The quest for the best diet to achieve weight loss and weight maintenance is the Holy Grail of dietitians and nutritionists. The two current ‘best selling’ styles of diet with nutritional credibility are arguably High Protein, Low Carbohydrate diets and those based on Intermittent Fasting.
The quest for the best diet to achieve weight loss and weight maintenance is the Holy Grail of dietitians and nutritionists. The two current ‘best selling’ styles of diet with nutritional credibility are arguably High Protein, Low Carbohydrate diets and those based on Intermittent Fasting.
The case for High Protein Low Carb
Arguing the case for High Protein Low Carbohydrate during one ICN session was Professor Arne Astrup of Copenhagen University.
The best way to control weight is probably to eat an enjoyable healthy diet that requires only minor changes to achieve, said Professor Astrup. If the diet is filling, people will be prevented from eating too much and putting on weight.
“I prefer to eat real food and I think dieters do too. I couldn’t live on meal replacements or intermittent fasting for the rest of my life – or I wouldn’t want to,” said Professor Astrup.
“Eating normally for five days and fasting for two days would be punishment and I want to enjoy food.”
However, Professor Astrup said for obese people small changes would not be enough to effect and maintain weight loss. “What we did in the Diogenes study was to put 800 people on 800 calories for eight weeks, which resulted in an 11kg loss that was maintained for at least six months. Those who did best in the long term initially had the greatest weight loss.”
Professor Astrup disagreed with scientists who say successful dieting is just a matter of energy balance and it does not matter what type of food constitutes the calories. He contended that his, and other, studies show the most effective diet is one that:
• gives people free choice of foods…
• …but is relatively high in protein for satiety, and…
• …also contains low GI (Glycaemic Index) carbohydrates for the feeling of fullness they produce.
Other benefits of a higher protein and lower GI pattern of eating is that it produces lower insulin responses and reduces levels of inflammatory markers linked to coronary and other disease. It reduces body fat and increases fat-free mass and is also suitable for children – fasting is not, said Professor Astrup.
As a rule of thumb the right proportion is one gram of protein to two grams of carbohydrate.
The Case for Intermittent Fasting
Putting the case for intermittent fasting was Dr Alex Johnstone of the Rowett Institute of Nutrition and Health, Aberdeen.
Fasting has a long history of use to treat obesity stretching back to Hippocrates in the fifth century BC SAID Dr Johnstone. She argued that long-term compliance to a high protein diet was no better than other diets. “It is not a suitable weight loss tool for life because some carbohydrate is needed for healthy gut function.”
Intermittent fasting (IF) is an easier way for some people to control their weight and involves restriction only for short periods of time, said Dr Johnstone who outlined historic, religious and political reasons why people fasted.
Fasting associated with religious ritual such as Ramadan, however, did not result in weight control because studies showed there was compensatory over eating.
Dr Johnstone contended that IF reduces the risk of heat disease, and that we already know people who eat only 60-70% of the daily energy requirement live longer. But could that be achieved using IF?
She said that popular diets such as Michael Mosley’s 5:2 Diet were not real fasts because on the two fasting days one quarter of normal calorie intake (500 or 600 calories) were consumed.
In conclusion, more scientific studies were needed to assess the true effectiveness of IF diets, said Dr Johnstone, but they could result in lower body fat mass and an increase in beneficial fat-free mass. More studies on the affect of physical activity on IF diets was needed and on their longer term effectiveness and potential benefit.