Weight Scale Talk
...continuation
Page
1 > Page 2
A slightly better fitness indicator is the Body
Mass Index (BMI). You can figure your BMI by plugging your weight
and height into a simple equation. The result can then be compared
against a chart to determine whether your actual body mass is within
a healthy range or if it indicates any level of obesity. For adults,
that healthy range is between 19 and 25. However, the BMI measurement
has its drawbacks, too. It presumes that you have the average muscle
mass and bone density of a moderately active adult. Bruner cites
baseball great Cal Ripken as an example of an extremely active person
whose weight is misinterpreted by the BMI chart. According to the
chart, Ripken, with a BMI of 30, is overweight. "The weight
of his high muscle volume, not fat, puts him into the overweight
category," explains Bruner, "but we already know he's
fitter than most people on earth." Conversely, elderly adults
with very low bone densities may appear to have a healthy BMI, when,
in fact, much of their weight comes from excess fat rather than
muscle or bone.
To get a clearer picture of that muscle-to-fat ratio, doctors and
fitness professionals often use a skin caliper. This device pinches
and measures the fat and skin on different parts of the body. After
the measurements are taken, an average is calculated and the number
is compared against a chart. Unfortunately, this method also has
its drawbacks. People who want to get their body fat tested over
the course of a fitness program may not get an accurate assessment
of the changes in their bodies, since some testers pinch harder
than others, and it's difficult to duplicate the exact locations
where they pinched before.
According to Bruner, "a more sophisticated, reliable and reproducible
test" is bioelectrical impedance or body composition analysis
(BCA). This simple method involves painlessly sending a current
through a person's arm and leg to get a body composition reading.
The doctor or technician can then plug that reading into a computer
program along with the subject's gender, height, weight and level
of physical activity. Within moments the computer is able to provide
the person's body fat percentage, muscle mass, bone density, estimated
metabolic range and estimated ideal body weight. BCA is now widely
available at many doctor's offices. Fitness centers also offer the
test, sometimes at no additional charge.
So rather than focusing solely on your weight, assess your progress
throughout a fitness program by getting an occasional BCA, suggests
Bruner. But don't throw out your scale just yet. "Seeing changes
on the scale each week can be very helpful and motivating,"
he says, "but people who exercise need to be mindful that they
could be gaining muscle [if their scales don't reflect the weight
loss they expect]. Since muscle is heavier than fat, the scale may
not budge for a while, but clothes will fit better. So always take
a full set of body measurements, too."
<
PREVIOUS PAGE