Crash diets can help lose weight, reverse diabetes and reduce high blood pressure but they also affect the heart’s function.
Highlights
- Crash diets may help lose weight but they affect the functioning of the heart.
- Very Low-calorie diets have a very low-calorie content of 600 to 800 kcal per day.
- After a week, the ability of the heart to pump blood reduced but later improved after 7 weeks.
- The sudden dip in the function of the heart can be a caution in adopting a very low-calorie diet in those with heart disease.
This study used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to investigate the impact of a very low-calorie diet on heart function and the distribution of fat in the abdomen, liver, and heart muscle.
The study included 21 obese volunteers. The average age was 52 years, average body mass index (BMI) was 37 kg/m2, and six were men. Participants consumed a very low-calorie diet of 600 to 800 kcal per day for eight weeks. MRI was performed at the start of the study and after one and eight weeks.
Crash Diet - What Does it do to the body?
- After one week, total body fat, visceral fat and liver fat had all significantly fallen by an average of 6%, 11%, and 42%, respectively.
- Improvements in insulin resistance, fasting total cholesterol, triglycerides, glucose and blood pressure.
- After one week, heart fat content had risen by 44%. This was associated with a deterioration in heart function, including the heart’s ability to pump blood.
- By eight weeks, heart fat content and function had improved beyond what they had been before the diet began and all other measurements including body fat and cholesterol were continuing to improve.
More research is needed to discover the impact of the acute reduction in heart function. In people with existing heart problems, it might exacerbate their condition - for example aggravating heart failure symptoms like shortness of breath or increasing the risk of arrhythmias.
She added that very low-calorie diets do have benefits and do not need to be avoided. "Otherwise healthy people may not notice the change in heart function in the early stages," she said. "But caution is needed in people with heart disease."
Reference
- Lean M.E.J. et al., ‘Crash diets’ cause acute impairment of cardiac function with associated myocardial lipid accumulation.’ Lancet (2017). doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(17)33102-1.
Source-Medindia