Take A Two Week Break From Your Diet? It May Help You Lose Weight.
Is the key to losing weight tossing your diet to the side?
It just may be—at least for a small break, that is, as a new study in
the International Journal of Obesity suggests.
In the study, 51 obese men
were split into two weight loss groups: One took on 16 weeks of continuous
dieting, eating 33 percent fewer calories than would be necessary to maintain
their weight. The second took “diet breaks.” They stuck to that same diet for
two weeks, then “broke” the diet for two weeks, during which they ate the
number of calories necessary to maintain their weight. They kept up this
pattern so they had 16 total weeks of dieting, too.
Six months after their dieting expert ended, those the
diet cyclers ended up about 18 pounds lighter than those who dieted straight
through.
So how did this
work? When you’re losing weight, your body goes through a process called
adaptive thermogenesis, says obesity expert Spencer Nadolsky, D.O., author of The Fat Loss Prescription.
“Your metabolism (resting metabolic rate) is expected to lower because
fat and muscle burn calories at rest. Your resting metabolism is based off your
weight. So when you lose weight, it should decrease,” Dr. Nadolsky explains. Related: Why You Regain Weight After You Stop Your Diet.
Simply put,
this means your metabolism slows down even more than expected to compensate the
fact you're giving it less energy, making it harder to lose weight.
This metabolic
process, called adaptative thermogenesis, is reduced when diet breaks happen.
It may be due to leptin levels, the hormone responsible for inhibiting hunger
and telling your body you’re full.
“If you lower
your caloric intake, leptin goes down. When you lose weight, leptin levels go
down. So if you periodically stop dieting and increase your calories, leptin
goes up without regaining weight,” says Dr. Nadolsky.
And by reducing
the adaptative thermogenesis process, it can keep your metabolism revving, and
help you lose more weight.
Still, there
are a couple of caveats with the study you should know. First, the study didn’t
measure physical activity, so it’s possible that the men who broke their diet
were more active, which, of course, could lead to greater calorie burn.
Secondly, participants were
provided their meals, which were carefully selected to make sure they hit the
calorie requirements. That’s not how it works in the real world, where you're
left to fend for yourself and make food choices every time you eat.
So it’s possible that when you
take a “break” from your diet, you may end up eating more than your maintenance
calorie amount.
But that also may help explain
why the diet break can be a good choice for sustainable weight loss, says Dr.
Nadolsky.
“It is possible that the diet
breaks would allow for more adherence during the restriction periods, thus
allowing more weight loss in the end,” he says.
Should You
Use Diet Breaks to Help You Lose Weight?
While this study was done on
obese guys, it’s possible that men who aren't obese but are looking to lose a
few pounds can still benefit from this approach.
"You see similar
approaches with guys going into physique competitions. They call it calorie
cycling. As long as the energy deficit is there, it should work," says Dr.
Nadolsky.
First, determine how many
calories you want to cut for your “dieting phase.” A good rule of thumb is 33
percent—the same amount used in the study, he says. So calculate how many calories
a day you normally eat when you’re maintaining weight, and subtract 33 percent
from that.
Follow this for two weeks at
time. Then, during your “diet break,” eat your normal amount of calories. Your
“diet break” should last two weeks, after which you’d repeat the cycle.
Just a couple reminders for
your “break:” It shouldn’t be a free-for-all “cheat” period. Remember, if
you want to model your plan after the study, you should be eating at your
maintenance during your “break” days. It’s not giving you free rein to eat
everything in sight. Related: Should You Have A Cheat Day? Cheating Yourself or Cheating the System.
“Don’t to think of it as a
‘refeed’ or total diet break. You’ll be at a lower calorie
maintenance level after each weight loss cycle, so you shouldn't eat as much as
you were before the weight loss,” says Dr. Nadolsky. “It will just be a break
from the hard cutting, but not overall.”
So even when you’re
“breaking,” you still should be making healthy choices, like lots of lean
protein, whole grains, and vegetables, while cutting back on processed foods.
But it’s not that you can’t have a little fun—just plan
accordingly.
“You can have treats during
that break phase as long as it doesn't go much over your new calculated
maintenance level,” says Dr. Nadolsky.
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