activity. First, let us look at Calories. The word calories (lowercase c) are a measure of energy.
A calorie is defined as the amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water 1
degree Celsius.
needed to raise 1 kilogram of water 1 degree Celsius. When you look at food and you assess the
Calories, this is what you are actually looking at. Calories are energy. All Calories are the same.
They are like inches on a ruler; the first inch is the same as the last inch. A calorie is a unit of
measure for energy.
• Every gram of protein yields 4 Calories.
• Every gram of Carbohydrate yields 4 Calories.
• Every gram of Fat yields 9 Calories.
• Every gram of Alcohol yields 7 Calories!!!!!
Calories. CICO is an acronym for “Calories In Calories Out .”It is a basic principle that to
manipulate your body, you need to have an inverse number of calories going in versus out.
want to gain weight, you must eat slightly more Calories than your body is burning. What you
are losing or gaining, though, will play out through the Macronutrients.
How can we utilize Calories?
Burning Calories
Your metabolism takes the things you eat and drink and converts them to energy by various
pathways. Your metabolism is the sum of various components that together add up to your total
daily energy expenditure or TDEE.
TDEE is made up of TEF, EAT, NEAT, and the largest portion of BMR
Thermic Effect of Food (TEF~8-15%)+ Exercise Activity (EAT~15-30%)+NEAT(~15-50%)
+Basal Metabolic Rate(BMR~60-70%)
TEF: TEF stands for Thermic Effect of Food. This is the amount of energy your body exerts to
digest/metabolize/burn the food you eat. TEF plays an important role in the foods you choose
within your macros. You want to choose foods that will make your body work the hardest for the
best advantage. Get the most “bang for your buck”! This often comes down to non-processed
foods, protein, and high-fiber vegetables.
exercise. This will vary based on the exercise and your adaptations to the exercise.
do that is not sleeping, eating, or sports-like exercise. It ranges from the energy expended
walking from the car to the desk, typing, performing yard work, running after kids, and even
fidgeting.
TEF, EAT & NEAT are collectively called NREE. This stands for Non-Resting Energy
Expenditure.
measured in practice as your sleeping metabolic rate. It is the energy your body expends when
completely sedentary and fasted, the amount of energy required to sustain your body’s primary
functions. BMR factors in age, sex, lean mass, hormones, genetics, stresses, and more. BMR is
also considered REE, Resting Energy Expenditure.
impact is BMR. BMR is often overestimated due to so many factors playing into it. You cannot
quickly control, or sometimes control at all, items that affect your BMR. You CAN choose to
improve items that affect your TEF, EAT, and NEAT on a daily basis, though!
You can control your exercise (EAT) to control how you burn Calories
Resistance Training
Building muscle often focuses on strength or hypertrophy, but the two are not exclusive!
Strength: The amount of force your muscles can exert (“Typically” programmed as low
rep/high weight)
Hypertrophy: The growth of (muscle) tissue. (“Typically” programmed as high rep/lower
weight)
hypertrophy. Strength training takes the best of both worlds and combines them so the strength
gains can translate to hypertrophy. The more lean mass you have, the higher your BMR may be.
That means, in general, burning calories more efficiently over time.
allow recovery time, you will gain strength and hypertrophy. The difference will lie in how fast
the complete muscle activation hits. Higher reps/lower weight will take longer for the muscles to
be fully recruited, whereas, with lower reps/higher weight, the recruitment is almost immediate.
for the rep scheme is important. More and more studies are showing the hypertrophy range is
closer to 30-100% of 1Rep Max or around 1-30RM vs. 6-12RM.
set and not being optimal with your reps. What is “enough” rest? The time it takes to feel
recovered and ready to hit the reps with that intensity that is needed for the set.
increases in muscle strength and hypertrophy in young resistance-trained men.”1 So no need to
rush through your rest time, but also, do not goof around…GO when your BODY says, “I am
ready”!
Cardio (Cardiovascular Training)
Fat, gain muscle, or get stronger or faster. Catabolism fuels anabolism; In order to build
something, something has to be broken down. Both types of processes are important to human
physiology. Both types also occur in exercise.
with the storage of energy; constructive metabolism. If something is “anabolic,” it is building
something.
together with the release of energy; destructive metabolism. If something is “catabolic,” it is
destroying something.
(overall building) or catabolic (overall breaking down) for skeletal muscle? Strength training is
largely Anabolic (when protein intake and training are programmed well). You will have a Net
effect of building muscle as it repairs from you, breaking it down by progressively overloading
the muscles with resistance. The muscles break down to rebuild. The muscle protein synthesis is
greater than the protein breakdown.
to rebuild it. Your body breaks down fuel sources to fuel cardio, and that can include your
muscle. This can especially happen if ALL you do is cardio, or you do it too close to strength
training, or your nutrition is not adequate.
needed is very important, and if you have body goals, not just technique goals, knowing how to
work in accessory training around your karate training is important, as well, to help preserve and
build muscle for the rest of your life.
Bond-Williams KE, Carter AS, Ross CL, Just BL, Henselmans M, Krieger JW. Longer
Interset Rest Periods Enhance Muscle Strength and Hypertrophy in Resistance-Trained
Men. J Strength Cond Res. 2016 Jul;30(7):1805-12. doi:
10.1519/JSC.0000000000001272. PMID: 26605807.