When trying to lose
weight, the specific diet plan you're on might not matter much. What experts
say gets you pound-shedding results is an equation called CICO or
"calories in, calories out." For weight loss to work, you have to
restrict calories in some way, so it doesn't quite make a difference if you're
eating keto, Whole30, Paleo, or gluten-free, so long as you're making sure you
take in less calories than you're burning.
What Are the Origins of the CICO Diet?
"In 1780, French
scientist Antoine Lavoisier used a guinea pig to measure heat production
as a way to measure energy (or calories) in food," explains Dr. Deena Solomon, a Los
Angeles-based weight-management expert and cognitive behavioral psychotherapist
and author of Immaculate Consumption: The Path to Lifelong Weight
Management. Lavoisier devised a mathematical formula that could be easily
calculated.
Measuring energy (or
calories), he came up with the name calorimeter for a device to determine how
many calories are consumed when eating. "In the early 1920s, Dr. Lulu Hunt Peters, an
American doctor, came up with a simple formula based on Lavoisier's precise and
scientifically-proven equation: The one and only way to lose weight is to lower
calories. This became the universally accepted method for weight
reduction," Dr. Solomon says.
CICO and the idea of
calories in, calories out follows the notion that weight loss requires a
balance between the energy consumed and energy used. "Increasing your
calorie expenditure beyond what is consumed will result in the number on the
scale going down," says Dr. Adrienne
Youdim, an associate clinical professor of medicine at UCLA's David
Geffen School of Medicine and a diplomat of the American Board of Internal
Medicine, the National Board of Physician Nutrition Specialists, and the
American Board of Obesity Medicine.
Related: 6 Ways To Cut Calories Every Day
Everybody requires a
minimum number of calories to live. "This minimum number is called the
basal metabolic rate (BMR). Your BMR is the number of calories your organs need
to function while you perform no activity whatsoever," Dr. Solomon says.
You can think of it as the amount of energy you'd burn if you stayed in bed all
day. "The dieting community has determined once you know your BMR you can
use it to calculate the calories you actually burn in a day," Dr. Solomon
says. From there, you can determine how many calories you need to eat to gain
muscle, lose fat, or maintain your weight.
The fact is, it's quite
easy to calculate one's resting metabolism. Many gyms provide a machine that
measures this. "Sitting in a chair with the breathing contraption over
your nose breathing in and out for 10 minutes, at the end, the number is
available. Mine came out to be 1456," Dr. Solomon says. Since your basal
metabolic rate is based largely on involuntary functions like breathing and
pumping blood, changes in your day-to-day activity don't do much to raise or
lower this number. However, increasing muscle mass does increase BMR, because
muscle is metabolically "hungry" and it takes more energy to maintain
more muscle. This means that when you have a lot of muscle mass, you'll burn
more calories at rest.
All diets to date, rely on
what has become the universally accepted equation: lower calories you'll lose
weight. "This is the formula setting the standard for every current
weight-loss model," Dr. Solomon says. "Calorie counting becomes an
external reinforcement: the indicator of success — the scale (the ultimate
external reinforcement for weight loss)," Dr. Solomon says.
For many, this formula is
very effective for permanent weight management. Unfortunately calorie counting
for chronic overeaters as a way for permanent weight management has been shown
to be ineffective. "While caloric management has been the accepted way to
date to lose weight, meeting caloric expectation for permanent behavioural
changes has been shown to be ineffective for people who exhibit a high
frequency of 'non-hunger' eating events," Dr. Solomon says. The CICO
method can be an effective starting point, though. "Without skills for the
strategically manipulation of non-hunger eating events, overconsumers are
doomed to fail relying on caloric ceilings," Dr. Solomon says.
Will Following CICO Guarantee Weight Loss?
Counting the calories
you're consuming is fairly easy (though, admittedly not that much fun), but
what's tricky is accurately counting calories burned. "Calories are very
important, and people should be aware of how many they are consuming, but it's
almost impossible to know exactly how many calories someone is putting out
without doing a very detailed and expensive laboratory test to determine
output," says Alix Turoff, a registered dietitian. Wellness apps and gear,
like the Fitbit and the Apple Watch, can help, but you probably already know
the measurements provided are an approximation.
There's another
complication: calories are determined by their density and composition of fat,
protein, and carbs (or macronutrients) and those components all have different
ways of working in the body. "Carbohydrates are digested more quickly than
protein and fat, which might mean that someone who eats a diet high in
carbohydrates gets hungry quicker than someone who eats more protein or
fat," Turoff says. "Fat takes longer to digest than carbs, so it
keeps you fuller longer, but then protein has a higher thermic effect than
carbs, which means that the body uses more energy breaking it down, which
technically means it's putting more calories out," Turoff says.
We told you it's not that
simple, and that's why experts generally prefer counting macronutrients
for weight loss. "I always provide my clients with a range of what their
calorie needs are, but I also provide them with a range of macronutrients that
I feel will be best for them," Turoff says.
How Does CICO Fit With Other Popular Diet
Plans?
"In theory, if you
were to eat the same number of calories on any diet, whether it was
Paleo, Whole30, or Weight Watchers, your weight will generally remain the
same," Turoff says, adding that choosing a diet low on empty carbs and
high on protein and fat, like Paleo and Whole30, is still better to help your
weight-loss goals.
A keto diet is the one
exception, because of the physiological changes that take place while following
the eating plan. "A ketogenic diet forces the body out of carb-burning
mode, our natural state, and into fat-burning mode — this also happens in
starvation. In the absence of carbohydrates, our bodies are forced to burn fat
for fuel in the form of ketones," Turoff says.
Related: The Pros And Cons Of Going Keto
In terms of the quality of
calories, it still comes down to the macronutrient breakdown of the food.
"Protein and fat have a higher thermic effect meaning, it takes more
calories to break them down than carbohydrate," Turoff says. You also want
to think about how long different foods will keep you feeling full and
satiated, which will ultimately result in a net of fewer calories taken in, but
theoretically, 500 calories from McDonald's and 500 calories from organic
avocado toast will affect weight in a similar way if all things were equal.
The fact that these are
"whole foods" rather than "junk food" doesn't always change
the nutrition profile of the meal. While it may be better for long-term health
to stick with unprocessed foods, the bottom line when it comes to weight is not
so different. "Good for weight loss and healthy is not always the
same," Turoff says.
It's very possible to lose
weight eating a lot of junk food. "That may not be the best practice for
long-term health (cardiovascular disease, carcinogens, etc.), but when it comes
down to weight and weight management, your body understands calories, carbs,
fat, and protein and not organic, grass fed, non GMO. This is where focusing
purely on calories is a disservice to your body, but that said, a combination
of "calories in, calories Out" while taking into account
macronutrient profile and attention to quality of ingredients is the best route
to weight loss," Turoff says.
Part of the weight-loss
equation comes down to the way in which our bodies use calories. You should
consult a nutritionist before changing your diet plan, especially if you have a
condition like diabetes or polycystic ovary syndrome.
No comments:
Post a Comment