The
excerpt from the Lancet Diabetes and
Endocrinology comment in The Nutrition Debate #297, “Obesity in
Remission,” brought to mind a segment from “Choices,” the 2nd of
four hour-long videos reviewed in The Nutrition Debate #275, “Weight of the
Nation,”
published on 12/31/14. You might have missed it. But if you are having trouble
losing weight or, having been successful in the past, are now putting weight
back on (as I am), you should read #297, and this blog post.
Starting
at minute 17:00 in “Choices,” Rudolph Leibel, MD,
Co-Director of the New York Obesity Research Center at the Columbia University
Medical Center, says, “Individuals losing weight are NOT metabolically the same
as they were before they lost weight.” “The weight reduced individual will be
requiring about 20% less (sic) calories per day relative to what somebody of
that weight who’s never lost weight would eat…in order to keep at that body
weight,” he says
.
“Consider
two individuals – same gender, same age, exactly the same body weight – one of
whom is at that body weight as a result of let’s say a 10 or 15% weight
reduction, the other who’s been at that weight for their entire adult life. If
that reduced weight individual goes out to lunch with her friend, and they both
order the same meal, that will represent a 20% overeating for the
weight-reduced individual, and be quite normal for the individual who’s not in
that state. Twenty percent might seem like a little, but 20% excess calorie
intake a year will account for the inexorable weight regain.”
“As
far as we know, this phenomenon does not go away,” Dr Leibel says. “So, being
successful for a year or two doesn’t mean that you’re going to be able to go
back to eating what would be appropriate for a person who’s never lost weight.”
“Does
that seem unfair?” an off-camera voice asks an overweight woman. “Sure, it does
seem unfair. It’s unfair that, you know, I just can’t lose the weight and go
back to the way a normal thin person lives their life, but that’s part of the
price you pay for allowing yourself to get overweight in the first place,” the
woman responds. Okay, that’s the thinking of this well-meaning and very
well-funded, widely-viewed and deeply-flawed HBO series. Forget for a minute
who funded it.
You
can choose to blame yourself for following the Government’s Dietary Guidelines
since 1977, and your doctor’s advice at least since 1961 when the American
Heart Association started telling you to eat less saturated fat and
cholesterol. That’s when Agribusiness starting making more “low-fat”
manufactured foods with added sugars and processed carbohydrates.
Or you
can choose to eat many fewer carbs and more fat – both saturated and
monounsaturated, but not polyunsaturated fats (vegetable and seed oils). You
will feel fuller when you eat fatty meats and fish and a few low-carb veggies.
Fat satiates. Protein digests slowly. Your blood sugar will stabilize, your
blood lipids will improve, your inflammatory markers will too, and as you lose
weight, without hunger, your blood pressure should come down too. All these
good things happened to me.
And
when I regained some of the weight I lost, but continued to eat low-carb,
high-fat – just too much of it – the only thing that went up was the number on
the scale. Like many of my readers, I have a “biological predisposition for
energy storage” and I live in “an environment that promotes high energy intake”
(both carbs and fat). The RESULT: an obesity–promoting interaction between the
two (weight gain). This condition is both chronic and, at times,
treatment-resistant. I like to eat.