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Physical Activity
KEY POINTS:
Counsel on Physical Activity
1. Routine physical activity may improve body composition and
enhance adiposopathic endocrine and immune system processes.
2. Engaging in moderate-intensity activity for 150 minutes per
week can contribute to weight loss and help prevent weight gain.
Increasing the weekly duration to 250 minutes or more can result in
clinically significant weight loss and effective weight maintenance.
3. Engagement in physical activity has the potential to enhance
metabolic, musculoskeletal, cardiovascular, pulmonary, mental,
sexual, and cognitive health.
4. Resistance training can enhance body composition, mitigate
muscle loss during weight reduction, and elevate resting energy
expenditure.
5. A daily step count of fewer than 5000 steps is classified as sedentary
and is linked to an elevated risk of all-cause mortality, whereas a
daily step count exceeding 10 000 steps is deemed active.
6. A standard prescription for physical exercise, known as Frequency,
Intensity, Time, Type, and Enjoyment (FITTE), encompasses
frequency, intensity, duration, type, and enjoyment.
7. Metabolic equivalent tasks (METs) serve as a standardized
measure for evaluating the intensity of physical exercise. One
MET corresponds to the energy expenditure of one minute of
rest while lying down, equivalent to an oxygen consumption of
3.5 milliliters per kilogram of body weight per minute (3.5 ml/
kg/min). Standing = 2 METS; walking 4 miles per hour = 4 METS;
running 10 miles per hour = 16 METS.
8. Progress can be measured by tracking activity patterns over time
through various activity logs or by using a reliable technique to
measure body composition.
Physical activity is defined as any bodily movement
produced by the contraction of skeletal muscles that results
in a substantial increase in caloric requirements over resting
energy expenditure.