Why Do Most People Find It So Tough To Stick To An Exercise Regime?

If you are feeling too lazy to hit the gym or follow an exercise routine, then your altered dopamine receptors -- critical for movement -- may be the reason behind your lack of motivation rather than excess body weight

IANS | February 01, 2017 8:49 AM | Fitness

The study challenged a common belief that obese animals do less physical activity, because carrying extra body weight is physically disabling.
Highlights
  • Feeling too lazy to hit the gym or follow an exercise routine
  • Altered dopamine receptors may be the reason behind it
  • The study appeared in the journal Cell Metabolism

New York: The first week of January is the time of year when many people realise they are pudgier than they ought to be and resolve to slim down by starting a regular program at the gym. But this New Year’s resolution to slim down is the one that most people are unable to stick with for very long.

Now a new study done on mice is providing clues about one of the reasons why it may be hard for so many people to stick with an exercise program.

So if you are someone who is feeling too lazy to hit the gym or follow an exercise routine, then your altered dopamine receptors – critical for movement – may be the reason behind your lack of motivation rather than excess body weight, a new study has suggested.

The study challenged a common belief that obese animals do less physical activity, because carrying extra body weight is physically disabling.

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“We know that physical activity is linked to overall good health, but not much is known about why people or animals with obesity are less active,” said Alexxai V. Kravitz from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) – a part of the National Institutes of Health in the US.

For the study, mice were fed either a standard or a high-fat diet for 18 weeks. Beginning in the second week, the mice on the unhealthy diet had higher body weight. By the fourth week, these mice spent less time moving and got around much more slowly when they did move.

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The results showed that the high-fat diet mice slowed down their activity, but they did it before they actually got fat instead of after, suggesting that the excess weight alone was not responsible for the reduced movements.

The reason the mice were inactive was due to dysfunction in their dopamine systems. They had deficits in the D2 dopamine receptors, the researchers said.

“There are probably other factors involved as well, but the deficit in D2 is sufficient to explain the lack of activity,” said Danielle Friend, postdoctoral student at NIDDK.

The study appeared in the journal Cell Metabolism.