Studies Shows that Exercise Alone is not Enough to Prevent Weight Gain

By Staff Reporter / 1486785117
This program was called Eat Smart, Move More, Weigh Less. The duration of the online program lasted up to 15 weeks, which uses ‘planned behavior’ as a means to change unhealthy eating habits.

Exercise on its own without also following a healthy diet isn't enough to help people lose or even just maintain their weight, a recent study suggests. Exercise alone is not enough to lose weight because our bodies reaches a plateau where working out more does not necessarily burn extra calories, as researchers have found.

In a study, published in Current Biology on Thursday, they suggest that there might be a physical activity termed as "sweet spot", whereby too little can make one unhealthy but too much drives the body to make big adjustments to adapt, thus constraining total energy expenditure.

In fact, some of the people who exercised more than others in the study actually gained weight over the two-year study period, while some of those who exercised less than others lost weight over the same period, according to Live Science.

If true, it would go some way to explaining an apparent contradiction between the two types of study carried out by researchers. On the one hand, there are studies which show that increasing exercise levels tends to lead to people expending more energy and on the other, there are ecological studies in humans and animals showing that more active populations (for example hunter-gatherers in Africa) do not have higher total energy expenditure.