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Weight Loss Diet Works Better When You Take a Break In Between

by Julia Samuel on September 19, 2017 at 2:40 PM
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Highlights

A two-week break from continuous dieting improves weight loss and reduces weight regain. Avoiding continuous dieting may be the key to losing weight and keeping the kilos off, the latest University of Tasmania research shows.


Reducing the food intake or changing the quality of foods that are included in the diet are the two main strategies in a weight loss diet plan. Even though it is strictly followed, there is a stagnating phase which may increase the chances of quitting.

‘Two-week intermittent diet proves to be a more successful means of weight loss compared with continuous dieting.’

To find a solution for the problem, a research team alternated a calorie restricted diet and food intake. The results are surprising.

An Alternative Weight Loss Diet Plan

In a randomised controlled trial, the body's 'famine reaction' to continued dieting and its impact on weight loss in men with obesity was investigated.

During the study, two groups of participants took part in a 16-week diet which cut calorie intake by one third. One group maintained the diet continuously for 16 weeks while the other maintained the diet for two weeks, then broke from the diet for two weeks eating simply to keep their weight stable, and repeated this cycle for 30 weeks in total to ensure 16 weeks of dieting.

Those in the intermittent diet group not only lost more weight, but also gained less weight after the trial finished.

The intermittent diet group maintained an average weight loss of 8 kg more than the continuous diet group, six months after the end of the diet.

Professor Byrne said while researchers in the past had shown that as dieting continued weight loss became more difficult, this latest MATADOR (Minimising Adaptive Thermogenesis And Deactivating Obesity Rebound) study looked more closely at ways to lessen the famine response and improve weight loss success.

How Does Intermittent Dieting Work?

Head of the University of Tasmania's School of Health Sciences Professor Nuala Byrne, who led the study with a team of collaborators from Queensland University of Technology and the University of Sydney, said dieting altered a series of biological processes in the body, which led to slower weight loss, and possibly weight gain.

"When we reduce our energy (food) intake during dieting, resting metabolism decreases to a greater extent than expected; a phenomenon termed 'adaptive thermogenesis' - making weight loss harder to achieve," Professor Byrne said.

"This 'famine reaction', a survival mechanism which helped humans to survive as a species when food supply was inconsistent in millennia past, is now contributing to our growing waistlines when the food supply is readily available."

Professor Byrne said while this two-week intermittent diet proved to be a more successful means of weight loss compared with continuous dieting, other popular diets which included cycles of several days of fasting and feasting were not any more effective that continuous dieting.

"There is a growing body of research which has shown that diets which use one to seven day periods of complete or partial fasting alternated with ad libitum food intake, are not more effective for weight loss than conventional continuous dieting," she said.

"While further investigations are needed around this intermittent dieting approach, findings from this study provide preliminary support for the model as a superior alternative to continuous dieting for weight loss."

Reference

  1. Byrne N M et al., Intermittent energy restriction improves weight loss efficiency in obese men-The MATADOR study, International Journal of Obesity (2017) http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ijo.2017.206.


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