Intermittent Fasting Increases 24h Energy Expenditure, But Skipping Breakfast Linked to Reduced Metabolic Flexibility - Hai
Intermittent Fasting Increases 24h Energy Expenditure, But Skipping Breakfast Linked to Reduced Metabolic Flexibility
Intermittent Fasting Increases 24h Energy Expenditure, But Skipping Breakfast Linked to Reduced Metabolic Flexibility
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Intermittent Fasting Increases 24h Energy Expenditure, But Skipping Breakfast Linked to Reduced Metabolic Flexibility
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"To eat or not to eat breakfast?" Unfortunately, the scientists geared their research pretty much to this question. |
Alright, you all have read my recent
Facebook news post about the reduced energy expenditure students reported in a hitherto unpublished paper. Those of you who have (rightly) pointed out that this was at best preliminary evidence (which is, by the way, exactly what I pointed out, as well), will now feel vindicated: Scientists from the German
University of Hohenheim report that "when compared with the 3-meal control, 24-h energy expenditure was higher" with a meal-skipping regimen that had a lot of similarity to what many of you will practice and label "intermittent fasting".
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The researchers' main interest was yet not to investigate the effects of "intermittent fasting", but to find out whether the timing of meal skipping "impacts these risks by affecting circadian regulation of energy balance, glucose metabolism, and postprandial inflammatory responses" (Nas 2017).
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Figure 1: Schematic overview of the study protocol; note: the interventions were isocaloric and had identical nutrient compositions. *Randomly assigned. BSD, breakfast skipping day; DSD, dinner skipping day (Nas 2017) |
To this ends, the researchers had 17 participants [body mass index (in kg/m�): 23.7 6 4.6] participate in a randomized crossover trial comprising three isocaloric 24-h interventions (55%, 30%, and 15% carbohydrate, fat, and protein, respectively), to compare the metabolic effects of
- breakfast skipping day (BSD) with the first meal at 1 PM and the last at 7 PM, and
- dinner skipping day (DSD) with the first meal at 7 AM and the last meal at 1 PM
to a conventional 3-meal-structure (smaller meals at 1 AM, 1 PM, 7 PM - total energy and macronutrient intake were identical) on a control day (control).
IF can also help with weight loss in the obese: A recent study also confirms the weight loss benefits of time-restricted feeding showing that obese subjects lose 5% weight, and 4% body fat within 12 weeks when they eat only within an 8h window from 10am-6pm (Gabel 2017 | as discussed in the
SuppVersity Facebook News).
In contrast to the previously mentioned graduate research, the scientists offer some insights into how they determined the energy expenditure and the use of a respiration chamber is an important plus of the study.
In fact, there's hardly a better way to reliably assess one's subjects energy and macronutrient balance; in conjunction with blood analyses that determined the postprandial glucose, insulin, and inflammatory responses in leukocytes as well as 24-h glycemia and insulin secretion, Nas et al. produced quite a comprehensive dataset which shows the expected null effect on the AUC of the "hunger hormone" glucagon and its opposing peaks and troughs (see
).
As well, as the following more surprising effects, the scientists describe in their latest paper in the prestigious "American Journal of Clinical Nutrition" (Nas. 2017):
So far, so good! While the formerly cited results suggest that it doesn't make a difference whether you skip breakfast or dinner, as long as you skip it (=fast intermittently), the blood analyses spoke a different language. In particular, ...
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If you don't have breakfast and feel fine: Do not start 2017. Here's why! |
Is skipping breakfast a true problem, then? Should "Intermittent Fasters" skip dinner? As previously pointed out, the experimental evidence that there was anything special to breakfast is simply not there. Rather than the optimal time to skip a meal for metabolic health appears to be determined by dietary habits (the high variance in the 4h inflammatory response, see
Figure 3, right, would support that |
learn more about habits and metabolism) and the effects on one's total energy intake. The fact that one's glycogen stores are generally lowered in the AM, as well as a circadian profile in inflammation, may well explain why skipping dinner, i.e. eating breakfast, appears to yield better results, glucose- and inflammation-wise that is.
In the real world, however, differential effects on energy intake make me question the practical relevance of the study at hand - "yes, it's methodologically flawless to use isocaloric diets to isolate the effects of meal skipping/timing", but "no, it's not realistic!" Why's that? Well, 99% of you breakfast skippers out there will probably say that skipping breakfast decreases their daily energy intake. If that's the case, this interacts with both, the glucose and inflammatory response to a meal and - more importantly - the energy expenditure, which may, in fact, have been significantly reduced in the initially referenced graduate study, because the scientists didn't successfully standardize the energy intake... without having the full-text at hand, however, I do not want to further speculate about the reasons for the differences. What I can tell you
now, however, is that the study at hand doesn't seem to suggest that a metabolic downside of intermittent fasting exists (note: the "metabolic advantage is too small to translate to fat loss if it wasn't for the reduced energy intake, we'll usually see when people embark on an intermittent fasting regiment). The issue of increased inflammation with breakfast skipping may require further studies |
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