When we talk about metabolism, the first thing that comes to mind, for many, is that you must have a fast metabolism to lose weight or the more overweight you are, the slower your metabolism must be. But there’s a lot more to it!
Lauren Davenport, senior physiologist at AXA Health, is sorting the fact from the fiction and exploring why metabolism is a complex biochemical process that has become somewhat skewed by various myths around its role in weight loss (spoiler alert: being overweight isn’t the result of a ‘slow’ metabolism).
What is metabolism?
Your metabolism is a set of life-sustaining chemical reactions that occur in the body such as breathing, digestion and growth and repair of tissues – basically, it’s what keeps your body going.
When we talk about metabolism in this article, we are referring to your basal metabolic rate (BMR). It’s important to understand that your BMR does not have a speed. Your BMR is the number of calories needed to preserve the life-sustaining functions, even when we are resting.
BMR accounts for 70% of your body’s total daily energy requirements and energy expenditure.
Energy balance and expenditure
Energy balance is the balance between the energy we take in from food and drink vs the energy we use. If the energy we take in (calories from food) is more than the energy that we expend, we will put on weight.
If the energy we take in is less than the energy we expend, we will lose weight.
To understand metabolism fully, it’s important to be aware of what our body uses energy for on a daily basis. There are three different elements that make up our total daily energy expenditure.
- The first is your BMR, which accounts for the most part of our daily energy expenditure.
- The second is the thermic effect of food, or TEF. TEF describes the calorific cost of digesting, absorbing and metabolising food. TEF accounts for around 10% of your daily energy expenditure.
- The third component of our total daily energy expenditure is activity, which can be broken down further into two categories: exercise activity thermogenesis (EAT) and non-exercise activity thermogenesis (NEAT).
EAT
EAT is all the energy that we expend while performing intentional exercise sessions, such as a workout, running, cycling, swimming.
It accounts for around 5% of our daily energy expenditure.
NEAT
NEAT on the other hand is the energy that we expend performing tasks involved in our daily life, such as tidying up, moving around the office or changing platforms on the commute to work, even fidgeting.
NEAT accounts for around 15% of our daily energy expenditure, which is quite a lot more than the amount of energy we typically expend on exercise.
For this reason, NEAT is a useful tool to use in weight management.