On
a recent episode of the Oprah show, one of the guests was a 51 year old man with
the heart of a 20 year old. He's been following a calorie restriction plan and
they said he might be one of the first people to reach 120 years old by following
this plan. There have been stories both in the lay press and scientific press
about calorie restriction for years and it has been a frequent talk show topic
on other many other TV shows. However, before you cut your calories in half in
hopes of adding another decade onto your life, you'd better get the other half
of the story they didn't talk about on Oprah.
Ive
seen a lot of strange things in the health field, and although calorie restriction
(CR) is the subject of serious and legitimate scientific study, I consider CR
to be one of those strange things. Of course, thats because I choose a different
lifestyle - the muscle-friendly Burn
The fat, Feed The Muscle lifestyle - but theres more than one reason
why Im not a CR advocate:
Hunger
while dieting is almost always a challenge. Theres some hunger even with
conservative calorie deficits of 15-20% under maintenance. Prolonged hunger is
one of the biggest reasons people fall off the weight loss diet wagon because
its unpleasant and difficult to resist. This is why pharmaceutical and supplement
companies spend millions of dollars on researching, developing and marketing appetite
suppressants. Yet CR advocates put themselves through 30-50% calorie restriction
on a daily basis as a way of life in the hopes of extending life span or health.
Practitioners
of CR follow a low-calorie lifestyle, but technically, they are not in a chronic
30% calorie deficit. That would be impossible. What happens is their metabolisms
get very slow (thats part of the idea behind CR; if you slow down your metabolism,
you allegedly slow down aging). So a 6 foot tall man who would normally require
nearly 3,000 calories to maintain his weight, might eventually reach an energy
balance at only 1800 or 1900 calories. This is not just due to a starvation
mode phenomenon, thats only part of it. Its primarily because
he loses weight until he is very thin and his smaller body doesnt need many
calories any more.
Does
caloric restriction really extend lifespan?
The
biological mechanisms of lifespan extension through calorie restriction are not
fully understood, but researchers say it may involve alterations in energy metabolism
(as mentioned above), reduced oxidative damage, improvements in insulin sensitivity,
reduction of glycation, modulation of protein metabolism, downregulation of pro-inflammatory
genes and functional changes in both neuroendocrine and autonomic nervous systems.
Mouse
studies on CR go back as far as 1935 and monkey studies began in the late 1980s.
So far the results are clear on one thing: caloric restriction does increase lifespan
in rodents and other lower species (yeast, worms and flies). Studies suggest the
life of the laboratory rat is 25% longer with CR (even longer with aggressive
CR). Primate studies are still underway and humans have been experimenting with
CR for some time. In primates and humans, biomarkers of aging show signs of slower
aging with CR. This makes many proponents talk about this CR as if it were a sure-thing,
already proven through double-blind randomized clinical human trials.
The
truth is, there is NO direct experimental evidence that you will live longer from
practicing CR. Due to the length of human lifespans, we will not have the necessary
data for at least another generation and perhaps multiple generations. Even then,
it will still be highly speculative whether CR will extend human life at all and
if so how much. We can only estimate. Ive seen guesses in the scientific
literature ranging from 3 to 13 years, if CR is practiced for an entire adult
lifetime.
Jay
Phelan, a biologist at UCLA is skeptical. He says the potential life extension
is on the lower end of that range and the increase is so small that its
not worth the semi-starvation:
There
is no current evidence that lifelong caloric restriction leads to increased lifespan
in primates. Its certainly tantalizing that things like blood pressure or
heart rate look as though they are a lot healthier and I believe they are. Whether
or not this translates to a significantly increased lifespan, I dont know.
I predict that it doesnt.
I
dont quibble qualitatively with their results. Yes, it will increase lifespan,
but it will not increase it by 50% or 60%, it wont increase it by 20% or
10%, it might increase it by 2%. So if you tell me that I have to do something
horrible for every day of my life for a 2% benefit - for an extra year of life
- I say no thanks.
Is
prolonged caloric restriction unhealthy?
When
caloric restriction is practiced with optimal nutrition (CRON), it is not inherently
unhealthy. Actually, it appears the reverse is true. First, the weight loss that
comes with the low calories produces improvements in the health markers, as you
would expect. Second, the meticulous choice of food from CRON practitioners, where
they pick high nutrient foods and avoid empty calories means that they are making
healthy food choices. Third, advocates say that the CR itself improves health.
I wonder, however, how much does CR improve health independent of the weight loss
and the optimal nutrition?
By
losing fat and maintaining an ideal body composition (the fat to muscle ratio)
and eating high nutrient density foods, I propose that even at a more normal caloric
intake, you will get very significant health and longevity benefits. I also propose
that gaining muscle in a natural way (no steroids) will increase your quality
of life today and as you get older.
Aside
from the fact that we are not lab rats, the truth is, none of us knows when our
day will come. We could get plucked off this physical plane at any moment and
have no control over how it happens. My belief is that we should make our lifestyle
decisions based on quality of life, not just quantity of life. That includes our
quality of life today as well as our anticipated quality of life when we are older.
Maybe we ought to be focusing more on health span than life span.
Downsides
of calorie restriction for life extension
One
fact about calorie restriction that they often dont mention on these talk
shows is that the benefits of CR decline if you start CR at a later age. This
was discussed in a research paper from the Journal of Nutrition called, Starving
for life: what animal studies can and cannot tell us about the use of caloric
restriction to prolong human lifespan. The author of the paper, John Speakman
from the School of Biological Sciences at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland,
said that the later in life you begin to practice CR, the less of an increase
in lifespan you will achieve. Even if the CR proponents are right, if you started
in your late 40s or mid 50s for example, the benefit would be minimal.
If you started in your 60s the effect would be almost nonexistent. Essentially,
you have to starve for life to get the benefits.
While
some CR proponents claim that they arent hungry and they cite studies suggesting
that hunger decreases during starvation, Speakman and other researchers say that
hunger remains a big problem during CR - especially in todays modern society
where we are surrounded with convenience food and numerous eating cues - and that
alone makes CR impractical:
Neuroendocrine
profiles support the idea that animals under CR are continuously hungry. The feasibility
of restricting intake in humans for many decades is questionable.
Lets
suppose for a moment that CR is totally legit and the claims are true. Many of
the proposed benefits of CR come at the expense of what many of us are trying
to do here: gain and maintain lean body mass. One spokesman for CR is 6 feet tall
and 130 pounds. Another poster boy for CR is 6 foot tall and 115 lbs. Measurements
of rodents under CR not only show large reductions in skeletal muscle but also
bone mass.
I
am not suggesting that these CR practitioners are anorexic, a concern that has
been raised about CR when practiced aggressively. However, they are losing large
amounts of fat-free tissue and that is plainly obvious for all to see when you
look at their bony physiques. I am not imposing my body standards on others, but
115 to 130 lbs at 6 foot tall is underweight for a man by any standard. Furthermore,
researchers say that at the body mass indices sustained by most voluntary CR practitioners,
we would expect females to become amenorrheic. One thing that is completely
incompatible with a CR lifestyle is reproduction says Speakman.
With
that kind of atrophy, I have to wonder what their quality of life will be like
in old age. While many people struggle with body fat for most of their adult lives,
Im sure almost everyone knows an elderly person who wrestles with the opposite
problem: they are seriously underweight and they struggle to eat enough and maintain
lean body mass.
My
grandmother, before she passed away, was under 80 lbs. We could not get her to
eat. She was weak and very frail. I have reported many times about the research
showing how most overweight people under estimate calorie intake and eat more
than they think or admit. In elder care homes, the research has often showed the
opposite - the patients over estimate how much they eat. They swear they are eating
enough, but they arent and they keep losing dangerous amounts of weight. With
underweight, atrophied seniors, weakness means less functionality and lower quality
of life and a fall can mean more than broken bones, it can be life-threatening.
Life
extension with more muscle
While
there is a commonality between CRON and the way I recommend eating (high nutrient
density, low calorie density foods), in most regards, CR is the opposite of my
approach. In my Burn
The Fat, Feed The Muscle program, we go for a higher energy flux nutrition
program, which means that because we are weight training and doing cardio and
leading a very active lifestyle, we get to eat more. Because we are so active
and well-trained, the eating more does not have a negative effect as it would
on a sedentary person, who might get sick and fat from the additional calories.
We active folks take those calories, burn them for energy, partition them into
lean muscle tissue and we enjoy a faster metabolism and extremely high quality
of life.
As
a bodybuilder, CR is not compatible with my priorities, but hypothetically speaking,
if I were to practice a lower calorie lifestyle, I wouldnt follow an aggressive
CR approach. Id probably do as the Okinawans do. They have a very simple
philosophy: hari hachi bu: eat until you are only 80% full. While this does not
mean there is a carefully measured 20% calorie deficit, its consistent with
what we practice in the Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle lifestyle for a fat loss
phase, and avoiding overeating is certainly a smart way to avoid obesity and health
problems. Incidentally, the Okinawans eat about 40% less than Americans, and 11%
less than they should, according to standard caloric intake guidelines, and they
live 4 years longer than Americans.
If
someone is being sold on CR by an enthusiastic CR spokesperson, or
simply curious after watching the latest TV talk show (where they are looking
for controversial stories), its important to know that there is more than
one side to the story. If you carefully read the entire body of research on CR,
you will see that the experts are split right down the middle in their opinions
about whether CR will really work. CR for humans remains highly controversial
and there are no guarantees that this will extend your life.
Researchers
at the National Institutes of Health in Baltimore, MD put it this way:
Because
it is unlikely that an experimental study will ever be designed to address this
question in humans, we respond that 'we think we will never know for sure.'We
suggest that debate of this question is clearly an academic exercise.
In
closing, let me go back to one of the original questions I was asked: Can
the BFFM food plan also be thought as a longevity lifestyle, but with more muscle
mass? Absolutely beautifully said! Thats precisely what Burn
The Fat, Feed The Muscle is.
I
believe that by making healthy food choices but doing so at a higher level of
calorie intake and expenditure, that we can fend off sarcopenia - the age related
decline in muscle mass that debilitates many seniors - while enjoying a more muscular
physique, greater strength, and a less restrictive lifestyle. Most gerontologists
agree - by making simple lifestyle changes that include strength training and
good nutrition, you can easily turn back the biological clock 10 years without
going hungry.
For
more information about Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle, the longevity lifestyle
with more muscle," click
here.
About
The Author Tom Venuto is a fat loss expert, lifetime natural (steroid-free)
bodybuilder, independent nutrition researcher, freelance writer, and author of
the #1 best selling diet e-book, Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle: Fat-Burning Secrets
of The Worlds Best Bodybuilders & Fitness Models (e-book) which teaches
you how to get lean without drugs or supplements using secrets of the world's
best bodybuilders and fitness models. Learn how to get rid of stubborn fat and
increase your metabolism by visiting www.burnthefat.com
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