Quoting Shiv from another thread.

"I think the old habit of doing "upvaasa" - fasting once a week - and on
certain other days might be a good idea. Getting up and walking arond a lot
more would help."

Anecdotal evidence suggests this is right. Fidgety people are
generally not obese. YMMV.

-- Vinayak

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/17/magazine/mag-17sitting-t.html?_r=2&src=me&ref=general

DR. LEVINE’S MAGIC UNDERWEAR resembled bicycle shorts, black and
skintight, but with sensors mounted on the thighs and wires running to
a fanny pack. The look was part Euro tourist, part cyborg. Twice a
second, 24 hours a day, the magic underwear’s accelerometers and
inclinometers would assess every movement I made, however small, and
whether I was lying, walking, standing or sitting.

James Levine, a researcher at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., has
an intense interest in how much people move — and how much they don’t.
He is a leader of an emerging field that some call inactivity studies,
which has challenged long-held beliefs about human health and obesity.
To help me understand some of the key findings, he suggested that I
become a mock research trial participant. First my body fat was
measured inside a white, futuristic capsule called a Bod Pod. Next,
one of Dr. Levine’s colleagues, Shelly McCrady-Spitzer, placed a
hooded mask over my head to measure the content of my exhalations and
gauge my body’s calorie-burning rate. After that, I donned the magic
underwear, then went down the hall to the laboratory’s research
kitchen for a breakfast whose calories were measured precisely.

A weakness of traditional activity and obesity research is that it
relies on self-reporting — people’s flawed recollections of how much
they ate or exercised. But the participants in a series of studies
that Dr. Levine did beginning in 2005 were assessed and wired up the
way I was; they consumed all of their food in the lab for two months
and were told not to exercise. With nary a snack nor workout left to
chance, Dr. Levine was able to plumb the mysteries of a closed
metabolic universe in which every calorie, consumed as food or
expended for energy, could be accounted for.

His initial question — which he first posed in a 1999 study — was
simple: Why do some people who consume the same amount of food as
others gain more weight? After assessing how much food each of his
subjects needed to maintain their current weight, Dr. Levine then
began to ply them with an extra 1,000 calories per day. Sure enough,
some of his subjects packed on the pounds, while others gained little
to no weight.

“We measured everything, thinking we were going to find some magic
metabolic factor that would explain why some people didn’t gain
weight,” explains Dr. Michael Jensen, a Mayo Clinic researcher who
collaborated with Dr. Levine on the studies. But that wasn’t the case.
Then six years later, with the help of the motion-tracking underwear,
they discovered the answer. “The people who didn’t gain weight were
unconsciously moving around more,” Dr. Jensen says. They hadn’t
started exercising more — that was prohibited by the study. Their
bodies simply responded naturally by making more little movements than
they had before the overfeeding began, like taking the stairs,
trotting down the hall to the office water cooler, bustling about with
chores at home or simply fidgeting. On average, the subjects who
gained weight sat two hours more per day than those who hadn’t.

People don’t need the experts to tell them that sitting around too
much could give them a sore back or a spare tire. The conventional
wisdom, though, is that if you watch your diet and get aerobic
exercise at least a few times a week, you’ll effectively offset your
sedentary time. A growing body of inactivity research, however,
suggests that this advice makes scarcely more sense than the notion
that you could counter a pack-a-day smoking habit by jogging.
“Exercise is not a perfect antidote for sitting,” says Marc Hamilton,
an inactivity researcher at the Pennington Biomedical Research Center.

The posture of sitting itself probably isn’t worse than any other type
of daytime physical inactivity, like lying on the couch watching
“Wheel of Fortune.” But for most of us, when we’re awake and not
moving, we’re sitting. This is your body on chairs: Electrical
activity in the muscles drops — “the muscles go as silent as those of
a dead horse,” Hamilton says — leading to a cascade of harmful
metabolic effects. Your calorie-burning rate immediately plunges to
about one per minute, a third of what it would be if you got up and
walked. Insulin effectiveness drops within a single day, and the risk
of developing Type 2 diabetes rises. So does the risk of being obese.
The enzymes responsible for breaking down lipids and triglycerides —
for “vacuuming up fat out of the bloodstream,” as Hamilton puts it —
plunge, which in turn causes the levels of good (HDL) cholesterol to
fall.

Hamilton’s most recent work has examined how rapidly inactivity can
cause harm. In studies of rats who were forced to be inactive, for
example, he discovered that the leg muscles responsible for standing
almost immediately lost more than 75 percent of their ability to
remove harmful lipo-proteins from the blood. To show that the ill
effects of sitting could have a rapid onset in humans too, Hamilton
recruited 14 young, fit and thin volunteers and recorded a 40 percent
reduction in insulin’s ability to uptake glucose in the subjects —
after 24 hours of being sedentary.

Over a lifetime, the unhealthful effects of sitting add up. Alpa
Patel, an epidemiologist at the American Cancer Society, tracked the
health of 123,000 Americans between 1992 and 2006. The men in the
study who spent six hours or more per day of their leisure time
sitting had an overall death rate that was about 20 percent higher
than the men who sat for three hours or less. The death rate for women
who sat for more than six hours a day was about 40 percent higher.
Patel estimates that on average, people who sit too much shave a few
years off of their lives.

Another study, published last year in the journal Circulation, looked
at nearly 9,000 Australians and found that for each additional hour of
television a person sat and watched per day, the risk of dying rose by
11 percent. The study author David Dunstan wanted to analyze whether
the people who sat watching television had other unhealthful habits
that caused them to die sooner. But after crunching the numbers, he
reported that “age, sex, education, smoking, hypertension, waist
circumference, body-mass index, glucose tolerance status and
leisure-time exercise did not significantly modify the associations
between television viewing and all-cause . . . mortality.”

Sitting, it would seem, is an independent pathology. Being sedentary
for nine hours a day at the office is bad for your health whether you
go home and watch television afterward or hit the gym. It is bad
whether you are morbidly obese or marathon-runner thin. “Excessive
sitting,” Dr. Levine says, “is a lethal activity.”

The good news is that inactivity’s peril can be countered. Working
late one night at 3 a.m., Dr. Levine coined a name for the concept of
reaping major benefits through thousands of minor movements each day:
NEAT, which stands for Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis. In the
world of NEAT, even the littlest stuff matters. McCrady-Spitzer showed
me a chart that tracked my calorie-burning rate with zigzagging lines,
like those of a seismograph. “What’s that?” I asked, pointing to one
of the spikes, which indicated that the rate had shot up. “That’s when
you bent over to tie your shoes,” she said. “It took your body more
energy than just sitting still.”

In a motion-tracking study, Dr. Levine found that obese subjects
averaged only 1,500 daily movements and nearly 600 minutes sitting. In
my trial with the magic underwear, I came out looking somewhat better
— 2,234 individual movements and 367 minutes sitting. But I was still
nowhere near the farm workers Dr. Levine has studied in Jamaica, who
average 5,000 daily movements and only 300 minutes sitting.

Dr. Levine knows that we can’t all be farmers, so instead he is
exploring ways for people to redesign their environments so that they
encourage more movement. We visited a chairless first-grade classroom
where the students spent part of each day crawling along mats labeled
with vocabulary words and jumping between platforms while reciting
math problems. We stopped by a human-resources staffing agency where
many of the employees worked on the move at treadmill desks — a
creation of Dr. Levine’s, later sold by a company called Steelcase.

Dr. Levine was in a philosophical mood as we left the temp agency. For
all of the hard science against sitting, he admits that his campaign
against what he calls “the chair-based lifestyle” is not limited to
simply a quest for better physical health. His is a war against
inertia itself, which he believes sickens more than just our body. “Go
into cubeland in a tightly controlled corporate environment and you
immediately sense that there is a malaise about being tied behind a
computer screen seated all day,” he said. “The soul of the nation is
sapped, and now it’s time for the soul of the nation to rise.”

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