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The Winning Formula - Part 1
How to manipulate diet and exercise to look great naked
By Dr. John M Berardi, Ph.D.
First published at www.t-mag.com, Apr 12 2002.
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Introduction - Fat Is Beautiful?
While you T-men and T-vixens may find this difficult to believe, once
upon a time, fat was not abhorred the way it is today. In fact, to be
plump (not obese, of course) was viewed as a status symbol. Carrying around
a bit of excess body fat distinguished the nobility from the peasantry
and therefore became a sign of attractiveness, of beauty. But let's be
honest. Back then, stripped down to the most basic of levels, being fat
meant that you could afford to eat!
To illustrate this, here are a couple of interesting ideas that came about
just before the turn of the century:
- In the 1880's photographers were instructed that models "with
hollowed cheeks or visible collar-bones" should not be photographed
because the camera would accentuate these "defects."
- In addition, in 1882, Americans discouraged exercise, as they believed
that it "would burn excessive amounts of fat."
But in the late 1800's and early 1900's when industrialization took over
and food became easily available, even the lower and middle classes could
afford to become plump. Well, this certainly aggravated the upper class,
as they no longer could be distinguished by their rounded physiques. In
an effort to differentiate themselves from the lower and middle classes,
they decided to adopt a new ideal, and slim was now in.
The irony of it all is that as a result of this new ideal, healthy food
was in demand, and much the same as it is today, eating well became expensive.
So what happens is that the lower and middle classes can hardly afford
to be thin, while in the 1800's they could hardly afford to be fat.
So with this new standard in beauty and refinement set, the weight-loss
industry began and people began to worry about losing weight (at first)
and (more recently) about losing fat.
So with that said, the objective of this two part article (which served
as the transcript from the second of two, 2-hour lectures I recently gave
at Ian King's excellent "Bigger, Stronger, Leaner!" seminar
in Toronto) is to:
1. Give you a brief interesting history of the weight loss industry.
2. Present a review of the effectiveness of different weight/fat loss
strategies.
3. Present a model for designing healthy and effective weight/fat loss
strategies.
The Weight Loss Industry - A Checkered Past
As is the case with any dramatic shift in public opinion, new problems
arise which require new solutions. About the turn of the century the new
problem was how to lose weight. And the weight loss industry exploded
in offering solutions. However, in the absence of detailed scientific
data on the nature of energy balance, food composition, and the cellular
mechanisms of energy exchange, the best the industry could do was search
for agents that promoted weight loss, regardless of how they worked. Here
are a few frightening examples of this mentality in action.
o When I say the words, "heroin chic," you think of the waif
supermodels that believe heroin is the best diet drug available. Well,
back in the dawn of the diet age, they had their own version of heroin
chic that we'll affectionately call "consumption chic." You
see, at the time, several popular European poets and writers (Keates,
Shelly, Chekov, Bronte) had tuberculosis, which made them sickly and thin.
People therefore associated this look with refinement and intelligence.
As a result, the wealthy, taking the lead of other celebrities of the
day, began starving themselves to appear sickly and refined. And the very
low calorie diet (VLCD) was born.
o When I was growing up, a popular statement in my house was "John,
I can't afford you eating like this; whadda' ya' have, a hollow leg or
a tapeworm or something?" Now I didn't know what a tapeworm was (a
worm made out of masking tape?), but I associated it with being able to
eat a lot of food while staying thin, so the tapeworm was okay with me.
But going back to the turn of the century, a popular question of the day
might have been "Where can I get some chocolate covered tapeworms?"
Yep, tapeworms (parasites that live in the intestinal tract) were actually
used as a way to lose weight!
- During this same time period, even Kellogg of cereal fame entered
the diet market by offering their "Safe Fat Reducer." This
product was loaded with thyroid hormone. And not the kind that comes
nicely sterile as synthesized by a pharmaceutical laboratory. No, they
added the pulverized thyroid glands of dead animals to their product.
- Other common ingredients that were used in the tonics introduced
during the infancy of the diet industry were laxatives (cause diarrhea),
purgatives (cause vomiting), strychnine (cause nervousness, restlessness,
tremors), and arsenic (cause death - Do you weigh less when you're dead?).
- Getting even further away from the scientific method, some "diet
experts" had a theory that men and women should not use lotions
or cosmetics. In their opinion, these agents were absorbed into the
skin, transported to fat cells, and stored as body fat. This was not
good news for Oil Of Olay.
- A final interesting diet drug note concerns our old friend DNP. For
those of you who don't know, DNP (dinitrophenol) gained popularity in
the 1990's as a particularly effective fat-loss drug among bodybuilders.
But DNP was nothing new; in fact, it was the very first drug ever prescribed
for weight loss. By 1935, over 100,000 Americans had taken DNP to lose
weight. So where can you get some? Not so fast. The problem is, DNP
was actually found to be an effective agent for promoting weight loss
in munitions plants during WWI. What happened was that fat munitions
workers who had been exposed to DNP (which is used commercially in explosives,
as an herbicide, and an insecticide) were losing huge amount of weight.
What they didn't know at the time though, was that the physiological
actions of DNP cause the body to uncouple oxidative phosphorlylation
from ATP production. In essence, normally, people metabolize food to
produce energy (ATP). Well, DNP causes the body to metabolize food but
instead of producing energy (ATP), heat is generated; so much heat that
the organs can actually cook in the body. So, if you don't mind liquefied
organs, DNP will help melt away body fat, literally. And this was a
popular diet treatment!
The Weight Loss Industry - The Focus on Food
Although low carb diets (i.e. ketogenic diets and the Atkins Diet) have
been in vogue for the last few years, let me shed a little light on where
the concept of the low carb diet came from. Interestingly, the first low
carb diet was promoted several years before we even had strong evidence
that carbohydrates, fats, and proteins were present in our foodstuffs.
As legend has it, William Banting, a very overweight casket maker (of
all things), was worried that his casket would be too expensive to fit
his large, gelatinous physique. So he theorized that eating less starch
(potatoes, bread, pasta) would help him lose weight. And right he was
as he dropped down a few "casket sizes." He became slim and
svelte and in 1878 he published his "Letter on Corpulence,"
extolling the virtues of the no bread, no potatoes, and no pasta diet.
So the first low-carb diet came from a casket maker.
Just a few years later, information began trickling out of the scientific
community regarding the composition of food. In the 1890's Wilber Atwater
is credited for observing the different macronutrient components of food.
In the early 1900's, Russell Chittenden went a step further to determine
the calorie content of food. With these data, the concept of energy balance
and the practice of calorie counting was born.
Half a century later, in the 1950's, the research world began to publish
extensively on different diet strategies including ketogenic diets, high
protein diets, very low calorie diets, and protein sparing modified fasts;
this last one known to T-mag readers as "Fat Fast." As a result
of these dietary strategies, rather than promoting long-term weight loss,
the concept of yo-yo dieting began.
So, T-men and vixens, take note. While writers are often "introducing
new diet plans," there is very little that is "new." As
mentioned, the "Fat Fast" diet was popular in the 1950's (although
Brock's version has a few modifications that make it a bit better), ketogenic
diets were used at the same time with limited success, and even the Atkins
diet was first introduced in 1966. So don't fall victim to the notion
that these diets are really revolutionary ways to lose fat. As you're
about to see, they failed miserably back then, and even now, they aren't
the best way to change your physique.
Weight Loss Research
The problem with the dangerous early approaches to weight loss as well
as the later diet approaches (including ketogenic diets, very low calorie
diets, fat fast type diets, etc) is that they all worked to one degree
or another but the effects of these treatments lasted only as long as
the treatments were followed. In addition, since the focus was on weight
loss (not fat loss), the composition of the loss (lean vs. fat) was usually
ignored. Once the drugs were removed or normal dieting resumed, subjects
actually gained more fat than they had lost!
Then comes research to the rescue. When more accurate methods of body
composition testing were developed, body composition was used to determine
the proportions of the loss. These new techniques demonstrated that most
of the aforementioned low calorie diets decreased metabolic rate, chronically
depleted muscle glycogen (and therefore performance), and decreased lean
body mass (muscle).
Here are some of the more important research breakthroughs of the last
couple of decades:
- Studies by Elliot et al (1989) showed that a modified fast resulted
in a 22% reduction in RMR and this persisted even 8 weeks after returning
to a mixed, maintenance diet. This means that the metabolism can be
chronically depressed after dieting, even when returning to a reasonable
energy intake.
- Coxon et al (1989) showed that diets resulting in a weight loss of
4.18 lbs per week lead to losses of 1.75 lbs of lean mass per week.
Very bad!
- Bogardus et al (1981) showed that a carbohydrate restricted diet
(35%P, 1%C, 64%F - 850kcal) chronically decreased muscle glycogen by
50% and as a result, decreases exercise performance by 50% as compared
to a carb containing isoenergetic diet (35%P, 36%C, 29%F - 850 kcal).
No decreases were seen in the moderate carbohydrate group.
- Dulloo et al (1990) showed that in calorie deprived (50% below maintenance)
rats, weight regain was rapid and nearly all weight regained was fat.
The muscle mass that was lost was not replenished with refeeding.
Therefore, in each of these studies, the prescribed diets lead to a smaller
metabolic furnace and the dieters couldn't help but gain the fat back.
As a result, researchers were looking for alternative ways of manipulating
the energy balance equation (energy in - energy out). Enter aerobic exercise
intervention.
In prescribing aerobic exercise, researchers believed that exercise would
promote fat loss alone, enhance fat loss with dieting, and/or prevent
metabolic decline with dieting. And they were correct. Nicklas et al (1997)
and Dengel et al (1994) showed that when dietary treatment (300kcal below
maintenance) was compared to dietary treatment plus aerobic exercise,
the diet plus aerobic exercise group was more fit, retained more lean
mass (but they still lost some), and lost more fat. In addition, in diet
only groups, fat breakdown and oxidation tend to decline, but when adding
aerobic exercise, fat breakdown and oxidation are not decreased.
Although aerobic exercise was effective for assisting in fat-loss programs,
some lean mass is still lost. With the muscle building and preserving
properties of weight training starting to be realized, finally, researchers
began to speculate that another form of exercise might be beneficial in
addition to aerobic exercise. Enter resistance exercise intervention:
- Ballor et al (1988) studied 4 groups of subjects. The first group
was a control; the second group ate below maintenance; the third group
performed resistance training only; and the fourth group dieted and
lifted. While the diet and the diet plus exercise groups lost the same
amount of weight, the diet plus exercise group actually gained lean
mass while the diet group lost lean mass. In addition, the exercise
only group lost no weight but did increase lean mass substantially.
- In a direct comparison of aerobic and resistance training, Kraemer
et al (1999) showed that diet plus resistance exercise was better than
diet alone or diet plus aerobic exercise in preserving lean body mass
and muscle power during weight loss. All three groups lost a similar
amount of weight but while the diet group lost 6 lbs of lean mass and
the aerobic group lost 4 lbs of lean mass, the resistance group didn't
lose any lean mass. This means that the resistance group also lost the
most fat mass.
At this point in time, it's well recognized that a fat reduction strategy
should include diet, aerobic, and resistance exercise strategies. Below,
I've provided a list of what you might expect to happen with each treatment:
- Aerobic exercise alone leads to a 3 lb weight loss in 12 weeks and
a 6.6-lb weight loss in 30 weeks. This is accompanied by no losses in
LBM (*at maintenance caloric intake).
- Resistance exercise alone leads to no weight loss but a 2.2 lb (women)
to 4.4 lb (men) gain in LBM in 8-12 weeks (*at maintenance caloric intake).
- Diet alone leads to a 6.4 lb LBM loss for every 22 lbs weight lost.
- Diet plus aerobic exercise leads to a 3.74 lb LBM loss for every
22 lbs weight lost
- Diet plus resistance exercise leads to losses in fat mass and a preservation
of LBM.
Conclusion - Research Summary
Based on what I've presented so far, here is a summary of what's happening
with the different weight loss strategies.
1) Diet alone works for weight loss but it leads to unacceptable losses
in metabolic rate and LBM.
2) Aerobic exercise alone can lead to comparable fat loss with diet
conditions (assuming the same energy deficit). However it's difficult
to burn the required amount of calories for sufficient weight loss with
aerobic exercise. In addition, if adequate exercise is performed for
a reasonable fat loss, some lean body mass may also be lost.
3) Resistance exercise alone cannot match diet-induced weight loss.
4) Simultaneous exercise and diet interventions do not necessarily lead
to greater weight loss than diet alone, but energy metabolism is improved
and lean-body mass is preserved.
5) A combination of diet, a small amount aerobic exercise, and moderate
amount of resistance exercise should yield the greatest weight loss
while preserving LBM.
Looking back through this article, it appears that we've come a long
way in our quest to lose fat. However, while researchers are doing quite
a bit to promote healthy weight loss, let's not lose sight of where the
diet industry is today. Are our current diet drugs completely safe and
effective? That's debatable. How about our commercial weight loss clinics?
Certainly not!
You know, although we can laugh at the ridiculousness of the diet industry
of 100 years ago, these stories, in my opinion, serve as a warning for
us. I often wonder what the articles in the year 2100 will say about us.
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