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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The effects of light versus moderate exercise added to diet control in a weight reduction program for overweight college women

Reed, Carolyn Powers January 1983 (has links)
Thirty-nine overweight college women were assigned to one of three weight reduction groups: diet control (DC), DC + low intensity exercise (LX), DC + moderate intensity exercise (MX). All women were tested for VO₂peak and percent fat. The DC included a previously designed nutrition education and behavior modification program held one time per week which prescribed a caloric intake based on body weight to result in a 1000 kcal•day⁻¹ dietary deficit. Exercise groups were asked to also attend three exercise sessions each week. In addition to a warm up and cool down, LX exercised at a heart rate corresponding to 40% of VO₂peak for 35 minutes per session while MX exercised at 70% of VO₂peak for 20 minutes. Exercise durations were chosen to match LX and MX for total exercise caloric expenditure. Heart rates were self-monitored every 10 min and sporadically verified by the exercise leader. At the end of the 8 week program, there was an overall drop out for the three groups of 34%, with the DC group having the highest attrition (50%) relative to LX ( 40%) and MX (20%) groups. VO₂peak did not change significantly after the 8 week program in any group, perhaps as a function of the modest exercise stimulus and/or a sharp reduction in attendance noted in the final 2 weeks. However, an improvement in cardiorespiratory efficiency was indicated by the significant reduction of heart rate at submaximal workload III (MX = -12, LX = -10, DC = -6 bts·min⁻¹ ). A significant mean decrease of 2.93 ml·kg⁻¹·min⁻¹ in VO₂ at the same submaximal workload was noted. All groups lost a significant amount of body weight over the eight weeks. The trend in average body weight loss (DC=4.0, MX=3.6, LX=3.3 kg) was opposite to that of % fat loss (LX = 5.1, MX = 3.9, DC= 2.2%). These differences were not significant but show a tendency for exercise coupled with diet control to enhance fat but not total body weight loss. Thus, the treatment which enhanced fat loss and most strongly enhanced attendance was a moderate intensity exercise added to diet control. / Master of Science

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