When
we can’t lose weight or our weight loss stalls, we blame it on our faulty
metabolism. Yet if metabolism really is to blame, can you
counteract the effect by eating certain metabolism-boosting foods?
Possibly. What we eat can
help influence our metabolic process and make it a little more or a little less
efficient. But before you overhaul your diet, it’s necessary to understand how
your metabolism functions.
What Is Metabolism and How Does It Work?
“Your metabolism is what’s
in control of your body and how it makes and burns energy from food,” says Melissa Majumdar, RD, a senior bariatric
dietitian for the Brigham and Women's Center for Metabolic and Bariatric
Surgery in Boston and a spokesperson for the Academy of Nutrition and
Dietetics. “We rely on our metabolism to do everyday activities but also to
breathe, think, digest, circulate blood, and regulate temperature,” she
explains.
Metabolism consists of our
resting metabolic rate (RMR), which is the energy our body uses to breathe,
circulate blood, and perform other basic functions; activity thermogenesis,
which is any type of activity or exercise; and the thermal effect of food. “By
just eating, we’re burning calories to turn that food into energy,” Majumdar
explains.
Each one of these factors
makes up a typical percentage of the total energy expenditure, but there is some variability. For most people,
thermogenesis makes up about 10 percent of their total energy expenditure,
while resting metabolic rate accounts for about 60 to 70 percent. The most
variability occurs with activity levels and can vary from 100 calories burned
for a sedentary person to up to 3,000 calories or more for a training athlete.
What Affects Our Metabolism, for Better or Worse?
Genetics play the biggest
role in metabolism, but some variations are seen among certain ethnic groups.
Lean muscle mass, which
accounts for about a 5 percent difference between men and women, also affects
metabolism, because muscle burns more calories than fat, even at rest.
Increasing muscle mass through exercise increases your metabolism even when
you’re not actively exercising.
The most variability in
metabolism among individuals is also seen with activity thermogenesis (the
number of calories you burn by being active).
How Does Eating Certain Foods Help Rev Up Your Metabolism?
Certain foods can speed up
or slow down metabolism, potentially affecting weight loss. But it’s not a
simple, direct relationship — "eat this to boost your metabolism and lose
weight."
For example, meals high in
protein cause our metabolism to increase, but it’s usually temporary. “At that
meal, your energy expenditure is greater,” says Majumdar. “Whether that
actually translates to big changes, weight management, or weight loss is a
different story.”
What’s more, with respect
to weight loss, metabolism isn’t the only factor; the amount we eat also
matters. Eating meals high in protein, fiber, and healthy fats promotes
satiety, meaning we’re less likely to eat as much at the next meal.
On the flip side, not
eating enough calories can cause your body to use muscle for energy, which can
lead to a loss of muscle mass. If the body is trying to reserve its energy
stores, metabolism will slow.
Experts agree that there’s
no one food that will have such a significant effect on our metabolism that it
would cause us to lose weight. But there are foods that may rev up your
metabolism a bit, and there are others you should eat in moderation or avoid
altogether.
Six of the Best Foods to Help Boost Your Metabolism
1. Avocado
Avocado
is high in healthy polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats, which promote
satiety. A study published in November 2013 in Nutrition Journal found
that adding half an avocado at lunch may help overweight people feel more
satisfied and reduce their desire to eat in the hours following a meal.
Since avocado is an
anti-inflammatory food, it may have a secondary effect. “Inflammation can
definitely interfere with a lot of different things in your body, one of which
might be metabolism,” says Lisa Moskovitz, RDN, the CEO of the
New York Nutrition Group in New York City.
If you’re trying to lose
weight, be mindful of portion sizes. One quarter of an avocado has 80 calories
and 8 grams of fat.
2. Tempeh
Refined
grains like those found in processed, packaged foods, white bread, pasta, and
rice can sabotage weight loss. A study published in June 2011 in the New England
Journal of Medicine linked a weight gain of .39 pounds,
over a four year period, to each daily serving of refined grains.
Refined grains contain
empty calories, lack fiber, and can cause blood sugar spikes. “They’re not as
filling, so you can end up eating a lot more, taking in a lot more calories,
and it can make you feel a lot more tired and sluggish,” Moskovitz says.
2. Sugary beverages
Sweetened
beverages could slow down your metabolism. A study published in July 2017 in the journal BMC Nutrition found
that eating a high-protein meal with a sugar-sweetened drink may negatively
impact energy balance, reduce fat metabolism, and cause the body to store more
fat.
While fruit juice may not
contain added sugars, it's still high in calories, and juicing strips the fiber
content from fruit. Since it’s a concentrated form of sugar, juice can
stimulate your hunger, increase blood sugar and make you feel hungry shortly
after you drink it, Moskovitz says.
3. Alcohol
Soybean
oil is high in calories and omega-6 fatty acids, which can promote inflammation
and may contribute to weight gain. A study published in October 2017 in Nature noted
that soybean oil is the component in the American diet that has increased the
most over the past century, paralleling a rise in obesity. Foods high in
omega-6 fatty acids can also promote insulin resistance and resistance
to leptin (a hormone that tells your body that you’re full).
Decreasing omega-6 fatty acids and increasing omega-3 fatty acids can aid
weight loss, according to a review published in March 2016 in the journal Nutrients.
Swap soybean oil and other
oils high in omega-6 fatty acids for olive oil or flaxseed oil, or eat
fatty fish such as salmon. Of course, soybean oil may be difficult to avoid
because it's an ingredient in a number of processed foods. Rather than making a
swap in this case, avoid the processed food altogether and choose whole foods.
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