CosBeauty Magazine – August 2019

(lu) #1
http://www.cosbeauty.com.au 89

stomach acid, which digests food and
destroys bacteria. But smelling food or
even thinking about it during fasting
periods can trigger the brain into
telling the stomach to produce more
acid, leading to heartburn.
According to 5:2 Diet advocate
Dr Michael Mosley, intermittent
fasting is not recommended for people
with the following conditions:
s"EINGUNDERWEIGHT
s%ATINGDISORDERS
s4YPEDIABETES
s4YPEDIABETESTHATISCONTROLLED
by medication
s0REGNANCYORWOMEN
breastfeeding)
s2ECENTSURGERY
s-ENTALHEATHCONDITIONS
s&EVERORILLNESS
s#ONDITIONSWHERE7ARFARIN
is prescribed


Negative feelings and behaviours
reported by Dr John Berardi in his
BOOK%XPERIMENTSWITH)NTERMITTENT
&ASTINGINCLUDE
s#HANGESINMOOD
s%XTREMEHUNGER
s,OWENERGY
s/BSESSIVETHOUGHTSABOUTFOOD
s"INGEEATINGBEHAVIOUR


!ND-EDICAL.EWS4ODAY
noted people interested in trying
intermittent fasting ‘should consider
whether or not it will work with their
LIFESTYLE&ASTINGSTRESSESTHEBODY SO
it may not be beneficial for people
already dealing with significant
stressors’. CBM


Fasting ‘easier than


traditional dieting’


US nutritionist Dr John Berardi
tried six different intermittent
fasting plans over six months
and published his results in
the book Experiments with
Intermittent Fasting.

Over those six months he:
r Dropped 20 pounds of weight
(from 190 pounds to 170 pounds);
r Reduced his body fat from 10
per cent to four per cent (while
maintaining most of his lean
muscle mass).

Importantly, he noted:
‘I accomplished the goals
I set for myself in a way that was
easier and less time consuming than
“traditional” dieting.’

Berardi summed up his four
key Ƃndings:


  1. Trial fasting is a great way to
    practice managing hunger. ‘This
    is an essential skill for anyone who
    wants to get in shape and stay
    healthy and Ƃt.’

  2. More regular fasting isn’t
    objectively better for losing body
    fat. ‘While my IF experiments
    worked quite well, the
    intermittent fasting approach
    (bigger meals, less frequently)
    didn’t produce better fat loss
    than a more conventional diet
    approach (smaller meals, more
    frequently) might have.’

  3. More regular fasting did make it
    easier to maintain a lower body
    fat percentage. ‘Intermittent
    fasting isn’t easy. However, I did
    Ƃnd that using this approach
    made it easier for me to maintain
    a low body weight and a very


low body fat percentage vs more
conventional diets.’


  1. Intermittent fasting can work, but
    it’s not for everyone, nor does
    it need to be. ‘In the end, IF is
    just one approach, among many
    effective ones, for improving
    health, performance, and body
    composition.’


Berardi says his results found
that ‘intermittent fasting can
be helpful for in-shape people
who want to really get lean
without following conventional
bodybuilding diets, or for
anyone who needs to learn the
difference between body hunger
and mental hunger.’

However he also explains that
successful nutrition plans,
‘whether they use smaller, more
frequent meals or larger, less
frequent meals all share a few
commonalities’.

These include:
r Controlling calories. When
calories are controlled, progress is
made. ‘Whether you control them
by eating frequent small meals or
infrequent larger meals is
up to you.’
r Focusing on food quality. Fresh,
unprocessed, nutrient-dense food
is a must, regardless of which
eating style you adopt.
r Regular exercise. Exercise is a
critical part of the equation.

Berardi concludes: ‘Once those
three have been taken care of, it’s a
matter of personal preference and
lifestyle considerations.’
Free download pdf