Tag: weight reduction

  • From 222Kgs. To 95 Kgs. In A Year. No Starving/Pills.

     

    BEFORE THE DIET

    Breakfast: White toast with butter

    Mid-morning: Bacon and egg sandwiches
    Lunch: Sandwiches, crisps, chocolate bars

    Mid-afternoon: Crisps (sometimes 15 packets a day)

    Dinner: Chinese takeaway or spaghetti Bolognese made from a pre-prepared sauce with garlic bread

    Snacks: Crisps and chocolate

    AFTER THE DIET

    Breakfast: Weetabix or porridge with chopped banana
    Lunch: Jacket potato, beans and cheese with a mixed salad of lettuce, tomato, cucumber, pepper, onion and celery
    Dinner: Roast dinner with vegetables or pasta dish made with chopped vegetables, lean smoked bacon and passata
    Snacks: Fat free yoghurts, fresh fruit or fresh fruit salad or Alpen light bars

    Zelda, left, in 2006, and, right, last month. She used to regularly eat 15 packets of crisps a day Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1373914/Slimmer-year-Zelda-Haxby-sheds-half-body-weight.html#ixzz1IprhE2vE

     

     

    Note the Diet.

    It has more of vegetarian Diet.

    Had she cut non-veg., she could have made the transition swiftly.

    Another important factor is her fear of ridicule.

    Anxiety and Fear has a telling effect on weight, though I would not recommend it.

    I have personal experience of this.

    I dropped 8 kg in a month because of  worry.

    ( stone to kg conversion Linkhttp://www.convertunits.com/from/stone/to/kg)

    Story:

    A 35-stone mother who used to gorge on up to 15 packets of crisps a day and struggled to even walk up the stairs has lost 20 stone so she could live to see her two sons grow up.

    Zelda Haxby, 47, was so overweight she refused to leave the house for fear of being ridiculed and could not manage everyday tasks like doing the shopping.

    But after being hospitalised five years ago the mother of two from York vowed to turn her life around for the sake of her boys, Liam, 19, and 15-year-old James, and has now been crowned Slimming World’s Greatest Loser 2011. In the process she dropped from 35st 7lb to 15st 7lb and from a dress size 36 to a 14-16.

    She said: ‘When I was in hospital that was the final straw for me. I hated being away from my two boys and I realised that if I didn’t lose some weight I might leave them without their mother for ever.

    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1373914/Slimmer-year-Zelda-Haxby-sheds-half-body-weight.html#ixzz1IpsD6xoT


  • Sleep more and lose more fat.

    Does it mean that lean muscles will continue to burn calories and go on reducing weight?

    If so, at what point will it stop?

    It is an age old wisdom that if you sleep( especially during day) more, you shall put on weight, which has hereto been acknowledged by Doctors.

    If you can reduce weight by oversleep what is the point in sleeping less when your objective of reducing weight has been achieved,  probably you might look trim( as far as this study goes)

    Again weight reducing technics-whether by diet or exercisesis really helpful, is an open question and no final word has been said.

    Weight reducing mumbo jumbo often results in serious side effects and in some cases even death.

    Please read my blog on this filed under Health.

    Story.

    Nobody diets to look more like Homer Simpson (d’oh!). So to be sure the weight you’re losing is mostly squishy fat — not lean, sexy, calorie-torching muscle — take out this night-time insurance policy: Say goodnight to Jimmy Kimmel and the Weather Channel, and spend more time under the covers.

    In a provocative new study, dieters who slept 8.5 hours a night lost twice as much fat and held on to nearly twice as much muscle as those who scraped by on 5.5 hours of slumber. While everybody lost the same amount of weight, the well-rested group hit the jackpot, because lean muscle looks far sleeker than fat. Plus, the more muscle you’ve got on board, the better, since muscle is a metabolic engine that burns more calories round the clock. And that makes it easier for you to keep the weight off. Fact: By the end of the study, the long sleepers were burning an extra 114 calories per day (that’s about 10 pounds a year).

    Read more: http://www.calgaryherald.com/health/Sleep+your+away/3707745/story.html?cid=megadrop_story#ixzz13CV6kKLT

    Related:

    Hi Jenna — While it is possible to lose 15 pounds in one month, I would not recommend it for you for several reasons. First of all, at 16 years old, you are in the midst of an important period for growth and bone development, and losing weight too quickly (more than 1 to 2 pounds per week), could result in bone loss, which could affect bone density in adulthood.

    Secondly, losing weight too quickly when you don’t have a significant amount of weight to lose can result in muscle loss as well as fat loss, which can decrease your metabolism and make it more difficult to maintain your weight loss.

    http://edition.cnn.com/2010/HEALTH/expert.q.a/10/22/lose.weight.one.month.jampolis/index.html

     

     

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  • The 4 Stupidest Lose-Weight-Quick Schemes

    In India we have still crazier things being followed, that too by open ads through Electronic media and the worst thing is people do believe them! Read on.
    From ab belts to Taco Bell diets, here are some of the dumbest — and unhealthiest — things people do to lose weight.
    Although the American dream has many facets, one of the most powerful is the desire to obtain a perfectly fit body through a combination eating crap and not exercising.

    Every year, we Americans are bombarded with advertisements that promise us sparkling abs, thighs and buttocks, all without doing any work or significantly changing our eating habits. Without fail, of course, these diets have certain critical flaws to them, such as depriving your body of key nutrients or giving yourself permanent bone damage. Indeed, most of these diets don’t even qualify as snake oil, since consuming such oil would probably be a healthier alternative.

    While the following four lose-weight-fast schemes are among the stupidest schemes around, they are actually quite representative of the fad-diet industry as a whole. It wouldn’t at all be surprising to see even stupider schemes emerge in the near-future, such as a diet that promises to help you lose 40 pounds in a week by consuming only deep-fried leprechaun testicles. Even so, these schemes each stand out in their own unique, forehead-slap-inducing ways and are thus worthy of our attention. Let’s get started, shall we?

    Scheme #1: The Cookie Diet………….
    http://www.alternet.org/healthwellness/145220/the_4_stupidest_lose-weight-quick_schemes/?page=entire

  • Extreme diets: Life on 800 calories a day

    It has not been conclusively proven that so called diets cure obesity.Weight reduction by drugging and unproven exercises will cost you your life.

    In my opinion Diet Science is a border line case between science and guess work with inverse logic.

    (CNN) — Her death made headlines around the world: Samantha Clowe, a 34-year-old British woman, died suddenly this fall from a previously undiagnosed heart condition. At the time of her death, Clowe was following a plan called LighterLife, a very low-calorie diet designed to help obese and severely obese patients lose weight.
    She was consuming 530 calories a day.
    “Samantha came to LighterLife with a BMI of 37, weighing more than 17 stone [238 pounds],” says a spokesperson for the company. “Although she managed to lose 3 stone [42 pounds], her health may have already been compromised.” An inquest determined that Clowe most likely died from cardiac arrhythmia but could not determine what role, if any, Clowe’s diet played in the development of her condition, only that her death “may be related to her low calorie diet and weight loss.”
    Very low-calorie diets have been used to help obese and severely obese patients lose weight for more than two decades. “Next to bariatric surgery, nothing is more effective for weight loss than a VLCD, including pills and other diets,” says Dr. John Hernried, medical director for OTC Medical Weight Loss Group, a weight-loss clinic in California.
    But the diet “is not indicated for someone who wants to lose 10 pounds.” Most programs screen potential participants to ensure they are psychologically and medically stable enough to begin the process.
    Gordon Heitman, 46, a California man, lost 233 pounds in just over a year on a VLCD that allowed him to eat an average of 800 calories a day.
    “This is a very specialized diet. We are taking on full responsibility for [the patient’s] nutrition.”
    –Dr. John Hernried
    “For the most part I wasn’t hungry,” says Heitman. “I was fine with what I was eating.”
    The diets use a process called ketosis to prompt the body to burn stored fat for energy while being fed anywhere from 500 to 800 calories a day. Patients may eat or drink only manufactured food, shakes, and snack bars especially created for and sold through specific programs. The products are designed to supply the patient with adequate nutrition without offering excess calories.
    “This is a very specialized diet,” says Hernried. ” We are taking on full responsibility for [the patient’s] nutrition.”
    In the United States, there are at least four certified VLCD diets, each run by a different company. Dieters enrolled in any of the programs purchase shakes, snack bars, and meal replacement foodpacks directly from the doctor or clinic supervising them. In the U.S., a day’s worth of products usually has an average of 800 calories. Costs vary, but a year on a VLCD could cost between $6,000 and $10,000, if the person strictly follows the plan, which would include paying for program food and visits to the clinic to check in with the doctor.
    Counting calories
    Think 800 calories sounds like a lot? A little? Here are a couple of quick comparisons:

    Option A
    4 oz. Atlantic salmon: 233 calories
    1/2 cup broccoli: 27
    1 medium baked potato (with skin): 161
    Total: 421 calories
    Or
    1 Whopper sandwich: 710
    Total: 710 calories

    Option B
    Grande cafe latte with whole milk: 272
    1 plain bagel (3 oz.) with plain cream cheese (2 tbsp.): 450
    Total: 722 calories
    Or
    1 (5-oz.) fruit and yogurt parfait, no granola: 130
    1 cup (8 oz.) brewed coffee with half & half: 41
    Total: 171 calories
    Source: CalorieKing.com
    “[These] are very safe and effective diets only if they are done under medical supervision,”says Hernried. “Not all VLCDs are made equal.”
    Hernried has lectured on very low-calorie diets for more than a decade and supervises a VLCD program in his California clinic. He believes every low-calorie program must have regular involvement from a medical professional and incorporate lifestyle changes, exercise, and enough calories in order to be effective and safe for the patient.
    “I would never recommend doing a very low-calorie diet alone,” says Hernried. Patients at his clinic have bloodwork done biweekly and get regular electrocardiograms.
    “Absolutely these diets must be done under the care of a doctor,” says CNNHealth.com’s diet and fitness expert, Dr. Melina Jampolis, a physician nutrition specialist. “These things are not without risk.”
    Heitman says he is thankful for the medical supervision he received while on the diet. “My hair did thin out and there were other side effects,” he says. “There were leg cramps … and now they’re monitoring me for gallstones.”
    Diets of less than 800 calories can lead to numerous complications, according to Jampolis, including heart arrhythmias, which could lead to death. Extreme dieters are also at risk of dehydration, electrolyte imbalance, low blood pressure and high uric acid, which could lead to gout or kidney stones, she says. Also, losing weight quickly could lead to gallstones and thinning hair because dieters are getting the minimum amount of nutrition, which can affect hair and bone density.
    While different programs restrict patients to different calorie counts, Hernried believes some diets provide too few calories to their patients. “No matter how good the nutrition is in the product, the brain will start to break down under 600 calories.”
    On LighterLife, a patient with a BMI of 30 or higher is allowed four foodpacks a day, averaging 530 calories. LighterLife argues that its foodpacks comply with the United Kingdom’s National Institute for Clinical Excellence and contain at least 100 percent of the recommended daily allowance of vitamins, minerals and trace elements. Before joining LighterLife, a patient must get approval from his doctor. However, once a patient is on the plan, the program does not regularly conduct bloodwork or EKGs.
    “This industry of meal replacement, it can play a role for people with a lot of weight to lose, ” says Jampolis. “But those people must be monitored by a doctor regularly and these diets must be part of a complete lifestyle overhaul.”
    “Absolutely these diets must be done under the care of a doctor. These things are not without risk.”
    –Dr. Melina Jampolis

    Changing his lifestyle was the biggest challenge for Heitman. “Social events are all based around food, so you have parties at work, get-togethers, meetings — almost at every social event, the center focus is food.”
    Behavioral counseling helped create new habits. “You’re able to talk with other people on the program … and they give you tips on how to do things. People who have been on the program a long time have their own tips to share.”
    “We will tell patients from the moment they come in … the VLCD is purely a tool to get you out of medical risk,” says Hernried. “The real work is not from the diet, it’s the lifestyle changes.”
    “[It’s] the follow-through with learning to eat right and regularly exercising,” says Heitman. “I keep a food diary every day and I have found fun ways to get my exercise that ensures that I will want to get out and do it.”
    “I want to be around for my grandkids. I want to enjoy my life with my wife. It’s about having that commitment.”
    http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/12/15/very.low.calorie.diets/index.html

  • Low-carb, high-carb diet both help keep weight off-Reuters.

    Agreed.Low carbohydrates intake may reduce energy levels to perform tasks efficiently,especially in tropical countries where the heat is severe.
    Again it is not yet proven that food habits alone determine obesity.

    Story:
    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Low-carb and high-carb diets work equally well for maintaining weight loss, Australian researchers report.

    People had the same success in keeping off the weight they’d lost after sharply cutting their calorie intake for 3 months if they followed a low-carb (also called high-protein) diet or a high-carbohydrate regimen for the following year, Dr. Elizabeth A. Delbridge of the Heidelberg Repatriation Hospital in Victoria and her colleagues found.

    Some studies have suggested that high protein diets may be a more effective way to lose weight short-term than high carbohydrate diets, Delbridge and her team note in their report. But there’s less evidence on which approach might be better for helping people to keep off weight they’ve lost, and whether the two diets have different effects on heart health.

    To investigate, Delbridge and her team assigned 141 men and women who’d completed the weight-loss phase of the diet to a year on a diet in which 30 percent of their calories came from protein, or one consisting of 15 percent protein. Both groups also were instructed to keep their fat intake below 30 percent of total calories, and to focus on reducing saturated fat.

    The study participants had lost 16.5 kilograms (36.4 pounds), on average, and only regained 2 kilograms, or about four pounds, over the following year.

    While all the study participants saw their blood pressure go down as they lost weight, average blood pressure went up in the high-carbohydrate group during the weight maintenance phase, but the high-protein dieters were able to sustain their blood pressure reduction.

    While people found it easy to stick to the high protein diet, Delbridge and her team say, the low-protein dieters “struggled to consume the recommended amount of carbohydrate (55%) and to limit their protein intake to 15%.”

    But the low protein group still managed to keep their protein intake at about 22 percent of their calories, significantly below the 30 percent maintained by the high-protein dieters. And there was no significant difference between the two groups in the amount of weight they kept off.

    The findings show, the researchers conclude, that “free-living overweight and obese people” (as opposed to those studied in an inpatient clinic, for example) were able to stick with recommended diet and keep off the weight they had lost for 12 months.

    SOURCE: American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, November 2009.
    http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSTRE5AI4ZT20091119?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100