about...FAT.....
nturner612
Posts: 710 Member
Question: What if
Person A ate 1300 calories but most of the food consisted of frozen lunches, sqeezing in pizza and fries to fit cal intake, and ate junk food, but stayed at cal intake goal. Exercised and lifted weights on a regular basis. drank plenty of water.
Person B eats 1300 calories but eats losts and lots of veggies, fruits, and healthy meats (tuna, chicken). Exercises and lifts weights on a regular basis and drinks plenty of water.
Say they are genetically identical, like a duplicate of a person. Person A consistenly eats lots (whatever u consider high) fat BUT does not go over calories.
What would be the end result here? I would like to know if by watching "fat" it makes for a better weigtht loss or it truly does not matter.
Person A ate 1300 calories but most of the food consisted of frozen lunches, sqeezing in pizza and fries to fit cal intake, and ate junk food, but stayed at cal intake goal. Exercised and lifted weights on a regular basis. drank plenty of water.
Person B eats 1300 calories but eats losts and lots of veggies, fruits, and healthy meats (tuna, chicken). Exercises and lifts weights on a regular basis and drinks plenty of water.
Say they are genetically identical, like a duplicate of a person. Person A consistenly eats lots (whatever u consider high) fat BUT does not go over calories.
What would be the end result here? I would like to know if by watching "fat" it makes for a better weigtht loss or it truly does not matter.
0
Replies
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It doesn't make much difference in the weight loss. It makes a HUGE difference in general health. Person A might be thin, but be more likely to still have cholesterol, triglyceride, blood pressure issues, etc.0
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Person A would be very hungry, I would imagine ...0
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assuming caloric intakes were the same, they would get approximately the same results.
Processed foods and highly caloric foods are most prone to having errors in their listed calories (and usually underestimates) so if actually in practice and with a large enough sample size you MIGHT see the whole foods eater (s) lose more.
But again, not likely to be different.0 -
As far as weight loss it doesn't make a difference. Person A may not be as healthy but they should end up weighing the same in your example.
Fat doesn't make you fat. There's lots of good fats and your body needs fat to operate properly.0 -
I think person B would lose more and faster..... calorie intake is not the only factor to losing weight,.....WHAT you eat is significantly important...0
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it really doesn't mattetr where your calories come from...you should lose the same amount of weight. the person eating healthier will definitely be healthier on the inside though.0
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Person A would end up having insulin spikes after each meal and either slipping and eating more crap or feeling hungry and irritable. Hence it would be much more difficult for them to stick to the original plan. Not to mention other health effects mentioned above.0
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