alex3619
Senior Member
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- Logan, Queensland, Australia
Hi Calathea, I am not sure a simple table approach would be accurate. People vary too much. Usually you use tables to calculate lean weight though, based on total weight and skin fold tests. Even this is only approximate. There are machines similar to scales which many dieticians use that use electrical effects to measure lean weight - I do not recall their name just now.
Furthermore in us this relates to issues we may have with body fluid - either retention or loss.
I also don't think that getting too technical is worth it. The figures are only going to be approximate anyway. There are however published tables that tell you this kind of thing for what it is worth - I just don't really trust them. It needs to be measured not read off a table, and even then its approximate. So from my perspective I think that we should be sticking to general principles and not worrying about specific details.
Unless you are on a metabolically controlled diet (as I was once for a year) worrying about minute details is not worth the bother - rules of thumb are easier to live with.
The simplest way to think about lean weight is to think back to when you were fully grown but slim (which is not always the case but is for many people): what did you weigh? Unless something dramatic has happened (e.g. you became a body builder) this should approximate your lean weight if you subtract five to twelve percent: five is for very lean males, twelve percent is for more typical women if I recall correctly. In any case if you ask your medical practitioner they can give you an ideal target weight and to keep things simple you can calculate from ten percent below that as lean weight. That should be sufficiently accurate for most purposes.
Since some of us have lost a lot of muscle weight, it might be the case that if you are substantially underweight then your actual body weight might be a good approximation: it means you might eat a little more protein than you might otherwise need.
Bye, Alex
Furthermore in us this relates to issues we may have with body fluid - either retention or loss.
I also don't think that getting too technical is worth it. The figures are only going to be approximate anyway. There are however published tables that tell you this kind of thing for what it is worth - I just don't really trust them. It needs to be measured not read off a table, and even then its approximate. So from my perspective I think that we should be sticking to general principles and not worrying about specific details.
Unless you are on a metabolically controlled diet (as I was once for a year) worrying about minute details is not worth the bother - rules of thumb are easier to live with.
The simplest way to think about lean weight is to think back to when you were fully grown but slim (which is not always the case but is for many people): what did you weigh? Unless something dramatic has happened (e.g. you became a body builder) this should approximate your lean weight if you subtract five to twelve percent: five is for very lean males, twelve percent is for more typical women if I recall correctly. In any case if you ask your medical practitioner they can give you an ideal target weight and to keep things simple you can calculate from ten percent below that as lean weight. That should be sufficiently accurate for most purposes.
Since some of us have lost a lot of muscle weight, it might be the case that if you are substantially underweight then your actual body weight might be a good approximation: it means you might eat a little more protein than you might otherwise need.
Bye, Alex