A worksite program for overweight middle-aged men achieves lesser weight loss with exercise than with dietary change

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Abstract

To compare changes in total and regional body composition using dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) after subjects lost weight through change in diet or exercise. A 12-month, randomized, controlled study of two weight-loss interventions - low-fat diet ad libitum or moderate, unsupervised exercise - in free-living, middle-aged men. Compliance was determined at monthly measurement sessions through food records and activity logs; DEXA scans were performed every 3 months. Fifty-eight overweight men (mean body mass index=29.0±2.6; mean age=43.4±5.7 years) recruited from a national corporation were assigned randomly to diet, exercise, or control groups. One group reduced dietary fat to 26.4% of energy intake but kept activity unchanged; another group self-selected aerobic exercise (three sessions per week at 65% to 75% maximum heart rate) but kept diet unchanged. A control group maintained weight. At 12 months, measurements of weight, total and regional fat mass and lean mass, energy intake, and percentage dietary fat; physical activity indexes. Results were analyzed using paired t tests and analysis of variance. Mean weight loss was 6.4±3.3 kg in dieters and 2.6±3.0 kg in exercisers; control subjects maintained weight. DEXA scans revealed that 40% of dieters' weight loss was lean tissue; more than 80% of weight lost by exercisers was fat. Exercisers maintained limb lean tissue and lost fat mass. Greater total weight and lean tissue loss occurred when subjects lost weight through a low-fat diet consumed ad libitum than when subjects participated in unsupervised aerobic exercise. Use of DEXA enabled identification of progressive total and regional changes in fat and lean tissue.

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Pritchard, J. E., Nowson, C. A., & Wark, J. D. (1997). A worksite program for overweight middle-aged men achieves lesser weight loss with exercise than with dietary change. Journal of the American Dietetic Association, 97(1), 37–42. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0002-8223(97)00015-1

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