Fasting Diet Just As Effective As Restricted Calorie Diet, Study Says
An alternate-day fasting diet didn't do better at curbing weight loss than a more traditional calorie-restricting one – but that doesn't mean you should throw it away like that extra helping of chocolate cake.
According to a new small study
published in JAMA Internal Medicine, people who followed an
alternate-day fasting diet didn't have significantly divergent weight
loss results than those under a daily calorie restriction.
Researchers looked at 100 obese adults – 86
women and 14 men – from October 2011 to January 2015 as part of the
trial. For one year, patients were put into separate groups. An
alternate-day fasting group would eat 25 percent of their calorie needs
on so-called "fast days," followed by 125 percent on a "feast" day.
Another group only ate 75 percent of their calorie needs per day, while
the final group didn't receive any diet intervention.
The study found an average weight loss of 6
percent in the alternate-day fasting group compared to 5.3 percent in
the daily calorie-restriction group. The results didn't match the
study's hypothesis, which sought to determine how effective the diet
would be.
Diet
adherence turned out to be better in the calorie-restriction group,
even though the alternate-day group got to eat whatever they wanted
every other day.
Study author Krista A. Varady
stressed to U.S. News that this doesn't rule out the diet as a viable
option. Even on the feast days, the participants ate less than they
would typically eat. Varady thinks this is why they lost the same amount
of weight.
"It's not really a negative result," Varady, of
the of the University of Illinois at Chicago, said. "This diet just
doesn't happen to do better than a traditional approach, but it still is
an effective diet for weight loss."
Not everyone completed the study, with the
largest dropout rate coming from the alternate-day fasting group at 13
out of 34 people, compared to 10 out of 35 in the daily
calorie-restriction group and 8 out of 31 in the control group.
"Taken together, these findings suggest that
alternate-day fasting may be less sustainable in the long term, compared
with daily calorie restriction, for most obese individuals," according
to the study. "Nevertheless, it is still possible that a certain smaller
segment of obese
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