WebMD/ May 29, 2009, 10:00 AM

24-Hour Fat Burning From Exercise?

Many of us get through a tough workout by thinking about the fat burning that will occur during the exercise and for the next 24 hours or so.

After all, that's the widely held belief: Regular workouts turn us into extraordinary fat burners.

Not so, at least not for moderate-intensity exercisers, according to Edward Melanson, PhD, an associate professor of medicine at the University of Colorado, Denver, who presented his research at the annual meeting of the American College of Sports Medicine in Seattle. The study is published in Exercise and Sport Sciences Reviews.

"Moderate duration exercise of an hour or less has little impact on 24-hour fat oxidation," Melanson concludes.

Most studies looking at the fat burning associated with exercise have been short-term studies -- spanning just a couple of hours -- that looked at people who hadn't eaten, he says. Melanson's team evaluated people in a more true-to-life scenario, following them over a 24-hour period during which they exercised and ate or did no exercise and ate.

"It's not that exercise doesn't burn fat," Melanson says. "It's just that we replace the calories."

"Exercise increases the capacity to burn more fat," he says. "But if you replace those calories, that is lost."

The findings shouldn't discourage people from exercise, Melanson says, but rather inspire them to become more realistic about "calories in, calories out" - and to expend more than they take in if they are trying to lose weight and body fat.

Exercise and Fat Burning

Melanson's team evaluated fat burning in 10 lean, endurance-trained participants, 10 lean but untrained people, and eight untrained and obese people during exercise conditions and sedentary conditions.

Participants were fed a diet that was 20 percent fat, 65 percent carbs, and 15 percent protein for three days before each session and on the day they exercised or did not exercise. On the exercise day, participants rode a stationary bike at a moderate intensity for one hour, burning about 400 calories.

When Melanson's team measured calorie expenditures, they were higher in each group when they exercised compared to when they did not, not surprisingly.

But they found that burning of carbohydrate, not fat, seemed to increase in the 24-hour period after exercising.

In the journal report, Melanson reports additional fat-burning studies, including one that compared seven men ages 60-75 with seven other men ages 20-30, with no differences in fat burning between groups for the 24 hours after exercise or no exercise.

Why don't we become long-term fat burners after a good workout? The most likely reason is that we eat. And what we eat affects fat burning.

For instance, eating as little as 240 calories of carbohydrate during the hour before exercise can reduce fat burning during exercise, and the boost in fat burning during exercise can be "blunted" for up to six hours after eating a meal, says Melanson, citing other research.

To maintain their low body fat, endurance-trained exercisers may simply eat less fat than they burn habitually, he says.

Fat Burning: Calories Count

The study findings are "dispelling the myth that you can create a 24-hour fat-burning situation after exercise," says Pete McCall, an exercise physiologist and spokesman for the American Council on Exercise.

But, he tells WebMD, the findings were limited to exercisers who did moderate-intensity exercise, and for an hour or less. "These results might not apply to different forms of exercise or higher-intensity exercise," McCall says.

Still, he says, the research results might be a crucial wake-up call. "The point of this study, I think, is [that] he is trying to get people out of that mind-set: 'I just worked out and I can eat whatever I want.'" At least for people trying to lose weight, McCall says, that's certainly not true

Melanson says that the take-home message from his research depends on whether you are trying to lose weight or just maintain. "If you are using exercise to lose body weight or body fat, you have to consider how many calories you are expending and how many you are taking in," he says. The goal is a negative fat balance.

"If your body mass index is below 25, you shouldn't be concerned about losing more body fat," he says.
By Kathleen Doheny
Reviewed by Louise Chang
?2005-2008 WebMD, LLC. All rights reserved
© 2009 WebMD, LLC.. All Rights Reserved.
8 Comments Add a Comment
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dragonffire says:
Gee, thanks a lot GeorgeWHoover! Guess the researchers wasted a lot of time and the Times wasted a lot of space (and ink) when both could have come to you for the answer.
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I_am_me1953 says:
by waterandsand June 2, 2009 2:54 PM PDT

no you need smaller steady meals throughout the day to increase your metabolism. Appetite suppression is stupid. Also disagree that carb intake b4 workout decreases fat burning while exercising because carbs b4 workout increase your energy.
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yes carbs b4 workout does increase your energy, BUT your body will burn carbs and protein and save fat for when thimes are tough. If you give your body plenty of carbs to handle the workout then no fat burn. If you give your body xs carbs before workout then store the xs.
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rf35 says:
How to lose weight: eat less and exercise. Simples...
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adt13t says:
infantile belief systems like a perverted placebo
ungrounded and out of mind body touch eating
like a feeeble minded parasite.
People typically treat the planet like they treat
their own bodies
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adt13t says:
basic adult consumption / expenditure awareness patterns
vs.
the massively profitable excuse and blame industry in the regressive
infantile crib.
don't worry it's not your fault take this little pill which masks the symptoms
of over worked irritable bowel
and go ahead have the xtra large pepperoni all by your selfish insanity
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voxpopulus says:
Unused carbs are turned to fat by your body. If you exercise and increase your carb burning you lay down less fat. My successful exercise and diet regime, which lost me 30 lbs in six months, is an hour of treadmill exercise in the morning BEFORE I eat anything, followed by protein breakfast with little or no carbs. Even these guys say exercise increases your carb burning. It works. I am fed up with articles saying this doesn't work and that doesn't work. Losing weight is not that hard.
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billpl-2009 says:
My mother -in-law is pushing near 300 lbs

that woman gets more exercise dragging 300 lbs back and forth between the kitchen table and the refrigerator than I get in a hour long work out. (think about it)

needless to say, it doesn't do her much good
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waterandsand says:
no you need smaller steady meals throughout the day to increase your metabolism. Appetite suppression is stupid. Also disagree that carb intake b4 workout decreases fat burning while exercising because carbs b4 workout increase your energy.
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