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Dieting can make lean people fatter Evidence1 #392052 Dieting to lose weight in people who are in the healthy normal range of body weight is a strong and consistent predictor of future weight gain. [1] | |
+Citations (2) - CitationsAdd new citationList by: CiterankMapLink[1] How dieting makes the lean fatter: from a perspective of body composition autoregulation through adipostats and proteinstats awaiting discovery
Author: A. G. Dulloo, J. Jacquet, J. P. Montani, Y. Schutz Publication info: 2015 February, Obes Rev. 2015 Feb;16 Suppl 1:25-35. doi: 10.1111/obr.12253 Cited by: David Price 12:58 PM 14 May 2015 GMT Citerank: (3) 392175Fat mass / fat-free mass depletion feedback signals are more effectiveLean people regain fat faster because their feedback signals in response to the depletion of both fat mass (i.e. adipostats) and fat-free mass (i.e. proteinstats) – through the modulation of energy intake and adaptive thermogenesis – are more effective than in individuals with overweight or obesity, thus resulting in a faster rate of fat recovery relative to recovery of lean tissue (i.e. preferential catch-up fat) [1], [2]648CC79C, 399911Dieting can make lean people fatterDieting to lose weight in people who are in the healthy normal range of body weight is a strong and consistent predictor of future weight gain. [1]648CC79C, 399941Fat mass / fat-free mass depletion feedback signals are more effectiveLean people regain fat faster because their feedback signals in response to the depletion of both fat mass (i.e. adipostats) and fat-free mass (i.e. proteinstats) – through the modulation of energy intake and adaptive thermogenesis – are more effective than in individuals with overweight or obesity, thus resulting in a faster rate of fat recovery relative to recovery of lean tissue (i.e. preferential catch-up fat) [1], [2]648CC79C URL: | Excerpt / Summary Whether dieting makes people fatter has been a subject of considerable controversy over the past 30 years. More recent analysis of several prospective studies suggest, however, that it is dieting to lose weight in people who are in the healthy normal range of body weight, rather than in those who are overweight or obese, that most strongly and consistently predict future weight gain.
This paper analyses the ongoing arguments in the debate about whether repeated dieting to lose weight in normal-weight people represents unsuccessful attempts to counter genetic and familial predispositions to obesity, a psychosocial reaction to the fear of fatness or that dieting per se confers risks for fatness and hence a contributing factor to the obesity epidemic. In addressing the biological plausibility that dieting predisposes the lean (rather than the overweight or obese) to regaining more body fat than what had been lost (i.e. fat overshooting), it integrates the results derived from the re-analysis of body composition data on fat mass and fat-free mass (FFM) losses and recoveries from human studies of experimental energy restriction and refeeding.
These suggest that feedback signals from the depletion of both fat mass (i.e. adipostats) and FFM (i.e. proteinstats) contribute to weight regain through the modulation of energy intake and adaptive thermogenesis, and that a faster rate of fat recovery relative to FFM recovery (i.e. preferential catch-up fat) is a central outcome of body composition autoregulation in lean individuals. Such a temporal desynchronization in the restoration of the body's fat vs. FFM results in a state of hyperphagia that persists beyond complete recovery of fat mass and interestingly until FFM is fully recovered. However, as this completion of FFM recovery is also accompanied by fat deposition, excess fat accumulates. In other words, fat overshooting is a prerequisite to allow complete recovery of FFM. This confers biological plausibility for post-dieting fat overshooting - which through repeated dieting and weight cycling would increase the risks for trajectories from leanness to fatness.
Given the increasing prevalence of dieting in normal-weight female and male among young adults, adolescents and even children who perceive themselves as too fat (due to media, family and societal pressures), together with the high prevalence of dieting for optimizing performance among athletes in weight-sensitive sports, the notion that dieting and weight cycling may be predisposing a substantial proportion of the population to weight gain and obesity deserves greater scientific scrutiny. |
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