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Analyze your
Body Weight, Whether you are Overweight or Underweight

What Causes Overweight and Obesity?
Lack of Energy Balance
A lack of energy balance most often causes overweight
and obesity. Energy balance means that your energy IN equals
your energy OUT.
Energy IN is the amount of energy or calories you get
from food and drinks. Energy OUT is the amount of energy
your body uses for things like breathing, digesting, and
being physically active.
To maintain a healthy weight, your energy IN and OUT
don't have to balance exactly every day. It's the balance
over time that helps you maintain a healthy weight.
- The same amount of energy IN and energy OUT over
time = weight stays the same
- More energy IN than energy OUT over time = weight
gain
- More energy OUT than energy IN over time = weight
loss
Overweight and obesity happen over time when you take
in more calories than you use.
Other Causes
An Inactive Lifestyle
Many Americans aren't very physically active. One
reason for this is that many people spend hours in front of
TVs and computers doing work, schoolwork, and leisure
activities. In fact, more than 2 hours a day of regular TV
viewing time has been linked to overweight and obesity.
Other reasons for not being active include: relying on
cars instead of walking, fewer physical demands at work or
at home because of modern technology and conveniences, and
lack of physical education classes in schools for children.
People who are inactive are more likely to gain weight
because they don't burn up the calories that they take in
from food and drinks. An inactive lifestyle also raises your
risk of coronary heart disease, high blood pressure,
diabetes, colon cancer, and other health problems.
Environment
Our environment doesn't support healthy lifestyle
habits; in fact, it encourages obesity. Some reasons
include:
- Lack of neighborhood sidewalks and safe places
for recreation. Not having area parks, trails,
sidewalks, and affordable gyms makes it hard for people
to be physically active.
- Work schedules. People often say that they don't
have time to be physically active because of long work
hours and time spent commuting.
- Oversized food portions. Americans are surrounded
by huge food portions in restaurants, fast food places,
gas stations, movie theaters, supermarkets, and even
home. Some of these meals and snacks can feed two or
more people. Eating large portions means too much energy
IN. Over time, this will cause weight gain if it isn't
balanced with physical activity.
- Lack of access to healthy foods. Some people
don't live in neighborhoods that have supermarkets that
sell healthy foods, such as fresh fruits and vegetables.
Or, for some people, these healthy foods are too costly.
- Food advertising. Americans are surrounded by ads
from food companies. Often children are the targets of
advertising for high-calorie, high-fat snacks and sugary
drinks. The goal of these ads is to sway people to buy
these high-calorie foods, and often they do.
Genes and Family History
Studies of identical twins who have been raised apart
show that genes have a strong influence on a person's
weight. Overweight and obesity tend to run in families. Your
chances of being overweight are greater if one or both of
your parents are overweight or obese.
Your genes also may affect the amount of fat you store
in your body and where on your body you carry the extra fat.
Because families also share food and physical activity
habits, a link exists between genes and the environment.
Children adopt the habits of their parents. A child
who has overweight parents who eat high-calorie foods and
are inactive will likely become overweight too. However, if
the family adopts healthy food and physical activity habits,
the child's chance of being overweight or obese is reduced.
Health Conditions
Some hormone problems may cause overweight and
obesity, such as under active thyroid (hypothyroidism),
Cushing's syndrome, and polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS).
Underactive thyroid is a condition in which the
thyroid gland doesn't make enough thyroid hormone. Lack of
thyroid hormone will slow down your metabolism and cause
weight gain. You'll also feel tired and weak.
Cushing's syndrome is a condition in which the body's
adrenal glands make too much of the hormone cortisol.
Cushing's syndrome also can develop if a person takes high
doses of certain medicines, such as prednisone, for long
periods.
People who have Cushing's syndrome gain weight, have
upper-body obesity, a rounded face, fat around the neck, and
thin arms and legs.
PCOS is a condition that affects about 5–10 percent of
women of childbearing age. Women who have PCOS often are
obese, have excess hair growth, and have reproductive
problems and other health issues due to high levels of
hormones called androgens.
Medicines
Certain medicines may cause you to gain weight. These
medicines include some corticosteroids, antidepressants, and
seizure medicines.
These medicines can slow the rate at which your body
burns calories, increase your appetite, or cause your body
to hold on to extra water. All of these factors can lead to
weight gain.
Emotional Factors
Some people eat more than usual when they're bored,
angry, or stressed. Over time, overeating will lead to
weight gain and may cause overweight or obesity.
Smoking
Some people gain weight when they stop smoking. One
reason is that food often tastes and smells better after
quitting smoking.
Another reason is because nicotine raises the rate at
which your body burns calories, so you burn fewer calories
when you stop smoking. However, smoking is a serious health
risk, and quitting is more important than possible weight
gain.
Age
As you get older, you tend to lose muscle, especially
if you're less active. Muscle loss can slow down the rate at
which your body burns calories. If you don't reduce your
calorie intake as you get older, you may gain weight.
Midlife weight gain in women is mainly due to aging
and lifestyle, but menopause also plays a role. Many women
gain around 5 pounds during menopause and have more fat
around the waist than they did before.
Pregnancy
During pregnancy, women gain weight so that their
babies get proper nourishment and develop normally. After
giving birth, some women find it hard to lose the weight.
This may lead to overweight or obesity, especially after a
few pregnancies.
Lack of Sleep
Studies find that the less people sleep, the more
likely they are to be overweight or obese. People who report
sleeping 5 hours a night, for example, are much more likely
to become obese compared with people who sleep 7–8 hours a
night.
People who sleep fewer hours also seem to prefer
eating foods that are higher in calories and carbohydrates,
which can lead to overeating, weight gain, and obesity over
time.
Hormones that are released during sleep control
appetite and the body's use of energy. For example, insulin
controls the rise and fall of blood sugar levels during
sleep. People who don't get enough sleep have insulin and
blood sugar levels that are similar to those in people who
are likely to have diabetes.
Also, people who don't get enough sleep regularly seem
to have high levels of a hormone called ghrelin (which
causes hunger) and low levels of a hormone called leptin
(which normally helps curb hunger).
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