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by sanjiwatsuki
3982 days ago
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The headline is misleading and clickbait-y. The rule in question (3500 calories deficit results in one pound of weight loss) is mostly true, even if oversimplified. The fact that your metabolism drops as your weight drops just means that the calorie/day input needs to drop correspondingly to maintain the same deficit. As the article states, the fact that the weight loss isn't entirely fat is a minor error. Thus, the 3500 calorie guideline is maintained, as long as you remember that it is a deficit and not a static amount. |
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At one point, it indicates that 3,500 calories corresponds to a pound of body weight, then later indicates this came from research suggesting that 3,500 kJ corresponds to a pound of body weight and that this is where the 3,500 calories figure comes from.
Problem is, 3,500 kJ = 836 520.076 calories = 836.520076 Calories. So which is it? 3,500 kJ per pound of body weight, 3,500 Calories, or 837 Calories, or something else?
FYI: A nutritional Calorie is actually a kilocalorie (1,000 calories). One Calorie = 4.184 kJ.