Not exact matches
The
women in the study
gained 4.2 pounds
on average between their baseline weight and one year after giving birth, suggesting that even small differences in BMI can lead to pelvic floor laxity in normal - weight
women, says Yale researcher Marsha K. Guess, M.D., lead author
on the study.
Normally, a pregnant
woman to the end of the 38th week of pregnancy
gains on the
average 14 - 15 kg, because the weight of a pregnant
woman increases only due to the development of the baby inside of her.
He said that lifestyle modifications such as healthy eating, physical activity and behavioral modifications during pregnancy have had limited benefits
on improving adverse perinatal outcomes, with the exception of reducing excessive gestational weight
gain,
on the
average of two to five pounds in obese
women.
On average, these
women gain only 15 pounds throughout pregnancy — just half of the recommended amount.
While all groups,
on average, lost weight, the
women who exercised with a PT did not lose significantly more weight than the control subjects and some
women in the training groups even
gained weight.
In a 2010 survey,
women at Riverside
gained about 36 pounds in a year,
on average.
Another advantage was that the additional 240 calories a day eaten from the dried daily apple didn't result in weight
gain in the
women, they actually lost
on average 3.3 lbs.
The
average weight
gain I saw in
women who were placed
on synthetic hormones was between 20 - 30 pounds, sometimes even more!
I'm one of those
women you described that has spent years severely restricting calories then goes
on binge cycles and
gains it back... Prior to this I was restricting and probably
averaging 800-1000 calories.
A 2001 study following more than 200
women who quit smoking found that after a year, those who received CBT stayed off cigarettes at higher rates — and
gained half as much weight,
on average — as those who entered a weight - control program.
The guidelines recommend that underweight and normal - weight
women gain,
on average, about 1 pound every week during their second and third trimesters of pregnancy, and that overweight and obese
women gain about half a pound every week in their second and third trimesters of pregnancy.
Sadly,
on average women gain about 20 pounds every 16 years, if the
gain patterns of nurses can be extrapolated to the general female population.