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Calculadora de Calorías

Calcular necesidades calóricas diarias (TDEE) basado en TMB y nivel de actividad

1,649kcal/day
BMR
2,556kcal/day
TDEE (Daily Calories)
⚠️ Disclaimer: This tool is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a qualified healthcare provider before making any health-related decisions.

How Calculadora de Calorías Works

A Calorie Calculator is a comprehensive energy-management utility used to determine your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE). By combining your Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) with your physical activity levels, this tool provides a roadmap for Weight Loss, Maintenance, or Muscle Gain. It is the primary tool for nutritional planning and sports performance optimization.

Implementation & Processing Pipeline

The analysis engine calculates your energy needs through a multi-stage nutritional pipeline:

  1. BMR Calculation: The tool first determines your resting energy floor using the Mifflin-St Jeor Equation.
  2. Activity Factor Modulation: The engine applies the Katch-McArdle Activity Multipliers (Physical Activity Levels) to account for daily movement:
    • Sedentary: 1.2\n * Moderate Exercise: 1.55\n * Heavy Exercise: 1.9
  3. TDEE Determination: The final "TDEE" is generated: TDEE = BMR × Activity Factor.
  4. Goal Alignment: Based on your target (e.g., "Lose 0.5kg per week"), the tool subtracts or adds a "Caloric Buffer" (typically 500 calories for weight loss).
  5. Reactive Macro Breakdown: The tool provides a suggested breakdown of Proteins, Fats, and Carbohydrates tailored to your energy total.

How It's Tested

We validate the calculator against established medical formulas to ensure safe and accurate results.

  1. The "Mifflin-St Jeor" Accuracy Check:
    • Action: Input: Male, 100kg, 180cm, 30 years old.
    • Expected: BMR must equal exactly (10*100) + (6.25*180) - (5*30) + 5 = 1000 + 1125 - 150 + 5 = 1980 kcal.
  2. The "Activity Multiplier" Test:
    • Action: Compare "Sedentary" (1.2x) vs "Heavy Exercise" (1.9x) for the same profile.
    • Expected: The TDEE should scale linearly without changing the BMR base.
  3. The "Under-Eating" Safety Check:
    • Action: Set a goal "Lose 2kg per week" (dangerous deficit) and Activity to 0.
    • Expected: The tool defaults to the BMR floor, preventing unsafe calorie suggestions.
  4. The "Macro Split" Verification:
    • Action: Check the sum of Protein (4kcal/g) + Carbs (4kcal/g) + Fat (9kcal/g).
    • Expected: The total nutritional energy must match the TDEE within a 1% margin of error.

The History of the "Calorie" and Wilbur Atwater

The concept of measuring food as heat-energy transformed human health in the late 19th century.

  • Wilbur Olin Atwater (1887): The "Father of American Nutrition Science" conducted the first large-scale studies on the "Fuel Value" of food. He used a Bomb Calorimeter to burn food samples and measure the resulting heat. He established the "Atwater Factors" (4-9-4) still used on nutrition labels today.
  • The Harris-Benedict Equation (1919): The first BMR formula.
  • The Mifflin-St Jeor Equation (1990): The modern standard, considered more accurate for today's lifestyles.

Frequently Asked Questions

Technically, yes. One kilocalorie (kcal) is the amount of heat energy needed to raise the temperature of one kilogram of water by one degree Celsius.

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