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I've been thinking a lot lately about calorie deficits and weight loss.

I was thinking how there's a total contradiction between these two statements:

1) you get 9 calories from a gram of fat, 4 from a gram of protein and 4 from a gram of carbohydrates

2) the body uses protein and lipids to build structural elements (unsaturated fatty acids make great cell walls, doncha know).

So unless I'm reading something wrong, carbs are actually the only thing that's always converted to energy or stored as fat! (By energy, I mean ATP and CP, the stuff that moves muscles). So what's correct is that the body can get that many calories out of the stuff you put in your mouth, IF that stuff is used for energy, which not all of it is. Increase exercise level and I bet you anything the amount of material needed for structural repairs/building goes up... and I bet that's a lot of what "base metabolism" is.

Thoughts?

Date: 2007-07-24 01:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bluechromis.livejournal.com
I hear what you're saying, because it sounds like a lot, but actually, I don't even notice a 750 cal/day deficit. With that I'm still eating around 2000 cal/day. Some days I'll eat 1400 without noticing hunger, other days I will eat 2500 without feeling gorged. In the past, every structured diet I was put on had me eating 1600 cals/day or less, which is a more than 1000 cal deficit, which I suppose was why I was always so miserable on them - I was starving myself. Trainers did this to me, nutritionists did this to me, I did this to me. What the hell people?

I think the thoughts on 3500 cal/lb are based more on dietary studies and observations than on the specifics of calories involved in burning fat. I'm not positive, but I think I remember reading about that a while back.

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