Extreme diet or crash diet,
is a method to lose a significant amount of weight within a limited time
period. But crash diets are not meant for long term weight loss plans.
Since crash diets usually cut down on one or more food groups to reach a
desired weight level, these diets skip out on important nutrients that
your body needs.
Dt.
Komal Patel
Post Graduate in Nutrition
Dietitian/Nutritionist
• 87%
(39 ratings)
•
11 years experience
The ways crash diets can affect your body include:
-
Dehydration: You realise you are losing weight
after implementing the crash diet, but this is just an illusion. All the
weight lost isn’t fat, but water. When you restrict calories, your body
first burns glycogen—not fat, for energy. Glycogen is a form of
carbohydrate stored in the muscles and liver, and water is attached to
every gram of glycogen. So when your body burns glycogen, you end up
losing water, which causes dehydration.
-
Unstable blood sugar: When your body doesn’t get a steady supply of fibre, fat, protein and carbohydrates, your insulin and blood sugar levels run amok. Some diets, such as the detox diet, can lead to type II diabetes.
-
Muscle break down: Energy comes from calories and
restricting calories adversely affects your muscles. When you start
losing weight, your body starts harnessing muscle proteins for energy.
This leads to muscle loss and your physique deteriorates. For instance,
liquid diets (that have low calories) cause rapid muscle loss and can
lead to ventricular arrhythmias.
-
Slow metabolism: Your metabolic rate crashes
automatically when you lose muscles. This implies that you burn less
calories when you talk, exercise and walk. You start feeling sluggish,
and even after you get back to your normal diet, your metabolism won’t
change back to how it was before.
-
Malnutrition: A lot of crash diets recommend eating
less than 700 calories a day, which will help you lose weight, but it
harms your body. The body needs calories, since they are an important
energy source. Soon your body adapts to the lack of calories and becomes
malnourished.
- Intellectual problems: Some crash diets cut down carbohydrate consumption, and this ends up affecting your brain. The brain needs carbs to function properly. So, when there is a severe carbohydrate deficiency, the level of corticosterone (the stress hormone) increases in your brain, making you vulnerable to stress, depression and binge-eating behaviours.
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