The low down on Intermittent Fasting

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The low down on Intermittent Fasting

Why has intermittent fasting (IF) become so popular in the past few years?

One of the main reasons is simplicity. There are a million and one diets that involve specific foods or nutrients, but IF skirts all those details. Let’s see what the main types of IF are, and what the evidence shows about weight loss and other health effects.

Intermittent Fasting variants:
Also known as time-restricted feeding,[1] IF alternates periods of normal food intake with extended periods (usually 16–48 h) of low-to-no food intake. This approach lends itself to different variants, including those:

Alternate-Day Fasting (also known as Alternate-Day Modified Fasting).
This diet can take different forms: you can eat over 12 hours then fast for 36 hours; you can eat over 24 hours then fast for 24 hours; or you can eat normally over 24 hours then eat very little (about 500 kcal) over the next 24 hours.

Eat-Stop-Eat. You fast or severely restrict calories for 24 hours, either at regular intervals (two days per week in the 5:2 Diet) or just from time to time.

Random Meal Skipping. You skip meals at random throughout the week.

Feeding Window. You can only eat during a set period of time every day (from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m, for instance).

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Should you decide to try intermittent fasting, pick a variant you think you can stick with for at least a few weeks.


Effects on Weight
Yes, IF works, though to very different degrees in different studies.[2] This variability could be explained by different factors, among which is the specific IF variant studied. For instance, simply skipping breakfast led to some weight loss in one study[3] but not in another.[4] In each of those two studies, the control group was provided with a standard breakfast, such as oatmeal, but neither group was restricted in what they could eat the rest of the day.

It’s also possible that people with more weight to lose may benefit more from an IF approach, but one thing is sure: if you compensate for the meals you skipped by eating more later in the day, or the next day, or the next, you won’t lose weight. The weight-loss equation is simple: you need to ingest less calories than you burn. IF is just one way to make this happen, but it is a way that some people find easier than the more common “eat smaller meals” approach.

To lose weight, you need to burn more than you eat — or, conversely, to eat less than you burn. Some people find this goal easier to reach through intermittent fasting than through the traditional “smaller meals” approach.


Effects on Health
The body of evidence on IF is still relatively small, but a growing number of studies have reported improvements in various health markers aside from weight, notably lipids.[1] Further, those studies suggest that IF may provide unique metabolic benefits over the “eat smaller meals” approach.

The most intriguing of those benefits, but also the most debated, is a longer life. Fasting can kick-start some regenerative processes in the body,[5] and extended lifespans from caloric restriction have been reported in many animal models[6] (but not all[7]). Keep in mind, however, that those animals were either fed low-calorie diets or rotated through periods of fasting for most of their lives. It is unknown if IF can extend the lifespan of human beings, and if it can, which variant is best and how many weeks, months, or years are required to make a difference.

Assessing the potential metabolic benefits of IF is a long-term endeavor. As a systematic review of the literature noted in 2015,[8] preliminary evidence looks promising, but solid research is still sparse, so that “further research in humans is needed before the use of fasting as a health intervention can be recommended”.

Preliminary evidence suggests that fasting could have unique metabolic benefits, including life extension, but those need to be confirmed by further research in humans.


Other Considerations
Depending on the length of your fast, you may experience stress, headaches, constipation, or dehydration. Staying hydrated is particularly important; it’ll also help mitigate any headaches or constipation.

Some preliminary evidence suggests that a periodic reduction of caloric intake may produce physiological benefits similar to those of fasting. A fast-mimicking diet is a strategy where, instead of completely forgoing food, you simply consume a low-calorie diet for 5 days straight each month.[9] The typical protocol entails eating 1,090 kcal (10% protein, 56% fat, 34% carb) on the first day, then 725 kcal (9% protein, 44% fat, 47% carb) on each of the next four days.

Keep in mind that IF is not for everyone. People with impaired glycemic control should avoid fasting, as it causes poorer glucose response.[10] Also, if you’re attempting to build muscle mass, are pregnant, underweight, younger than 18, or have a history of disordered eating, IF is probably not for you.

Intermittent fasting is a viable strategy to slim down or maintain a healthy weight. In that respect, however, continual caloric restriction (the traditional “eat smaller meals” diet) offers similar benefits. What matters most is consistency. People who find eating less often easier than eating less could especially benefit from trying IF. As for unique metabolic health benefits of fasting … the debate is still ongoing.

References

Mattson MP, Longo VD, Harvie M Impact of intermittent fasting on health and disease processes . Ageing Res Rev. (2016)
Tinsley GM, La Bounty PM Effects of intermittent fasting on body composition and clinical health markers in humans . Nutr Rev. (2015)
Geliebter A, et al Skipping breakfast leads to weight loss but also elevated cholesterol compared with consuming daily breakfasts of oat porridge or frosted cornflakes in overweight individuals: a randomised controlled trial . J Nutr Sci. (2014)
Betts JA, et al The causal role of breakfast in energy balance and health: a randomized controlled trial in lean adults . Am J Clin Nutr. (2014)
Longo VD, Mattson MP Fasting: molecular mechanisms and clinical applications . Cell Metab. (2014)
Masoro EJ Overview of caloric restriction and ageing . Mech Ageing Dev. (2005)
Mattison JA, et al Impact of caloric restriction on health and survival in rhesus monkeys from the NIA study . Nature. (2012)
Horne BD, Muhlestein JB, Anderson JL Health effects of intermittent fasting: hormesis or harm? A systematic review . Am J Clin Nutr. (2015)
Wei M, et al Fasting-mimicking diet and markers/risk factors for aging, diabetes, cancer, and cardiovascular disease . Sci Transl Med. (2017)
Jakubowicz D, et al Fasting until noon triggers increased postprandial hyperglycemia and impaired insulin response after lunch and dinner in individuals with type 2 diabetes: a randomized clinical trial . Diabetes Care. (2015)


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You do IF don't you GF? How are you getting on with it?
 
You do IF don't you GF? How are you getting on with it?

It's more like enforced IF, once we get a job there's no food until its completed which can be hours..

I think alot of these fat diets "whatever you might call them", might produce a slight edge in normal people, but once you bring exogenous hormones into the equation I don't think it really matters...
 
I love IF but I have to mindful as it's easy for me to fall into binge eating if not tracked. High doses of t3 and/or tren and IF becomes a binge-purge scenario for me. Overall it's my preferred way of dieting as I can generally eat til I'm full for dinner and still be way under my maintenance. Few times myfitnesspal got mad at me as I under ate waaaaay too much.
 
For me, the best time and place for IF is managing hunger while in a substantial deficit. I used it a bit over the past month because I went on an impulsive mini-cut to look more shredded when I went on a trip with a FWB from another city (she put her hands on my shirt-covered stomach while we were kissing and actually stopped kissing me just to rub my stomach and moan...not saying I do this to get girls but I'm not complaining about such moments :)). But ya, if I do a big drop in calories, I like to adjust to it with IF. Small frequent meals drive me insane.

I have been doing some two-a-day splits recently, though, and IF really does not go with that at all.

I'm still skeptical that cerberus peribus IF has any direct effects on fat loss/recomp or metabolism dynamics, though.
 
Interesting article about ghrelin (aka the "hunger hormone") and neurogenesis. Other positive mental benefits are discussed as well.

What I don't know is whether ghrelin would increase more/less on IF if everything else is equated. People talk about being less hungry doing IF than frequent small meals, but it is probably not as simple as "I feel hungry, therefore ghrelin must be up."
 
I think that's essentially unanswerable at the moment because we just don't know enough (eg about what triggers release etc). It's also a mind-numbingly complex field, with so many interacting messengers related to metabolism and appetite. I would tend to err on the side of a decent degree of pulsatility being desirable at the moment (so fasting and filling). But all I really know is that I know enough to know that I don't know enough ;) For now our best bet is going to be real-world studies of outcomes, when we get them.
 
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