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Dr. Alex Jimenez and Dr. Mario Ruja discuss basal metabolic rate, BMI, and BIA. Body mass and body fat can be measured in a variety of ways, however, several measurement tools may ultimately be inaccurate for many athletes. According to Dr. Alex Jimenez and Dr. Mario Ruja, calculating an individualβs body mass and body fat utilizing various tools is essential to determine overall health and wellness. BMI uses a personβs height divided by twice their weight. The results may be inaccurate for athletes because their body mass and body fat is different, in terms of weight, compared to the average person. Dr. Alex Jimenez and Dr. Mario Ruja demonstrate that BIA, or bioelectrical impedance analysis, and various other tools, such as the DEXA test, the Tanita scale, and the InBody, among others, can help more accurately determine an athleteβs body mass and body fat. Basal metabolic rate, BMI, and BIA is essential for parents that have young athletes as well as for the general population. Healthcare professionals that have these tools available can ultimately help provide individuals with the results they may need to maintain overall health and wellness.
Table of Contents
Podcast Insight
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[00:00:08] All right. Itβs Mario and Alex time. The two favorite chiropractors from El Paso, TX. Ok. Weβre going to beβ¦ Functional medicine, Alex. Thatβs what weβre gonna do. Itβs about functional medicine in 2020, baby.
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[00:00:21] This 2020, weβre gonna be focusing on BMI and weβre gonna be focusing on everything. Mario, my awesome co-host here weβre tearing it up. Weβre gonna give some points of view. Weβre gonna be discussing certain things. Today our focus is going to be on anthropometric measurements and measuring the body composition rationale and its interpretation.
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[00:00:46] Now Iβm afraid of that. All right.
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[00:00:49] Iβm afraid of measurements, Alex, Iβm telling you right now, I donβt want measurements around my body.
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[00:00:55] Okay. Thank you. All right Mario. Yeah.
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[00:01:00] Mario, weβve got to get a little bit of knowledge here. Okay. Well, what weβre not going to do is weβre not going to try to make this boring. No. If you really want to see boring. I think we have plenty of examples of what boring looks like. Yeah. Have you seen those boring guys, Mario? You know, itβs like the measurement of whatβs going on. Yeah. Here you go.
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[00:01:20] Video plays in the background.
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[00:01:31] You know what? I can go to sleep with that one, Alex. Now, thatβs what Iβm talking about Mario. I can go to sleep and just shut it off.
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[00:01:40] But, you know, learning has to be fun. It has to be interactive and it has to be functional.
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[00:01:47] So thatβs what weβreβ¦ Absolutely I totally agree. So what weβre gonna do is weβre gonna try to bring the facts as it can be and weβre gonna try to bring it with a little bit of slapstick fun.
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[00:01:56] So itβs gonna be fun. Mario, tell me a little bit about your interpretation of BMI as how people understand basal metabolic rate.
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[00:02:05] Well, this is what I understand and what I hear about basal metabolic rate.
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[00:02:13] Bottom line is, can you put your belt around your pants and can you tuck your shirt in? How about that?
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[00:02:25] You know, thatβs pretty scientific. Right. That is scientific. Yes, that is scientific. Yes. We could talk pear, we could talk apple, sizes, apple-shaped bodies types.
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[00:02:33] But weβre going to get specific here because people want to know, Ok, whatβs going on. Letβs start. One of the things that we can do is we can start discussing calculating energy requirements, because one of the things that we want to see, as you can see, I put up here a little bit of facts so that it can help us out a little bit in terms of figuring out whatβs the best approach in terms of what we do. Now, you can tell here that sedentary, no exercise, what we want to do is talk about basal metabolic rate. Ok. So this is a measurement that has occurred by height as well as weight index. So it comes out to that number and we can start looking at calorie, caloric intake burn. But when we do a BMR and we calculate this number, we typically want to get about a 1.2. And thatβs what would be normal in most situations if youβre sedentary, light activity, we start noticing that thereβs an increased activity expenditure and BMR should be one point 1.375. If you are moderately active, you should start doing that. So in its interpretationβ¦
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[00:03:33] Mario, when you see these kind of things and these kind of figures, what does it bring to mind for you in terms of these numbers? As we keep on going back to this, weβll be able to see exactly whatβs going on. Whatβs your incentive sense of the rates and the metabolic processes?
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[00:03:52] Well, again, very simple, when you look at it as the more active you are, the higher your metabolic rate is. Thatβs it. So at the end of the day, we want to put it in very simplistic terms to the public. We want to be more active about that. So science is supporting that, you know, park the car as far away as possible from the Wal-Mart entrance and your work. So by doing that every day, you are creating a higher function. Ok, metabolic, thatβs the burn. Thatβs your whole system burning fuel within yourself. So itβs simple. And the studies are showing that the more active you are, the higher your metabolic rate is. It can go up to a 1.9 from a 1.2. Correct.
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[00:04:50] Exactly. So what weβre looking at here is that the requirements are going to be pretty high. If you are one of those people that are very active. So ultimately, our goal is to get you as active or what youβre your lifestyle could require. So, you know, if youβre a mechanic, you say moderately active. If youβre someone who works in, letβs say, an office, your BMR is going to be calculable. Using these numbers for the body mass index, the whole idea is to try to figure out the body mass index using the BMR. So the BMR allows us to kind of give an estimate, the best estimate as to where youβre BMR should be at and then we can use the same number, this BMR to assess your body mass index. So our goal is to continue with kind of learning about this thing. And as we kind of go through that, we look at body measurement types. Now, in the past, what weβve looked at in terms of this, we assess the body in a bunch of different ways. Historically, weβve been able to do a weight, underwater weight assessment. Remember, Mario, we used to have like a tank and put someone in water, have them float, actually measure the oxygen consumption. Those were the old methods, the true standard way of doing our fat analysis.
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[00:05:57] Pretty expensive. Sometimes, though, we use the DEXA test. The DEXA test is a similar test that is used for bone density. We can actually do that. We also have, historically the body pod test. Now, I know that you have noticed different types of tests and weβre going to put up here.
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[00:06:13] What are the other tests that youβve seen? Alex, on that one. When youβre talking about the underwater weighing and DEXA and even the body pod, those are again, more research-based, more scientific.
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[00:06:30] Exactly. In that. So when youβre looking at that, I look at it from my perspective.
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[00:06:38] You know whatβs functional? Whatβs can everyone do? Exactly. Skinfold is easy. Yeah. You know, skinfold and the BIA and the Tanita scale. Yeah. I mean that one, electrical impulses going through and youβre looking at resistance and impedance. Those are simple. You canβt just buy them from Wal-Mart or anywhere and step on it. Make sure you donβt eat and make sure you donβt drink before you do your test. So do it early morning. Letβs say six, seven oβclock. Right. On an empty stomach so you can get some good readings with the scan. And also, you know, skin fold is easy.
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[00:07:21] And again, with the BMI, youβre looking at weight divided by twice your height, your height squared. Exactly.
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[00:07:31] So thatβs kind of like a simplistic view in terms of BMI. Anyone can do this. Yes. So those are right now. Those are the standards. Those are things, most of the time, when you go to your trainer. Most of the time when you go workout in your CrossFit gym or your, you know, what I call functional gym. Now people are going into more a functional aspect of fitness.
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[00:07:55] So they incorporate less wear-and-tear and trauma. Now theyβre looking at skin fold and InBody. They even have the new InBody systems that are very popular that give you a nice ratio even of your hydration, which is really nice.
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[00:08:13] You know, when you actually say that, when we look at this thing like the Tanita, these scales, like you said, that you can get them at home. The BIA is where itβs at. What weβre finding is that a lot of the studies are reflecting that the BIA actually shows quite a correlation with accuracy with these more complex underwater weighing as well as the DEXA test. So these standards research-based, youβd always want to maintain some sort of research-based, at least collaborative information that makes sense. Right. So now the BIA assessment machines, they can actually determine through OHMS, through impedance to fat analysis to actually measuring the electrical current of the body, a very accurate approach to weight assessment. And by, you know, basal metabolic rates. So now the studies are actually better and theyβre easier for people to do. And we donβt have to do some real complex things.
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[00:09:09] Yeah. And, you know, if you can show everyone the body part, I think thatβs really cool. Thatβs like a cool thing. You know, I mean, look at that. Can you. Yeah.
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[00:09:21] Yeah. Thatβs really cool. So when you look at a body pod. Right.
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[00:09:24] This is an incredible thing. But this is not something you would want to have in your office. Right? Thirty, Forty-thousand dollars. Right. Jesus, man.
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[00:09:31] Yeah, you know, itβs crazy, I mean, theyβre probably looking at you like they should have you on an alien channel or something. But the simple one, if you can scroll up on the BIA, itβs a simple machine and the readings are awesome. You know, the readings are very good. Theyβre portable. And you can see the resistance level and you can see the phase angle, which is really nice because then youβre looking at very specific patterns and turns your metabolism.
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[00:10:06] Absolutely. These tests now are available in most clinics, or at least the clinics that focus on functional fitness. We have them at the fitness centers and many fitness centers have them. And you and I are used to using these things in our offices. So as we do these things, as we assess these things, we really can give kind of the patients a quantitative point of view that really helps them figure out exactly how everything is.
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[00:10:38] Youβre exactly right, Alex. You know, in my work, you know, working with athletes and also what I call performance professions, where weβre talking about military S.F., Special Forces, Rangers, things like that. Itβs all about performance. So in that, we use calipers. You know, those are very, very useful, easy to use. And the one that I particularly like, which.
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[00:11:08] Again, with BMI, there are a lot of discrepancies, Alex, and you know, this being, you know, in the world of bodybuilding and athletics and all of our kids are athletes. I mean, theyβre, thatβs just part of the family structure. Thatβs who we are. So now you got to run, jump, catch a ball or kick a ball or do something. Right. So the point is in that what I have found out is that the BMI is not very accurate. Not very accurate at all Alex, when it comes down to athletes. Right. So this is where the discrepancy comes in, where it gets crazy because now you go to a regular assessment, a regular assessment or a regular, I donβt want to say regular doctor, but, you know, your doctor and then heβll test your BMI and youβre gonna be off, youβre going to be high and youβre going to say, you know, you need to get your BMI lower. Yeah, the point is that the BMI is the mass, right? So again, muscle is heavier than fat. So in your environment of bodybuilding, what do you think about that?
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[00:12:22] I mean because Iβm sure it was crazy. Well, one of the things that Iβve been able to see over the years is that when you have someone, as we understand this, that the BMR is obviously the thing that weβre using to assess height and weight. But those numbers get skewed when you have an athlete and they donβt work well for the muscular individual, someone thatβs I mean, my son, for example, he was 195 pounds, 5β² 8β³. In all reality, heβs clinically obese. Right. Yet heβs shredded and ripped. And he was a national champion in wrestling. Literally had no body fat. So the caliper method, the BMR, the BMI based on height and weight has deficiencies. And thatβs where the BIA came in and the body impedance assessment. Thatβs where the studies became very popular. And as what we see, Mario is that in essence, when we look at these situations, we find out that there are great assessment tools out there. These tools are the ones that are actually going to give us the ability to kind of come up with an accurate for a large range of individuals, whether theyβre bodybuilders, whether theyβre women. Thereβs a standard between, you know, a good 13 percent body fat and 29 percent body fat for females. Women typically have a larger number of between 18 and 29 percent body fat. At times, thatβs a range that is kind of in there. Hopefully, they can stick around 22 to 24, boys in the 13 range just because the body density is different in a female. Right. So what we look at is whatβs the norm? One of the things that we can do is try to calibrate people for their numbers so that they make sense for that individual and be able to work them towards it because a true athlete will be able to almost blow the BMR, BMI into the wrong number skew. And if we can get it to a nice number, weβre gonna have to use a lot of different tools. Now, what weβre going to present today are our ideas and fundamental philosophies and knowledge points that we use to determine actual true health. Right. So weβre going to be discussing those particular issues and weβre going to go over those particular areas here. Now, the BIA is the body impedance. Okay. So when we look at the bioimpedance areas, we can see that these kinds of tests are not only just affordable, but they actually determine the electrical current. And because of the body amount of muscle fat and the fat that occurs, we are using the fat as kind of like the thing that allows us to assess body dynamics as well as body density. Right. So as the more, thereβs more impedance or more ohms or more resistance in the body, the greater the body fat. So itβs very important that these tests be done properly. Many of the times before you do a BIA, youβve got to kind of, you know, youβve got to not take, first of all, youβve got to be dry. Ok. Because if youβre sweaty, it throws it off. Right. If you eat too much or too many fluids. So typically you try to keep away from foods, eating food prior to this and you try to get this thing to work. So resistance, as we look at it, are the things that weβre trying to measure. So one of the things that, when you look at these particular graphs, you see low resistance associated with large amounts of body fat mass, which is where the body is stored. Right. So when we look at this, this is one of the areas we can kind of put together when we look at the resistance numbers. Now, as we look at different angles, letβs say we got the phase angles. We also look at the ability. This is the new number that is assessing actually the intracellular and extracellular activity as well as the permeability of the cells. Ok. Now, as we range this. Theyβre looking at ranges between 0 and 20 percent. But the higher the phase angle, Ok, the higher the number where it pops, the better it is for the individual, the lower it is. Itβs not as good. So what we want to do is we want to see where your phase angle is and we want to be able to assess it as it gets calculated. So one of the things that we look at, we assess this and our tools that we use, such as the BIA assessments, such as the InBody testing systems, we can actually determine the ranges that are for the individuals. But hereβs where things make sense. But what weβre in general, when you look at this, Mario, what is your take from when we assess this particular type of under fundamental research technology as we can apply to athletes? Your daughters are athletes, right? And do you? What have you used in the past for this?
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[00:17:07] Usually, when they go on to programs, I mean, theyβre super fit, first of all. So theyβre looking more at anywhere between like performance in terms of speed, agility, and sustainability. Right. Like, you know, vertical in terms of explosiveness, those types of things. In the area of recovery and energy. This is where I can tell you with the girls and even the boys, they really focused on the energy consistency. Ok. And I can see even with this, which is critical that the phase angle, again, the lower the phase angle, it shows the inability of the cell to store, you know, energy.
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[00:18:09] So thatβs why that storage of energy, Alex, is real critical because why that is where we get the maximum output and everyone is talking about performance and performance is about what, output. So if that cell can not store the energy, it cannot release the energy and perform. So thatβs how nice these are nice markers. I would say that with the latest technology, we need to use them. We need to use them and we need to have benchmarks where itβs not just generalities. A lot of times we talk about generalities. How do you doing? Iβm doing good. You know, I had a good workout. Well, what does it mean to you to have a good workout? And what does it mean to have a great workout? The difference is, show me proof. Show me results. Itβs all about results. So the better, I guess a good takeaway. A good, good. Kind of, you know, assessment for people. Look at number one. Go to a professional and get your BMR and BMI done. Thatβs number one. And use the equipment.
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[00:19:26] And the specifics so you can mark and you can assess them afterward.
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[00:19:34] If you donβt have a straight baseline of pre, you will not have a post. And this is the same thing in performance. If you donβt have your electronic time and track your pre, then your post is meaningless. You really donβt know where youβre going. So for a lot of the performance, you know, to me, life is performance. Youβre going to have to perform either at work or at home or youβre going to perform on the field, whatever that may be. On a mat. On a field, you know, in your sports. Itβs about keeping track of markers, your pre and post. That way, you know where youβre going and you know your performance in our world. We love scores. Just imagine, go into a game and you never have a score. We donβt keep score. We just want to have fun. It doesnβt. Itβs not fun anymore. Right. So.
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[00:20:34] So for the things that weβre covering today in terms of the instruments, the methods of measuring body composition all the way from professional, DEXA and water displacement and body pods to skin folds, you know, everyday use, that you can just buy it at your local Wal-Mart anywhere and do the count protest.
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[00:21:02] Thatβs a great baseline.
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[00:21:06] And with a lot of the trainers, make sure that when you are training with someone, make sure that they do a baseline so you know and they know where youβre at and the performance and the programming.
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[00:21:23] Itβs really important to understand programming. There has to be a scaling. There has to be a periodicity in that development. And I know when little Alex was training for state, you know, in the wrestling, there has to be a periodicity. You canβt just go hard and go home like everybody says. No. You have to have your point of performance and youβve got to have your track, your flow to that. Just like when Mia is training for nationals or international competition in tennis, there has to be a plan where she is developing to peak at that time. Is that correct? Yes, yes, yes, yes. Thatβs so critical. And we, you, cannot create that plan to peak at that specific if youβre in the dark in terms of having a knowledge of where youβre at. And I think for our listeners and our viewers, itβs critical and itβs very, very easy to get. I think sometimes people get lost, like all, you know, BMI. I would venture to say 80 percent of the people that are listening today. Right. That are watching this video. Have no clue what BMI means. Theyβve heard about it, but they have no clue what it is. Yeah, they think itβs some scientific something. No, itβs not. All right. We want to bring it down to earth, down into your living room, where you can actually do a BMI for your kids, right? Yeah. Why donβt we do that? Why donβt we do a BMI for your kids? Do it for your husband, your wife. Make sure you know where youβre at again, with a BMI. And this, you know, refresh my memory. The target is from 19 to 20. Ok, 19 to 20. Anything beyond that is obesity. If youβre talking about 25 BMI, youβre in the obesity range. Right. If youβre talking about 30, you are morbidly obese. And the word morbidly obese means death. That should get everyoneβs attention. Oh, yes. Yes, it does. It kinda like wakes you up. So what weβre looking at is, number one, understand where you are. Then measurements and then also understand that these measurements fit the profile of a person. So if youβre a bodybuilder, if you are very heavy muscle-bound. Ok. Then you already know you need to go into impedance. Not measurements. But what I have found out. A very reliable measurement is. The measurement for your waist and thatβs where, Alex, I want to kind of share this with our listeners and viewers. Just a simple waist measurement is so powerful because it is actuallyβ¦
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[00:24:24] Some people say itβs better than BMI. It sure is. Right. I mean, actually, yes, itβs yes, itβs very much. That waist measurement gets down and makes it so simple because that abdominal mass, that abdominal fat is the one thatβs gonna kill you.
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[00:24:41] Thatβs the one that has the highest risk. Is that correct?
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[00:24:44] Thatβs correct. And if your belly is wide. If it sticks over your belt, we got issues. Ok. So weβre noticing that if there is a certain distance between the chest and the waist, those are better measurements in general. Yeah. So as those numbers are calculated, you donβt need a high-level test. To do this. Ok. I like that. So itβs a very important component to look at. But as we advance and weβre dealing with high-performance athletes, people want to know and you can take a sport like, letβs say, just wrestling, for example, you got these individuals. Or soccer. Huge. Weβre dealing with to assess a tight BMI or in a tight body mass index. You got to have body fat. You got to have body fat to be able to sustain the loads of an exercise routine. Youβre going to see that during season you got some guys that got some good body fat density. Right. And letβs say their weight class is 198, for example. And the guy is about 215 pounds. Well, if he drops from 215 to 198 overnight, heβs going to be exorbitantly exhausted. And this is something that weβre going to see now if he slowly works towards the goal towards the arena of 198 over a period of two weeks. Or he is better off. But letβs assume he gets there to the exact bodyweight 198 and its 3 days before competition, right? Itβs going to be exhausting. Heβs gonna be tired. However, if he can get there two weeks earlier and adapt his body as his body starts getting better, it will be able to respond better during the loads that it needs.
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[00:26:31] And this is what we are talking about, that it needs to be sports specific. You follow me Alex? Exactly. So that same conversation cannot be held with a soccer player. Exactly. A football player and a tennis player or anything in that what I call long aerobics exertion of over, you know, over, letβs say 10, 15 minutes. And this is whatβs happening is and I love it when you said that example with wrestlers, you know, I would say the same goes towards MMA fighters, which I take care of. Yes. MMA fighters in Phoenix and in different areas that then youβre talking about also boxers. Again, they have to make weight. Yes. Ok. Though the world of making weight is a beast, that is a world where you have to be on or youβre going to die. Exactly. You either go into that fight feeling like a beast or youβre praying that it ends quickly. And so. Yeah. Yeah. You gotta pin him in the first 10 seconds. Yes. So. So this is where itβs so important that the training, the measurements, the analytics, and metrics. Weβre in a world of analytics and metrics, Alex. Weβre not in a world of. Oh, he looks good.
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[00:28:09] No, no, weβre past that. Weβre way past. No, Mario, weβre in the world of making sure that when we wait, when we compare the athlete, we can measure their changes. And every stage down the road as they compete, as they become more and more in tune to that moment of competition, their body changes, their bodies adapt, their bodies become more refined. And as the season gets better or further along in the season, towards the competitions, towards the season, towards the heavy loads. Yeah. Thatβs when we can kind of see how the bodyβs changing. So these tests can actually help us determine how the body reacts. And once these competitors have years of competing and during those years they have offseason and on the season and we need to be able to measure those things in an easy way. Thatβs what these tests do in terms of tennis, for example, when youβve done these kind of things. What have you noticed in terms of, letβs say, just the athlete of tennis or even the boxers that you deal with? What have you noticed in terms of the, specifically theβ¦
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[00:29:15] Progression through the season. Itβs critical, itβs critical and Alex, I can tell you this, that itβs not just performance. The other conversation that I think really needs to be. Dialed in is recovery, recovery, Alex. Ok. And the other one that fits together with recovery is the phase angle. Yes. And decreasing injuries. Exactly. Thatβs where it kind of gets real, real crazy because you can not have this sustainable pattern. Without recovery and without that specificity and knowing when to push it, one to max out, as they say, and when to shut it down or when to go half-speed, and these are conversations that are really, really critical for young athletes. Alex. Yeah, I see a lot of them, you know, and theyβre starting nowadays. Theyβre starting earlier. Theyβre starting at six and seven years old. Six and seven. I mean, tell your body hasnβt even woke up to the conversation of sports yet. And they are practicing three times a week, having games every weekend, or some of them practice three times a week with one team and then go with another team and practice the other two days just so they can be at their best peak.
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[00:30:48] What sports are you dealing with that kids are doing at six or seven?
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[00:30:53] Theyβre running like right now. I have patients that are doing basketball and track at the same time.
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[00:31:01] Yeah. And during middle school.
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[00:31:05] Thatβs amazing. This is crazy. Yeah. So this is my question. Our question. Weβre here to help the community. Weβre here to help the parents because their vision is my little kidβs gonna be a superstar, right. Heβs going to sign a D1 contract. UT Austin, Texas tag, guns up, baby. Yeah, guns up or U of A. You have Wildcats wildcat.
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[00:31:34] No, you know walk-ins.
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[00:31:35] Yes. And Iβm thinking youβre not gonna make it past high school. I mean, youβre not gonna make it past Montwood or past Franklin. I mean, you are going to hit the wall so hard, so hard with repetitive traumas. Ok. And so those are the components that to me as a health care provider, as a, you know, a sports functional medicineβ¦
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[00:32:05] Cognitive.
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[00:32:08] Coach, I mean, I need to teach people this, forget taking care of injuries. I want to teach you so you donβt get injured. Itβs critical. And then they go into middle school and high school and thereβs no season off. There is no season off.
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[00:32:24] So in your opinion, what have you seen these tests do in order to help the parent or the athlete or the individual or the coach, for that matter? Understand, as a form of betterment for them? What do we get out of these tests in terms of the athlete?
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[00:32:46] Very simple. There is a time to turn it on and a time to turn it off. Ok. So, you reach your goal, rest. Ok. Youβve done the tournament, recover, get the recovery, get the mind and body to recover, Alex. A lot of times we donβt even think about the mind. Yeah, the mind gets beat up in the war, in the battlefield of performance, the mind gets beat up. Yes. Ok. It affects your sleep pattern. It affects your focus. Emotions, anger management, all of those things. So what I would say is weβre here to share knowledge and tools or health. But most of all, for performance. Yes. So that way. Each child and each person, letβs say youβre not in middle school, high school. Letβs say youβre in your 20s and 30s and 40s. Well, youβre performing for life. And so letβs really invite everyone to learn more to look up BMI, BMR, all of these and incorporate them into their plan of workouts and challenge them and ask them, whenβs the last time you got measured? How about that? Yeah.
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[00:34:13] Whenβs the last time? We have to kind of teach people that these tests are not, you know, at any point. Just one test. You have to follow through these tests for a lifetime to see whatβs actually going on. If you really have a center where you can go and the BIA tests are so simple now that we and the correlation between the highest level of research show that weβre very, very tight. Less than 1 percent variation from clinical research methods. So we know that the BIA works in terms of extremity inflammation, in terms of joint swelling, in terms of the metabolic processes for the mass density in theβ¦
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[00:34:56] In each extremity. So if you have one muscle that is larger on one side as a result of an injury from the other extremity, weβll be able to see the changes.
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[00:35:05] So the studies are very clear now. We use phase angles to determine health. We use fat analysis. We use the changes and the progression during a very athletic era or a very athletic season is very important to be able to determine. So that today weβre starting the children a lot younger. Weβre starting them at four, five, six years old as the child has to around 4 years old, as long as he can focus is in long as he can pay attention. Thatβs when we start him active. So it is wise to start the process of understanding the metabolism methods that we use to calculate body mass index through their ages so that we have a measurement of whatβs normal for that particular child. Because what we really have to see is whatβs good for that individual. Specific gravity is another method to determine if youβre cutting down too much. But thatβs another topic running. This particular issue is, particularly on the body mass index. And what we want to do is we want to bring that to the towns and to El Paso, particularly because we have those research capacities here, specifically the ones that we have liked is, you know, body mass index so InBody is one of the most top used. They use it at UTEP. They use it at the top research centers. And itβs pretty much the standard now. And, you know, and since we use it, it offers us an ability to quickly assess an individual. Iβve been at UTEP. Iβve seen the types that they use and itβs very accurate. And since weβve seen the research said that it follows now we know that this stuff is very accurate. And specifically, now you can actually assess your own and have it online and the determinant through methods where you can keep up with your child, see whatβs going on. Any other ideas, any other comments that you have, Mario, in terms of bringing this logic or this kind of approach to understanding basal metabolic indexes to the public?
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[00:37:10] I would say, Alex. Number one, letβs make it very simple. You know, letβs make it very simple. So with that, this is as simple as getting on a scale to see how much you weigh. Thatβs it. So letβs bring that conversation to everyone so everyone gets a scan. Minimal. Minimal. I would say seasonal every season. You should get a scan. You should get a BMI. You should have you should log it in just like your weight. You know, letβs be functional. Letβs think of ourselves as important as our cars. Right. So. So I look at it as you have a little tag up on your windshield that says oil change, you know. So why donβt we do this? Why donβt we have? And I really challenge everyone listening. And, you know, weβre here because we need to take care of our community. You know, our community is probably one of the highest rates of diabetes in the nation. Ok. And all of that startsβ¦ Mario. Mario. Yeah. Yeah.
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[00:38:20] Iβm sorry. I donβt want to say it, but you have to. Thereβs a big elephant in the room. But El Paso, our town was considered the fattest, sweatiest town in the whole United States at one point. That sickened me when I heard it. It was a different town. We are much more advanced. There were very few gyms. Now weβre all about fitness. So if weβre gonna be the leaders out there and man, I gotta tell you, we got some beautiful athletes coming out of El Paso now. Absolutely. We are one of the tops. We can put our athletes against the best, even the most. Well-bred. Top schools. So as we compete in those areas, we really want to use the tools that all the other places use in order to assess our athletes, our children, and our high-performance individuals. So itβs very important we do that kind of stuff now because we have the technology. And no longer is El Paso going to be the fattest, sweetest town of the United States. Thatβs unforgivable. You definitely agree with that.
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[00:39:23] So just bring in that and the division that I would like to share. Is that the measurement, the simplicity of just getting your weight and your height is now complemented with a BMI that you understand. You have some goals. Itβs 2020. Yeah, yeah. Itβs 2020, baby. You know what, 2020 means that letβs do better than last year. Letβs be healthier than last year and let us integrate and have a better understanding and better objective plan for our own health. And with this, I would say this test and the body measurement index is a word and an understanding that needs to be spread throughout families. So the family can talk about that, like, hey, what are we doing? How are we doing? Ok. And then with that, use it accordingly. Ok. Accordingly. To create positive outcomes where there is just to be able to play with your child if you have children. Thatβs your sport. Your sport is not to sit and watch. Your sport is to participate. Throw the ball. Kick the ball. Run with your child. Or if your child is really into sports. Give him the tools. Give her the best tools. Theyβre not that expensive. Now theyβre available. So that way they can get training that is on point and results that are extraordinary.
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[00:41:04] Exactly. I couldnβt have said it better myself. We have the technology. Itβs here. This is not the six million dollar man, kind of world or this is not outside of our realm. We can give it to our kids. We can show them, parents become the educators.
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[00:41:22] They are the ones that seek out the coaches. They are the ones that are the nutritionist for the children. They are the ones that are the psychologists that every aspect of developing a child requires a lot of different aspects. So those parents that have athletes, athletes that want to learn more about their bodies and the world of heavy tech research methods are over. Now, itβs simple. You get on scale really accurate methods and you can monitor your body a few times a year, two, three, four times a year, depending on your type of sport and your level of performance. These are the things we can do. And we need to provide that information so that you have tools in order to gage.
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[00:42:11] You canβt get in a car without looking at a speedometer. So if donβt know how fast youβre going. You donβt know if youβve gone too far. You donβt know if youβre having protein metabolic catabolism, which is breakdown or if youβre anabolic. So these are the tools that help us figure things out. You donβt know if certain joints or certain extremities are swollen because of just water or if itβs this protein breakdown. These tools we can actually see inside the body and monitor the improvement or changes. So the world changed. So now El Paso, we have the ability to change the way we understand our own physiology as well as the patientβs physiology and our clientβs physiology. So I welcome this technology. And by no means is it limited to anything that we do. This is many providers in the town who can do this. Many hospitals have it. But for a facility, itβs within our practices as well. So we use those things. So I look forward to being able to share this with the patients as well as the town.
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[00:43:15] Absolutely.
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[00:43:16] I second emotion on that, Alex, and the challenge and the motivation and passion that weβre going to have this year in 2020. Absolutely.
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[00:43:26] As to not only motivate and be cheerleaders for functional health and fitness, but also to educate and empower the community with the latest technology and knowledge so they can do their best.
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[00:43:43] Amen, brother. This is awesome. And I look forward to being able to continue. Weβre going to be coming at you often because weβre motivated.
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[00:43:53] Weβre parents and we want to be able to touch our El Paso and make it a better place because, you know, without getting too crazy, weβre pretty badass, as they say.
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[00:44:04] Right. Yeah. Weβre pretty intense in our town, right? Yeah.
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[00:44:07] Mario. Donβt get me started.
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[00:44:11] Theyβre gonna shut me down. No, no, no, no.
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[00:44:16] We wonβt do that later, guys. Weβll go ahead and see the show. And itβs been a blessing. So from all of us here, we can actually see how you guys are doing. So. Blessings to you guys. Thank you, guys. Bye-bye.
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Professional Scope of Practice *
The information herein on this entire blog site is not intended to replace a one-on-one relationship with a qualified healthcare professional or licensed physician and is not medical advice. We encourage you to make healthcare decisions based on your research and partnership with a qualified healthcare professional.
Blog Information & Scope Discussions
Our information scope is limited to Chiropractic, musculoskeletal, physical medicines, wellness, contributing etiological viscerosomatic disturbances within clinical presentations, associated somatovisceral reflex clinical dynamics, subluxation complexes, sensitive health issues, and/or functional medicine articles, topics, and discussions.
We provide and present clinical collaboration with specialists from various disciplines. Each specialist is governed by their professional scope of practice and their jurisdiction of licensure. We use functional health & wellness protocols to treat and support care for the injuries or disorders of the musculoskeletal system.
Our videos, posts, topics, subjects, and insights cover clinical matters, issues, and topics that relate to and directly or indirectly support our clinical scope of practice.*
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Dr. Alex Jimenez DC, MSACP, RN*, CCST, IFMCP*, CIFM*, ATN*
email: coach@elpasofunctionalmedicine.com
Licensed as a Doctor of Chiropractic (DC) in Texas & New Mexico*
Texas DC License # TX5807, New Mexico DC License # NM-DC2182
Licensed as a Registered Nurse (RN*) in Florida
Florida License RN License # RN9617241 (Control No. 3558029)
Compact Status: Multi-State License: Authorized to Practice in 40 States*
Graduate with Honors: ICHS: MSN-FNP (Family Nurse Practitioner Program)
Degree Granted. Masters in Family Practice MSN Diploma (Cum Laude)
Dr. Alex Jimenez DC, MSACP, MSN-FNP, RN* CIFM*, IFMCP*, ATN*, CCST
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