» Articles » PMID: 15102614

Nonexercise Activity Thermogenesis (NEAT): Environment and Biology

Overview
Date 2004 Apr 23
PMID 15102614
Citations 54
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Nonexercise activity thermogenesis (NEAT) is the energy expended for everything that is not sleeping, eating, or sports-like exercise. It includes the energy expended walking to work, typing, performing yard work, undertaking agricultural tasks, and fidgeting. NEAT can be measured by one of two approaches. The first is to measure or estimate total NEAT. Here, total daily energy expenditure is measured, and from it "basal metabolic rate-plus-thermic effect of food" is subtracted. The second is the factoral approach, whereby the components of NEAT are quantified, and total NEAT is calculated by summing these components. The amount of NEAT that humans perform represents the product of the amount and types of physical activities and the thermogenic cost of each activity. The factors that impact a human's NEAT are readily divisible into environmental factors, such as occupation or dwelling within a "concrete jungle," and biological factors such as weight, gender, and body composition. The combined impact of these factors explains the substantial variance in human NEAT. The variability in NEAT might be viewed as random, but human and animal data contradict this. It appears that changes in NEAT subtly accompany experimentally induced changes in energy balance and are important in the physiology of weight change. Inadequate modulation of NEAT plus a sedentary lifestyle may thus be important in obesity. It then becomes intriguing to dissect mechanistic studies that delineate how NEAT is regulated into neural, peripheral, and humoral factors. A scheme is described in this review in which NEAT corresponds to a carefully regulated "tank" of physical activity that is crucial for weight control.

Citing Articles

Altered motivation states for physical activity and 'appetite' for movement as compensatory mechanisms limiting the efficacy of exercise training for weight loss.

Flack K, Stults-Kolehmainen M, Creasy S, Khullar S, Boullosa D, Catenacci V Front Psychol. 2023; 14:1098394.

PMID: 37187558 PMC: 10176969. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1098394.


Perspective: Is the Response of Human Energy Expenditure to Increased Physical Activity Additive or Constrained?.

Gonzalez J, Batterham A, Atkinson G, Thompson D Adv Nutr. 2023; 14(3):406-419.

PMID: 36828336 PMC: 10201660. DOI: 10.1016/j.advnut.2023.02.003.


Meal Timing and Sleeping Energy Metabolism.

Yoshitake R, Park I, Ogata H, Omi N Nutrients. 2023; 15(3).

PMID: 36771468 PMC: 9919906. DOI: 10.3390/nu15030763.


Compensatory mechanisms from different exercise intensities in type 2 diabetes: a secondary analysis of a 1-year randomized controlled trial.

Correia I, Hetherington-Rauth M, Magalhaes J, Judice P, Rosa G, Henriques-Neto D Acta Diabetol. 2023; 60(5):645-654.

PMID: 36729308 PMC: 10063485. DOI: 10.1007/s00592-023-02038-7.


Impact of non-exercise activity thermogenesis on physical activity in patients with COPD.

Shirahata T, Nishida Y, Sato H, Yogi S, Akagami T, Nagata M Sci Prog. 2022; 105(3):368504221117064.

PMID: 36082951 PMC: 10450459. DOI: 10.1177/00368504221117064.