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Exercise helps us to eat a healthy diet
November 29, 2011--A healthy diet and
the right amount of exercise are key
players in treating and preventing
obesity but we still know little about
the relationship both factors have with
each other. A new study now reveals that
an increase in physical activity is
linked to an improvement in diet
quality.
Many questions arise when trying to lose
weight. Would it be better to start on a
diet and then do exercise, or the other way
around? And how much does one compensate the
other?
"Understanding the interaction between
exercise and a healthy diet could improve
preventative and therapeutic measures
against obesity by strengthening current
approaches and treatments," explains Miguel
Alonso Alonso, researcher at Harvard
University (USA) who has published a
bibliographical compilation on the subject,
to SINC.
The data from epidemiological studies
suggest that tendencies towards a healthy
diet and the right amount of physical
exercise often come hand in hand.
Furthermore, an increase in physical
activity is usually linked to a parallel
improvement in diet quality.
Exercise also brings benefits such as an
increase in sensitivity to physiological
signs of fullness. This not only means that
appetite can be controlled better but it
also modifies hedonic responses to food
stimuli. Therefore, benefits can be
classified as those that occur in the short
term (of metabolic predominance) and those
that are seen in the long term (of
behavioural predominance).
According to Alonso Alonso, "physical
exercise seems to encourage a healthy diet.
In fact, when exercise is added to a
weight-loss diet, treatment of obesity is
more successful and the diet is adhered to
in the long run."
The authors of the study state how important
it is for social policy to encourage and
facilitate sport and physical exercise
amongst the population. This should be
present in both schools and our urban
environment or daily lives through the use
of public transport or availability of
pedestrianised areas and sports facilities.
Exercise modifies the brain
Eating and physical activity are behaviours
and are therefore influenced by cognitive
processes that are a result of activity in
different areas of the brain. Previous
studies have already assessed changes in the
brain and cognitive functions in relation to
exercise: regular physical exercise causes
changes in the working and structure of the
brain.
The experts point out that these changes
seem to have a certain specificity. The
Harvard researcher supports the notion that
"regular exercise improves output in tests
that measure the state of the brain's
executive functions and increases the amount
of grey matter and prefrontal connections."
Inhibitory control is one of the executive
functions of the brain and is basically the
ability to suppress inadequate and
non-conforming answers to an aim (the
opposite of this would be impulsiveness),
which makes modification or self-regulations
of a behaviour possible.
With regards to losing weight and sustaining
weight loss in the long run, various recent
studies suggest that executive functions
such as inhibitory control and optimal
functioning of the brain's prefrontal areas
could be the key to success. This success is
mainly the fruit of a behavioural change.
Inhibitory control could also help to
prevent weight gain in healthy people.
The researcher outlines that "in time,
exercise produces a potentiating effect of
executive functions including the ability
for inhibitory control, which can help us to
resist the many temptations that we are
faced with everyday in a society where food,
especially hypercaloric food, is more and
more omnipresent."
Spain – leader in obesity
There has been an alarming rise in cases of
obesity in Spain in recent years, so much so
that prevalence in various areas of the
country is higher than in many parts of the
USA, which is traditionally thought of as
the paradigm of obesity in the western
world.
Furthermore, along with other Mediterranean
countries, Spain has one of the highest
rates of childhood obesity in Europe. The
experts are urging society to become aware
of the problem and join forces to prevent
and treat all types of obesity.