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Understanding Adaptive Thermogenesis and Leptin: Strategies for Maintaining Weight Loss

Appetite control and regulation. Hunger and Satiety hormones. Ghrelin and Leptin. eating disorders. Stomach produce ghrelin hormone for appetite increase, adipose tissue release leptin for decrease appetite. Isometric flat vector Illustration

Losing a significant amount of weight is an incredible achievement that requires dedication, perseverance, and a lot of hard work. However, maintaining that weight loss can be even more challenging. Two critical factors in this journey are adaptive thermogenesis and leptin. Understanding these concepts and implementing strategies to manage them can help you sustain your weight loss and continue on your path to a healthier, happier life.

What is Adaptive Thermogenesis?

Have you noticed that you can go long periods of time without tracking your daily calories consumed and burned, yet your weight stays relatively stable? 

Has your weight loss hit a plateau where you should be losing weight but aren’t?

The answer is likely adaptive thermogenesis, which refers to the body’s natural response to changes in energy balance, particularly during and after weight loss. When you eat excess calories, your body undergoes various metabolic adaptations to burn the excess calories such as increased sympathetic nervous system activity, increased conversion of T4 to T3, and decreased efficiency of the skeletal muscle. The converse is also true – when you are in a calorie deficit and below the body’s set point, there are metabolic adaptations to conserve energy, prevent further weight loss, and return the body to its “desired” weight. This is a survival mechanism designed to protect against starvation during times of food scarcity, and it is the primary reason why more than 80% of people who lose weight eventually return to their pre-weight loss levels of body fat. 

How Adaptive Thermogenesis Works During Weight Loss

  1. Total Energy Expenditure (TEE): This is the total energy expenditure that occurs over a 24-hour period, made up of the below components
  2. Resting Energy Expenditure (REE): Cardiorespiratory work and the work of maintaining transmembrane ion gradients at rest (60% of TEE)
  3. Thermic Effect of Feeding (TEF): the work of digestion (5-10% of TEE)
  4. Non-Resting Energy Expenditure (NREF): energy expended in physical activity above resting (30-40% of TEE).

As you lose weight, your TEE decreases. This means your body burns fewer calories than it did before the weight loss. Because of adaptive thermogenesis, it is estimated that maintenance of a 10% or greater reduction in body weight is accompanied by an approximately 20-25% decline in 24-hour energy expenditure, TEE. These changes can make it harder to maintain weight loss, as your body is essentially fighting to regain the lost weight by conserving energy and increasing hunger signals.

The Role of Leptin

Leptin is a hormone produced by fat cells that plays a crucial role in regulating adaptive thermogenesis through energy balance, appetite, and metabolism. It acts on the hypothalamus in the brain to suppress appetite and increase energy expenditure. When you have more body fat, your leptin levels are higher, signaling to your brain that you have sufficient energy stores and reducing hunger.

Leptin and Weight Loss

When you lose weight, your body fat decreases, leading to lower leptin levels. This reduction in leptin can trigger increased hunger and decreased energy expenditure, making it challenging to maintain weight loss. Essentially, your body is trying to regain the lost weight by making you feel hungrier and less energetic.

Strategies to Increase Leptin and Maintain Weight Loss

Understanding the interplay between adaptive thermogenesis and leptin is essential for developing effective strategies to maintain weight loss. Here are some key strategies to help you increase leptin levels and support your weight maintenance efforts:

1. Refeed Days

Refeed days involve temporarily increasing your caloric intake, primarily through carbohydrates, to boost leptin levels and counteract the effects of adaptive thermogenesis. This strategy can help reset your metabolism, reduce hunger, and improve energy levels.

How to Implement Refeed Days

2. Strength Training

Engaging in regular strength training can help increase your metabolic rate, build lean muscle mass, and support leptin production. Muscle tissue burns more calories at rest than fat tissue, which can help counteract the decrease in RMR associated with weight loss. This is one of the reasons we recommend not losing more than 1-2 pounds per week – when someone loses more than 2 pounds per week, that weight loss is likely 50% muscle.

Strength Training Tips

3. Adequate Sleep

Getting enough quality sleep is crucial for regulating hormones, including leptin. Sleep deprivation can lead to decreased leptin levels and increased ghrelin levels, the hormone that stimulates hunger.

Sleep Improvement Strategies

4. Balanced Diet

Maintaining a balanced diet that includes a variety of nutrient-dense foods can help support leptin production and overall metabolic health.

Dietary Recommendations

5. Stress Management

Chronic stress can negatively impact hormone levels, including leptin. Implementing stress management techniques can help support hormonal balance and weight maintenance.

Stress Reduction Techniques

Conclusion

Maintaining weight loss is a complex process influenced by adaptive thermogenesis and leptin. By understanding these concepts and implementing strategies such as refeed days, strength training, adequate sleep, a balanced diet, and stress management, you can effectively manage your metabolism and support long-term weight maintenance.