Even when you are at complete rest, your body is still working to maintain those vital functions that are necessary. The basal metabolic rate is the minimum amount of energy your body needs to survive by performing these basic functions, such as breathing, blinking, filtering blood, regulating temperature or synthesizing hormones.
Basal metabolic rate
Basal metabolic rate (BMR) is the amount of energy, per unit time, at rest, that a person needs to maintain body function. Some of the metabolic processes it regulates are respiration, blood circulation, body temperature control, cell growth, nerve function and muscle contraction.
This basal metabolic rate accounts for about 70% of the daily caloric expenditure of individuals. It is influenced by several factors such as lean body mass index (body weight without taking into account fat mass), presence of acute diseases and other conditions such as burns, fractures, infections, fever, etc. In women of childbearing age, BMR varies during the menstrual cycle mainly due to the effects of progesterone. In addition, diet and physical exercise can also have an impact on BMR. It has been shown that a decrease in food intake can reduce metabolic rate because the body tries to conserve energy (restrictive diets of less than 800 kcal per day have been quantified to decrease BMR by up to 10%). Metabolism also varies with physical condition and activity so that strength training can increase BMR.
Its proper measurement requires that a strict set of criteria be met, including a state of physical and psychological tranquility and temperature-neutral environments.
Number of observed variants
13.5 million variants
Number of loci analyzed
722 loci
Genes analyzed
Bibliography
UK Biobank Database. Basal metabolic rate, Data-Field 23105 [Version Jan-2022]
McMurray RG, Soares J, Caspersen CJ, McCurdy T. Examining variations of resting metabolic rate of adults: a public health perspective. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2014 Jul;46(7):1352-8.