In this week’s group meeting, Dr. Tro and health coaches Amy Eiges and Brian Wiley discussed the many benefits of exercise, and how to get started or come back from a long lay off. Since Covid, the closing of gyms, parks, and exercise classes have hit many of us, but with things slowly opening back up now is a great time to start or get back to it.
Discussion:
- The basic benefits of exercise: losing and maintaining weight, body composition, helping with glucose control, blood pressure, and other metabolic issues. Some benefits that are overlooked: exercise helps reduce stress, anxiety, and depression.
- Dr. Tro talked about a study that showed that HIIT can reduce A1c by 0.5-1.5 points, resistance training can reduce it 0.5 to 1.0 and a low-carb diet with intermittent fasting can reduce it 0.5 to 5.5 points. Combining all three, one can lower their A1c 1.5 to 7.5 with lifestyle changes.
- Comparing diet and exercise for weight loss: in 12 weeks the people that did diet and exercise together lost 12 pounds, exercise alone only lost 1 pound, and diet alone lost 10 pounds. This shows 80% of weight loss is diet-driven.
- However, exercise is hugely important for improving bone health, diabetes, metabolic health, blood lipids, lowering triglycerides, and raising HDL. Also, 95% of weight loss maintainers exercise daily and keep track of their weight.
- One of the biggest reasons 95% of weight loss maintainers exercise daily is because it relieves stress and helps mentally by reinforcing using exercise for stress relief over alcohol, food, and other unhealthy things.
- Resistance training in the form of weight lifting, resistance bands, or bodyweight exercises can improve your muscle size and it also helps with bone health.
- If you’re just getting started, the best exercise is walking — it helps build you up to do more intense training as you feel better. Start to build up the habit, go gently. Developing the daily exercise habit is an important part of the process.
- HIIT interval training is great. With intervals you get the aerobic and resistance components while getting the active rest that builds you up.
- If wearing a CGM or checking blood sugar during exercise don’t be alarmed at higher reading. This is a normal response and in the long run when you’re building muscle, eventually, these numbers will be better and your body will be more efficient at using glucose.
- If you are beginning an exercise program try and find a trainer that will give you a full assessment to make sure you don’t have any deviations that need correcting. This helps to prevent injury.
Brian Wiley
Brian Wiley is a Certified Health Coach who has struggled with food addiction and battled with obesity for most of his life. Being advised with mainstream approaches as his solution, along with the standard, “eat less, move more” resulted in minimal, or no success with eventual regain. In 2009, he reached his highest weight of 265 pounds. His doctor advised and encouraged him to take medications after his blood glucose, blood pressure and cholesterol reached dangerous levels at the age of only 35.
His commitment to a low carb lifestyle resulted in a 100-pound weight loss, and he was able to reverse his abnormal health markers improving his heart health and avoiding type 2 diabetes. Brian has maintained his weight loss for the last 11 years. “I see people everyday on social media and in real life and they’re struggling. They’re going through the same struggles of food addiction, unhealthy eating patterns, and unsuccessful dieting like I did. I want to serve as an example that this approach can be successful. It is not a fad, and is a healthy long-term lifestyle solution.”
Brian is also an ACE certified personal trainer. Brian was a featured guest on Episode 29 of the Low Carb MD podcast and on Vinnie Tortorich’s Fitness Confidential Saturday Success Story. Brian has also been featured on DietDoctor, Atkins and various other publications