Category Archives: Weight Management

Weight Loss Success Skills for Everyone

Body composition

Body composition

More Americans are either overweight or obese than ever before. A New York Times article says 34-percent of adults are obese, according to a 2010 report released by the Centers for Disease Control. The mountains of evidence health care professionals have presented–meant to motivate Americans to eat healthy, exercise, and control their weight, does not appear to be working. Most know the straightforward blueprint of lose weight-loss; burn more calories than you consume. Unfortunately, losing weight and keeping it off is not so simple.

Portion Control

According to the American Council on Exercise, portion control is one of the ABC’s of losing weight and keeping it off. Several portion control tips from ACE include eating from smaller plates, measure or weigh servings, read nutritional labels whenever possible, and do not fret if you leave food on your plate.

Use the Scale

The scale can be an important tool in your fight to loose and maintain your weight for the long haul. Although you do not need to weight in each day—or worry over ounces, a few times a week is a good practice. When using the scale, weigh in at the same time of day is advisable, mornings are best before having breakfast.

Fiber Intake

Shape magazine suggests fiber is a necessary part of an effective weight loss program—recommending 25 g of fiber each day. A fiber rich diet will leave you feeling full, helping you reduce your caloric intake. Fiber is in fruit, vegetables, and foods containing whole-grain.

Exercise

Exercise, according to CBS News, can help or hinder your efforts to lose weight. Most believe that exercising burns calories—resulting in weight loss. This is true, however exercise can leave you feeling hungry, causing you to eat more than you burned during your workout. In addition, many people reward themselves because they exercised–a piece of cake or some other treat is an entitlement. Finally, many people over-estimate the amount of calories they actually burn exercising and therefore eat more recovering from their workout then they burned.

Heavy Drinking

Drinking enough water is an import part of successful weight-loss program. Drinking too much water is often associated with bloating, especially in woman. However, water will actually reduce excess sodium stored in the body, which is the real cause of bloating. Water will also make you feel fuller, causing you to eat less. Shape magazine suggests drinking at least eight, 8-oz. glasses of water daily.

Learn to check your hydration factor: if your urine is light yellow with good volume, you are doing fine. If the color is dark yellow or beer-brown, it is time to drink up.

Conclusions

As athletes, we are perhaps more concerned with managing our weight than the general population. Although most of us could likely conduct a seminar on the various pieces of a successful weight management program, putting them all together so they work in harmony and succeed is difficult, at best. I think the 7-time Tour de France said it best when asked what he thought the best tool for managing weight was. His response; the bathroom scale.

 

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Filed under Body Composition, Coaching, Gregg Seltzer, Mind over Matter, Nutrition, Weight Management

Power Rice Pilaf

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photo: Seltzer Photography

If your into health and fitness, chances are your into your nutrition as well; as an endurance junkie you know that gains from your previous workout, and fuel needed to power your next workout depend on it. So, your likely getting emails, tweets and articles from every direction containing  healthy, nutritious, and fun to make recipes — right?

Here is a simple to make Power Rice Pilaf recipe from one of the best magazines out there focused on the great outdoors. I eat this stuff for breakfast 45 to 1-hr before my morning workout; it is a powerful meal — a real bonk buster. Make a batch up on Sunday to have it ready for the entire week. With that said, or written, here are the details.

Makes 4-servings and takes 1 to 2-hours depending on the rice used.

  • 2-tablespoons/ olive oil
  • 1 1/3-cups of brown rice (long or short grain)
  • 1 3/4 cups of water
  • 1-tablespoon salt
  • 1/2-tablespoon cinnamon
  • 1/2-tablespoon nutmeg
  • 1/2-tablespoon ginger
  • 2-tablespoons of maple syrup
  • 3-cups of your favorite chopped fruit
  • 1/4-mint (optional)

directions

  1. Pour olive oil into a large-deep skillet or medium saucepan. Place your heat on medium until hot. Add in the rice and cook, stirring until the rice turn glossy and are coated with the olive oil for 3 to 5-minutes. 
  2. Add in the salt and spices until fragrant, about 1 to 2-minutes.
  3. Add in the water, syrup, and half the fruit and stir until mixed. Let the water come to a boil before lowering the heat so the mixture bubbles lightly and cover.
  4. Cook the mixture until the moisture is mostly absorbed and the rice is tender, between 40 to 70-minutes, depending on the rice used. Uncover and add in your remaining fruit and half of the mint. Replace the lid and remove from the heat source.  Let the mixture rest for 20 to 30-minutes
  5. Finally, taste and adjust the seasoning if needed. Pour into your serving bowl, fluff with a fork, and enjoy.

Nutritional Data: calories 343; Cholesterol 0-mg; Saturated Fat 1-g; Fat 6.1-g; protein 6.3-g; Carbs 67.6-g; sodium 255-mg; fiber 6.7-g; trans fat 0.

Gregg Seltzer is a USAT, USAC, USATF, ASCA, and Master’s Swim coach with Triability Coaching, based in Southern California. He may be reached @ 800-884-2194 or www.triabilitycoaching.com for coaching arrangements, comments, or questions. 

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Triathletes — Health before Fitness

images (48)I am a professional  coach and as such I take on new endurance athletes — triathletes, runners and cyclists mostly. One of the questions I ask my new athletes is this very important question: ” What do you hope to gain from me, your coach”? The answer, especially from those who have been self-coaching for a few years is often the same; “I want to be healthy as well as fit”.  This often sounds funny to many people as it is often assumed that one who  can run a marathon, complete a century ride, or complete a triathlon of any distance must be healthy. Very often, this is not the case. I see many athletes who are very fit, but not very healthy.

Healthy first — fit second; you would think all athletes want this outcome especially as this is the reason most became athletes in the first place. Many years ago when I began my own training for my first triathlon it was to lose some weight, get my vital statistics in check, and maintain my health as I age — sounds about right doesn’t it? However, I fell into the trap of  too many carbohydrates, simple sugars, and other habits all intended to fuel my ever-increasing weekly, monthly and yearly mileage count.

Recently, I sat through an all day seminar with fellow endurance sport athletes. About everyone brought laptops, tablets, smartphones, and food. The eating habits of my fellow students was as interesting to me; even more so then the information coming from the presenter. The trash can was full of wrappers, cans, and bottles from energy bars and drinks which were preferred over natural snacks such as fruit and water, an important micro-nutrient in its own right.. Oh, a few of us peeled our banana’s, oranges, and drank tea and water, but we were a minority to be sure.

Remember,  the makers of drinks, bars, gels, chews, bites, and other related sport nutrition and hydration products are meant to provide convenience  an alternative to nature’s nutritional sources. They should be  a small percentage of your nutrition and hydration plan. Implement this into your health and fitness ideology for better overall health, wellness, and fitness.

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Filed under Body Composition, Coaching, Misc, Nutrition, Uncategorized, Weight Management

Triathlete’s and Body Composition

images (25)The ideal body-weight, also referred to as body composition, is a topic of interest for many people, athletic or not. Triathletes certainly are no exception. Lately, the subject of racing-weight has shot to the forefront of subjects covered extensively many books, magazines, and other sources triathletes of every ability rely upon when seeking any advantage come race-day. As gear used by triathletes becomes ever lighter – and expensive, it turns out shedding excess body-weight is a racers best way to gain free speed. As an example, a reduction in body weight of 10 to 20 pounds will save you 20 to 40 minutes in long course racing.

Determining Race Weight

A scientific survey conducted by St. Cloud State University of 3,000 endurance competitors concluded that nine out of ten athletes knew their exact racing weight. Likely, the athletes that did know their optimal race weight did not use mathematical equations- rather experience or trial and error helped them zero in on optimal race weight. Many can look in the mirror and tell if they have crossed the line and gone too far, one way or the other. Dropping weight will make you lighter, faster and yes, even healthier – as long as you really have the need to lose them. If not, you could be tipping the scales not in your favor health or performance wise.

Not only by the Numbers

Although the body weight number is important, it alone should not be the most important barometer. A lower bodyweight may feel and look good, but it can also indicate a loss in lean muscle mass, water-weight, or fat itself. Therefore, athletes should plan to have their body fat percentage checked quarterly by a professional using skin fold calipers, underwater, hydrostatic weighing, or bioelectrical impedance. Essential body fat for men is two to four percent — for women ten to 12 percent.

Conclusion

All triathletes want to better their performance, and most go to lighter, newer, more expensive gear to do it. The reality is, five-pounds of weight off your middle is the more effective, healthy, less-expensive way to achieve results, done correctly. Taking weight off your triathlon rig is fine, but achieving a healthy race weight, on race day, is like putting money in the bank. Just be certain to achieve your weight loss correctly. See a nutritionist, learn the do, and do not’s of nutrition periodization, and perhaps purchase a body composition scale for your home to monitor where your weight loss is coming from fat, water, or muscle.

Gregg S. Seltzer is a nationally certified triathlon & swim coach for Triability Coaching, based in Southern California. He may be reached for coaching or comment at www.triabilitycoaching.com or 800-884-2194.

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Boil an Egg Perfectly

I love a hard-boiled egg — it is the perfect source of protein after a session of strength training at the gym. Yet, perfecting the technique of boiling them has eluded me for a lifetime.

After swearing off the eggs, I decided not to quit so easy and try to tweak my technique. After many trial and errors, here is what has produced the perfect hard-boiled egg, for me. Give it a try,  let me know if you don’t agree.

1. Place your eggs in a pot and fill with water so the eggs are fully submerged with perhaps an inch of water to spare.

2. Add one-tablespoon of salt.

3. Turn on the heat source to high and let the water reach a turbulent boiling point.

4. Let the eggs boil for two-minutes.

5. Remove the pot containing your eggs from the heat source, cover, and let stand for fifteen-minutes.

6. Remove the eggs from the pot and place into a bowl. Please the bowl in the refrigerator to cool.

When you peel the egg, it is best to do so under cool water.

Plan ahead if possible. I train at the gym Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Therefore, I boil my eggs for the entire week on Sunday night. The eggs are easy to peel, and taste better than ever.

Enjoy

 

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Filed under Nutrition, Recipes, Strength and Conditioning, Strength Training, Uncategorized, Weight Management

Ways to Boost Metabolism

If you have attempted weight loses or the maintenance of your ideal weight, you are familiar with the word metabolism. According to Medicine Net.com, metabolism refers specifically to the breakdown of food and its transformation into energy. Put another way, an efficient metabolism helps you control your weight. Although genetics have a role to play with our metabolism, you can boost your metabolism by incorporating some lifestyle changes you can make.

Water

Water is a natural appetite suppressant that relieves bloating – flushing out the sodium and toxins lingering in your body. Drinking the right amount of water helps to keep you from mistaking hunger for thirst. Begin the day with a glass of water shortly after rising from bed. Continue to drink water throughout the day. The proper amount depends on factors such as weather and your activity level, but a good rule is eight 8-ounce glasses of water. You may also check your urine color. The color of lemon aid or lighter is good. A darker yellow and beyond should have you reaching for water.

Breakfast

Begin your day without breakfast and your body may prepare for what it perceives as looming starvation, slowing down your metabolism to conserve energy. Do not skip breakfast under any circumstance. Smart breakfast choices include whole grain cereal with skim milk or sugar-free yogurt with fruit.

Eat Small and Often

According to an article on Web MD, a website dedicated to health and wellness, eating more often, helps you lose weight. Small, frequent, meals helps your metabolism run in high gear – meaning more calories burned. Eating five or six smaller meals throughout the day, at three-hour intervals if possible, is a great weight loss or maintenance strategy. When your body goes without nourishment for long periods of time, your metabolism slows to survival mode.

Fats

Consuming sources of healthy fats is another effective metabolism booster. Healthy fats come from nuts, fish, olive oil, and flax oil. Replacing processed carbohydrates with unsalted almonds is another great source of healthy fat.

Calorie Count

You do want calculate what ideal caloric intake, based on your unique physical and lifestyle variables, and reduce your caloric intake if it is currently too high. Reducing your daily caloric intake too quickly will slow down your metabolism as your body adjusts to prevent starvation. Slowly reduce your daily caloric intake, giving your body time to adjust. Do not go too far. Consult your physician or a dietician for guidance on what your proper calorie count should be.

Strength Training

Samantha Heller, a contributor to Health Magazine, says strength training is a great way to fight the impact aging has on your metabolism. After completing a moderate to high intensity program of strength training, your metabolism will continue to work at a higher rate. How much depends on age, gender, and genetics, but it can reach 25 percent higher for as long as 15 additional hours after your workout has ended.

Aerobics

Aerobic exercise will increase your metabolism following a moderate to high intensity workout. As with strength training, the increased intensity is what does the metabolism wonders. After an intense workout, the metabolism will continue to burn calories long after you have left the gym. Push yourself, but be sure to consult with your physician first.

Spices

Chemical compounds found in spicy foods will get the metabolism moving. Although the results may be small, this perfect, healthy additive is easy to add to your daily routine. Adding spices throughout the day in foods you enjoy can increase your metabolic rate up to 23 percent for half hour increments. An example would be red pepper flakes, perhaps added to your next pasta dish.

Protein

Your body uses twice the amount of calories digesting protein, as is does carbohydrates or fat. Replacing processed carbohydrates or bad fats with protein while maintaining a balanced diet is great for speeding up your metabolism. Consider nuts, eggs, low-fat dairy, and chicken as welcome sources of protein.

Final words

Although increasing or speeding metabolism is the goal of most there are some factors that despite your best efforts are out of your control. Genetics play a role as you might expect as does your sex; men tend to have speedier metabolisms than do women. After age 40, metabolism slows for both sexes so these helpful tips can be especially helpful for 40-somethings and older.

About the Author

Gregg Seltzer is the founder and coach of Triability Coach, a Los Angeles based athletic studio specializing in coaching, advising, and training master’s age amateur athletes. He is a USAT, USAC, and USATF certified coach, and personal trainer. Gregg competes in a half-dozen triathlon races of various distances annually, and is a crazed trail racer in the off-season. Reach Gregg at gregg@tri-ability.com for comment, feedback, questions, or for training arrangements. You can also follow him at Twitter.com/triabilitycoach. Our phone number at Triability Coach is 800.884.2194. 

 

 

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Some Necessities for Weight Loss

Proper body composition is obtainable, but requires commitment.

More Americans are either overweight or obese than ever before. A New York Times article says 34-percent of adults are obese, according to a 2010 report released by the Centers for Disease Control. The mountains of evidence health care professionals have presented–meant to motivate Americans to eat healthy, exercise, and control their weight, does not appear to be working. Most know the straightforward blueprint of weight-loss; burn more calories than you consume. Unfortunately, losing weight and keeping it off is not so simple. As many as 87% of persons beginning an exercise program are unable to stick with it consistently.

Portion Control

According to the American Council on Exercise, portion control is one of the ABC’s of losing weight and keeping it off. Several portion control tips from ACE include eating from smaller plates, measure or weigh servings, read nutritional labels whenever possible, and do not fret if you leave food on your plate. A good portion size is equal to the size of your palm, or hockey puck.

Use the Scale

The scale can be an important tool in your fight to lose and maintain your weight over the long haul. Although you do not need to weight in each day—or worry over a gain of ounces, stepping on the scale a few times a week is a good practice. Use the scale at the same time of day is advisable — mornings are best before having breakfast. According to Lance Armstrong, the scale is one of the best fitness tools.  Scales that additionally measure water, fat, and muscle percentage are best, and inexpensive.

Fiber Intake

Shape magazine suggests fiber is a necessary part of an effective weight loss program—recommending 25 g of fiber each day. A fiber rich diet will leave you feeling full, helping you reduce your caloric intake. Fiber is in fruit, vegetables, and foods containing whole-grain.

Exercise

Exercise, according to CBS News, can help or hinder your efforts to lose weight. Most believe that exercising burns calories—resulting in weight loss. This is true, however exercise can leave you feeling hungry, causing you to eat more than you burned during your workout. In addition, many people reward themselves because they exercised, seeing a piece of cake or some other treat is an earned entitlement or reward. Finally, many people over-estimate the amount of calories they actually burn exercising and therefore eat more recovering from their workout then they burned.

Heavy Drinking

Proper hydration is an import part of a successful weight-loss program. However, be careful not to over-hydrate.  Water will also make you feel fuller, causing you to eat less. Shape magazine suggests drinking at least eight, 8-oz. glasses of water daily. Learn to check your hydration factor: if your urine is light yellow with good volume, you are doing fine. If the color is dark yellow or beer-brown, it is time to drink up.

Finally;

According to the ACSM, for the majority of adults, weekly exercise resulting in the burning of 2000 calories is likely necessary to promote and sustain desired weight loss. This equates to roughly 250 to 300 minutes per week or 30 to 60 minutes per day of exercise. The intensity of aerobic exercise sessions, as you might already know, is best at 40 to 60 percent of V02 R, while resistance training is best at 60 to 80 percent of 1-RM.

About the Author

Gregg Seltzer is the founder and coach of Triability Coach, a Los Angeles based athletic studio specializing in coaching, advising, and training master’s age amateur athletes. He is a USAT, USAC, and USATF certified coach, and personal trainer. Gregg competes in a half-dozen triathlon races of various distances annually, and is a crazed trail racer in the off-season. Reach Gregg at gregg@tri-ability.com for comment, feedback, questions, or for training arrangements. You can also follow him at Twitter.com/triabilitycoach. Our phone number at Triability Coach is 800.884.2194.

 

 

 

 

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The Benefits of Lemon Water

Many people add a slice or two of lemon to their glass of water, providing a tangy zing to the otherwise mundane yet healthy drink. There are many benefits other than taste, as adding lemon to your drinking water makes it one of the healthiest drinks. The juice from lemon has alkalizing properties raising your body’s pH, a vital key to health maintenance. Here are just some of the benefits lemon adds to your drinking water.

Digestion

The benefits of lemon water in relieving stomach distress cannot be over stated. Common issues with the stomach, such as heartburn, constipation, nausea, bloating, and gas can be soothed by drinking lemon water. Adding lemon water to your daily routine helps the body move waste more efficiently helping relieve constipation. Lemon is full of vitamin C, which is a potent antioxidant having favorable health results. Lemon added to your water, with its vitamin C, helps the liver fight free radicals it produces when filtering the bloodstream.

The Skin

Your skin will benefit from adding lemon to your water. Lemon is a citrus rich in vitamin C, which works from both the inside out, and the outside in. Lemon also has abundant citrus acids that remove dead skin cells gently and lighten darkened or discolored skin patches, such as sunspots. Eliminating blackheads and wrinkles are also a benefit from using lemon water.

Taste

Water is necessary to sustain life, and has many benefits on its own. However, waters bland taste can be too plain for some taste buds leading many to drink far less water than what is required daily. Adding a touch of lemon is a perfect additive for those needing the fruit taste without adding the sugar or other harmful additives.

Diuretic

Lemon is a diuretic, which is good for people with urinary tract infections and high uric acid problems, such as those with arthritis, or rheumatism because it helps flush out all the toxins and bacteria.

Cleaner

Cleaning your home is perhaps a surprise use of lemon water – and, when you use a natural substance to clean, it is an added benefit. OK, it is not triathlon related but a clean home makes for a happy athlete, so I have been told. Lemon water is great to dissolve soap scum and hard water deposits from showers and sinks. It is also a great cleaner for brass and copper. You can use lemon water as an air or water freshener – pour the lemon water down drains or add to toilet water.

Conclusion

As a coach, I advise not to drink your calories, meaning soda, sports drinks, alcohol, and those Starbuck concoctions to name only a few. Hydration is so very important to your survival, and for athletes, performance. Yet many have a problem meeting their daily H20 needs because water has no taste. Well, here is the key to the mint, so to speak. Adding lemon to your water is so simple, adding taste without calories; the best of both worlds. I wanted to add two more benefits, suggested by Theresa Cheung, author of the book “The Lemon Juice Diet”. Cheung suggests that adding lemon to your water will cleanse your liver, and stabilize your blood sugar level

Gregg Seltzer is the founder and coach of Triability Coach, an athletic studio specializing in coaching, advising, and training master’s age amateur athletes. He is a USAT, USAC, and USATF certified coach, and personal trainer. Gregg competes in a half-dozen triathlon races annually, and is a crazed trail racer in the off-season. Reach Gregg at gregg@tri-ability.com for comment, feedback, questions, or for training arrangements. You can also follow him at Twitter.com/triabilitycoach. Our phone number at Triability Coach is 800.884.2194. 

 

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Diet versus Exercise

Although there are plenty of people who exercise for reasons other than health and wellness, most likely exercise for health benefits such as weight loss or long-term weight management. Most people know that if you burn more calories than you consume you will lose weight. This is so because your body relies on stored fat for energy resulting in weight loses. However, gutting your diet to too few calories or nutrients can be unhealthy—even dangerous. Likewise, exercising too much can cause injury or other serious health issues. Balance is the key ingredient to losing weight without losing your health.

 

Benefits of a Healthy Diet

You already know that there are many benefits from a healthy diet: they are numerous. According to Readers Digest, people who eat a healthy diet are likely to live longer, and prevent or eradicate many types of illness to include certain cancers, high cholesterol, and blood pressure, while also reducing your risk of having a stroke or heart attack. In addition to the health benefits previously mentioned, a well-balanced diet can increase the function of the brain, your immunity systems ability to fight disease and overall emotional health.

Benefits of Regular Exercise

Exercise is an important ingredient to living a healthy lifestyle. According to Women’s Health magazine, exercise has a greater impact on an individual’s energy level because the brain releases dopamine and norepinephhrine—both neurotransmitters, which accounts for the increased energy most people who exercise regularly experience. Exercise also benefits the prevention of diabetes slightly more so than diet, although combining both is best. An active lifestyle fuels muscles with glucose in the bloodstream, stabilizing blood sugar levels.

Exercise Myths

Exercising regularly is important for many health reasons as stated above, although losing weight may be the primary reason or motivator for the average person. However, exercise can sabotage weight loss efforts if you are not careful. The reality is exercise does not burn as many calories as most think. For example, running for one-hour burns approximately 470 calories, 45 minutes on your favorite elliptical burns approximately 500 calories. Additionally, people might consume sports drinks, bars, or candies to fuel their workout, often adding more calories than they burn. Finally, some will reward themselves with high calories treats for exercise they did, adding even more calories. Often, the reason most people give up on exercise is they gain weight; not lose it. The quotient is out-of-whack.

Conclusion

According to the American Council on Exercise, a healthy diet and regular exercise work together for effective weight lose and long-term maintenance. The diet aspect determines how much weight is lost, and the exercise aspect keeps it off. A survey of successful dieters showed 89 percent used the diet and exercise combination to lose weight and kept it off for more than one year. ACE suggests simply reducing your serving portions by 10 to 15 percent daily while exercising 30 to 60-minutes a day, most days of the week.

Gregg Seltzer is the coach at Triability Coach, which specializes coaching, master’s age group athletes, and is a certified coach by the USA Triathlon, USA Cycling, and USA Track & Field governing bodies. Gregg is also a strength & conditioning trainer. Gregg competes in multiple endurance events annually, and is a crazed trail runner in the off-season. Gregg Seltzer is reachable at gregg@tri-ability.com for comment, feedback, or questions. Follow Gregg at Twitter.com/triabilitycoach. Our phone number at Triability Coach is 800.884.2194. 

 

 

 

 

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A Reference Chart for your Body Fat and Water Percentages

A scale equipped with BIA technology.

 

Here is a great guide you can use to determine target body composition, using age,  body fat percentage and total body water percentage. The top two charts are body fat percentage for men (top) and women (below). The last chart is the total body water percentage.

A great way to monitor your weight, body fat percentage, and water percentage is with a bathroom scale equipped with Bio-electrical Impedance Analysis, which sends a harmless electrical pulse into the body, providing the fat and water percentage estimates. These scales are inexpensive, and a must have if useful information is your thing.

 

 Body Fat Percentage

Rating

Men

Age Age Age Age Age
  20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60+
Low <13 <14 <18 <17 <18
Normal 14-20 15-21 17-23 18-24 19-25
Mod. High 21-23 22-24 24-26 25-27 26-28
High >23 >24 >26 >27 >28

 

Rating

Women

Age Age Age Age Age
  20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60+
Low <19 <20 <21 <22 <23
Normal 20-28 21-29 22-30 23-31 24-32
Mod. High 29-31 30-32 31-33 32-33 33-35
High >31 >32 >33 >34 >35

 

 

 

 

 

Total Body Water Percentage    

% Body Fate Range                              Normal % TBW Range

Men 14 to 14 % 70 to 63 %
  15 to 21 % 63 to 57%
  22 to 24 % 57 to 55 %
  25 and over 55 to 37%
Women 4 to 20 % 70 to 58 %
  21 to 29 % 58 to 52 %
  30 to 32 % 52 to 49 %
  33 and over 49 to 37 %

 

 

 

Source: University of Illinois Medical Center, Chicago, Ill.

 


 

 

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