Title of article
Alcohol energy intake and habitual physical activity in older adults
Author/Authors
A.H.C.، Goris نويسنده , , K.R.، Westerterp نويسنده , , E.P.، Meijer نويسنده , , A.D.M.، Kester نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
-148
From page
149
To page
0
Abstract
Alcohol forms a significant component of many diets and it supplements rather than displaces daily energy intake. Surprisingly, alcohol intake does not systematically increase body weight. The present study assessed whether a higher level of habitual physical activity in the daily environment is associated with a higher alcohol intake. Alcohol intake as part of total food intake was measured with a 7 d dietary record while at the same time physical activity was monitored with a tri-axial accelerometer for movement registration. Subjects were twenty women and twenty-four men, aged 61+-5 years, of BMI 27·1+-4·6 kg/m^2. Between subjects, there was a positive association between the level of habitual physical activity and alcohol intake (r 0·41; P <0·01). The subjects with higher alcohol intake had a higher activity level. On days with and days without alcohol consumption there was no difference in physical activity within subjects. In conclusion, it was shown that subjects with higher alcohol consumption are habitually more active. This may explain the lack of increasing body weight through additional energy intake from alcohol.
Keywords
Energy balance , overweight , Accelerometers , Alcohol paradox
Journal title
BRITISH JOURNAL OF NUTRITION
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
BRITISH JOURNAL OF NUTRITION
Record number
89628
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