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Back to Weight Reduction Techniques

Diet Reduction

 
For good health we require energy-providing nutrients (protein, fat, and carbohydrate), vitamins, minerals, and water.
 

  Related
 
 

Weight Reduction Techniques
Common diets (Atkins, Ornish.. etc)
Obesity, hazards and complications
Caloric assessment calculators

 
   

No matter what diet you are on, if you eat less and lose weight you also lower your risk of heart disease and lead a healthier life.

Caloric intake is the cornerstone of obesity treatment. The fundamental goal is the sustained reduction of energy intake below that of energy expenditure. A wide variety of suggested diets exist that are designed to achieve this. The main diet regimens in use follow several general facts relevant to food intake and weight loss.

First, a deficit of 7500 kcal will produce a weight loss of approximately 1 kg. Therefore, eating 100 kcal/d less for a year should cause a 5-kg weight loss, and a deficit of 1000 kcal/d should cause a loss of approximately 1 kg per week. The rate of weight loss on a given caloric intake is related to the rate of energy expenditure.

Obese individuals have a higher metabolic rate than lean individuals, and men have a higher metabolic rate than women (due to their greater lean body mass); thus, the rate of weight loss is greater among the more obese and among men (relative to women). With chronic caloric restriction, metabolic rate diminishes, but because of reduced lean body mass (along with much greater loss in fat mass) and possibly because of other adaptations. This fall in metabolic rate with food restriction slows the rate of weight loss on a constant diet.

For information on common diet plans (Atkins, Ornish.. etc) click here!

Very low energy diets

Very low energy diets (e.g., 400 to 600 kcal/d) are widely used. The liquid protein diets popularized in the 1970s were proved to be unsafe, causing >60 deaths. Life-threatening arrhythmias were documented in the clinical research setting, a consequence of both low-quality protein and deficiencies of vitamins, minerals, and trace elements. These types of diets have now been substantially modified. A very low energy diet consisting of 45 to 70 g high-quality protein, 30 to 50 g carbohydrate, and approximately 2 g fat per day, as well as supplements of vitamins, minerals, and trace elements, appears to be safe in selected patients under medical supervision. Patients should not be started on such diets unless they are >130% of their ideal body weight. Contraindications include pregnancy, cancer, recent myocardial infarction, cerebrovascular disease, hepatic disease, or untreated psychiatric disease. When used in patients with diabetes who are receiving insulin or oral agent therapy, close supervision is required and diabetic treatment may need to be adjusted. Whenever possible, exercise regimens and behavioral modification approaches should be used in conjunction with the diet.

Advantages of very low calorie diets are the greater rate of weight loss compared to less restrictive diets, as well as the possible beneficial effect of hunger suppression brought about by the production of ketones. In patients on such diets, blood pressure, blood glucose, cholesterol, and triglyceride levels fall, and pulmonary function and exercise tolerance improve. Sleep apnea may improve within a few weeks. Complications of these very low energy diets are usually minor and include fatigue, constipation or diarrhea, dry skin, hair loss, menstrual irregularities, orthostatic dizziness, and difficulty concentrating. Cholelithiasis and pancreatitis may occur when such diets are interrupted by binge eating; gallstones have been shown to develop in as many as 25% of patients while on the diet.

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Low energy diets

Low-calorie diets,>800 kcal/d, are applicable to most patients and have fewer restrictions than the very low calorie diets. Considerable controversy has attended the question of which diet composition is most appropriate for promoting weight loss. Though commonly recommended, benefits resulting from very low fat diets are modest at best. Nonetheless, the health effects of low-fat diets -- apart from curbing obesity -- may be important. A diet rich in fruits, vegetables, and whole grains may promote weight loss and is preferable to low-fat diets in which large amounts of simple carbohydrates are substituted for fats. The latter may actually promote obesity. Some have advocated diets with protein replacement of simple carbohydrates in an effort to minimize insulin production. The efficacy of this strategy, aside from overall calorie reduction, is unknown.

High carbohydrate diets

The name of this diet is based on the concept that if you eat a very high starch/high fibre diet, you can actually eat a greater total weight of food than usual, and still lose body fat. As a result the diet advocates extremely high carbohydrate intake.

 

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