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How To Increase Your Metabolism Rate

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By spuds


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Your Metabolism

Looking to lose weight or just be healthier. Have you considered increasing your metabolism rate? I bet you haven't. So how do you do that I hear you say? Well this hub has more about what metabolism is and how to increase your metabolism rate.


How to increase your metabolism rate

1. Understand what metabolism is. In the simplest terms, metabolism is the rate at which your body burns calories. The rate differs significantly from person to person. You and your friend can have the same activity level, diet, and weight but still gain or lose weight at different rates based on differences in metabolism.

2. Determine what is influencing your metabolism. There are some factors that you can change, and some factors that you can't.

* Age - metabolism slows 5% per decade after age 40 * Sex - men generally burn calories faster than women * Heredity - you can inherit your metabolic rate from previous generations * Thyroid disorder - problems in the thyroid gland can slow metabolism but this is rare * Proportion of lean body mass - metabolism increases with muscle mass

3. Calculate your resting metabolic rate (RMR). RMR is often used interchangeably with basal metabolic rate (BMR); although they are slightly different, estimating either is sufficient for the purpose of losing weight. To calculate your RMR, use the Mifflin-St Jeor equation (which is more reliable than the Harris-Benedict equation). There are also calculators online that can do this for you:

* RMR = 9.99w + 6.25s - 4.92a + 166g-161 * w = weight in kilograms; if you know your weight in pounds, divide by 2.2 to get your weight in kilograms * s = height in centimeters; if you know your height in inches, multiply by 2.54 to get your height in centimeters * a = age in years * g = gender = 1 for males, 0 for females

4. Adjust your diet accordingly. Your RMR will tell you how many calories you need to maintain your body at rest. Your daily consumption to maintain your weight should be:

* RMR x 1.15 * E.g. RMR = 2000, so the maintenance intake is 2000 x 1.15 = 2300 * To lose weight safely, consume no more than your maintenance intake but no less than your RMR. * Count calories by recording what you eat and looking up how many calories each food item contains (either on the food packaging or in tables provided in books or online).

5. Eat small, frequent meals. Extending the time between meals makes your body go into "starvation mode", which means it'll hold onto as many calories as possible and store them as fat. This is why fasting and skipping meals will only make things worse. In addition to having four to six small meals per day eating healthy snacks will also increase metabolism.

6. Drink water. As with food, depriving your body of water can encourage it to "hoard" rather than "burn". In order to encourage your liver to focus on metabolism rather than water retention, make sure you drink an appropriate amount of water.

7. Boost metabolism temporarily with aerobic exercise. Different activities burn different quantities of calories, but the important thing is to raise your heart rate and sustain the activity for approximately 30 minutes.

8. Boost metabolism in the long run with weight training. Muscle burns more calories than fat (73 more calories per kilogram per day, to be exact)so the more muscle you build, the higher your resting metabolic rate (RMR). Every bit of muscle that you gain is like a little factory that burns calories for you 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. This is the only way to increase RMR, which accounts for 60 to 70 percent of the calories you burn daily.

Do you eat healthily?

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funride profile image

funride  says:
2 years ago

Great hub on how to boost our "engine" power! We are just like motor machines - we have to adjust how much fuel we need accordingly with spent energy and how much we burn each day.

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