Starvation mode
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Well there was a study done that took a group of people and had them consume no calories for days. The results were 72-96 hours on average it took for the metabolism to slow down.
So when on an extreme deficit combined with a high expenditure lifestyle (totally not recommended) it'd probably be advantageous to keep your metabolism running smoothly by having a cheat meal every 3 to 4 days
I said cheat meal, not cheat day. The idea of the cheat meal would be to keep the metabolism running smoothly while on a very low calorie diet. It's an idea, or broscience. The no calorie study I mentioned was to give the OP an idea of how hard you would have to diet for starvation to even start happening. No calories is an extreme example and it took 3 to 4 days. That was just one study though. There's of course others. I'd still recommend the 2 cheat meals a week if eating at an extreme deficit 0-500 cal/day or at least eat extra around workout times. I'm a believer in diet experimenting. Live and learn!0 -
Okay, okay so starvation mode is a myth. Calories out > than calories in will result in weight loss. Some slowing of the metabolism will happen if the deficit is large enough for long enough.
Maybe OP wants to know how large a deficit can he maintain without adverse effects on his metabolism? I'd like to know that too.0 -
I don't think most people associate "starvation mode" with literally starving to death, but good on you all who went down that road. I think it's more likely in reference to the problem you get when you undereat and your body decides to hang on to every last calorie out of some biological programming (OMG THERE'S A FAMINE!!).
Weight loss is more than calories in v calories out, sorry. I've eaten 1200 cals for weeks and lost NOTHING, even gained a kg or two, and upped my calories to 1300 or 1400 and started losing again regularly. Lots of people have experienced this. Eating too little and not losing? Up your calories by 100 - 200 and start losing again.
I eat around 1700 to 2100 calories a day these days but less than 20g a day of carbs. I lose weight at the rate of about 1.5kg a week. I'm 40, 5'9" and 104kg. I've lost about 23kg since I started.I would eat close to or slightly over my BMR most days, and I don't exercise. I work in an office. What you eat is equally as important as how many calories. Those who love your internet science, go look it up.0 -
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/1077746-starvation-mode-adaptive-thermogenesis-and-weight-loss
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/blog/heybales/view/reduced-metabolism-tdee-beyond-expected-from-weight-loss-616251
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2i_cmltmQ6A
You'll find in those studies that while some effects and the mode is real - the myths that many times goes along with it is not.
In that one study, merely overweight folks reduced their total daily burn by 20% by taking a 25% deficit off their lab measured TDEE in 3 months.
But as it shows, recovery is possible, the documentary is slightly negative in that regard.0 -
@tuxedord re: metabolism impacts
I do think every body is different, but I'm happy to share my experience, as a sample size of one, and some other observations.
(1) When I consume ~BMR for 4 weeks, my metabolism decreases 20%. I lose weight pretty quick (~1lb/wk) despite the slow metabolism and pretty low BF% (16%). I can continue running 4 mi/day, but I do run faster when fuelled better.
(2) There's a metabolic limit to how much energy fat can render. It's ~30kcal/lb fat/day. Someone carrying 100lb fat can tolerate a big caloric deficit, considering he can get 3000kcal/day from stored fat before eating a bite. This guy will have little metabolic "adverse effect" from severe caloric restriction. Someone with 20 lb fat on their skeleton, by contrast, will see metabolic impacts with a much smaller deficit.
(3) I've had appreciable experience with fasting (for spiritual reasons), and my body reacts very quickly to caloric restriction. Maybe it's because I'm lean to start with or because past experience has conditioned my body to recognize fasting. When I cut calories to <500/day, I feel sleepy within 24 hours. I can think and function fine, but exercise is out of the question and I need 2 hrs more sleep/day.0 -
This topic gets debated to death around here. Here's some factual information:
You can starve. If you deprive yourself of enough calories for a long enough period of time, you will die. It has and does happen to people. When people starve to death, they lose TONS of weight. They do not magically stop losing weight because they are starving. They do see some slowdown to their metabolisms but not enough to cease weight loss. They exhaust the great majority of their stored fuel. They look like skeletons before they die.
In order to die you need to be at or near zero intake for a very long time (depending on how much stored energy you have).
So is starvation mode real? It just depends what you mean by starvation mode. If you mean a magical metabolic condition that stops you from losing weight because you are eating low calories, then no, it's a myth. If you are asking can you starve to death by eating nothing or next to nothing for a long long time, then yeah, that can happen.
/thread. And most threads with "starvation" or "1200" in the topic, now that I think of it.0 -
Weight loss is more than calories in v calories out, sorry. I've eaten 1200 cals for weeks and lost NOTHING, even gained a kg or two, and upped my calories to 1300 or 1400 and started losing again regularly. Lots of people have experienced this. Eating too little and not losing? Up your calories by 100 - 200 and start losing again.
Aren't you special? Why don't you go teach the starving kids in Africa how to gain weight while eating at a deficit.0 -
I only clicked on the thread to view the train wreck. Looks like Mr. awesome.... Err I mean vismal saved the day !!!
Exellent work.0 -
Weight loss is more than calories in v calories out, sorry. I've eaten 1200 cals for weeks and lost NOTHING, even gained a kg or two, and upped my calories to 1300 or 1400 and started losing again regularly. Lots of people have experienced this. Eating too little and not losing? Up your calories by 100 - 200 and start losing again.
Aren't you special? Why don't you go teach the starving kids in Africa how to gain weight while eating at a deficit.
Did you realize starvation mode and starving are not the same thing?
You are referring to starving, they are referring to starvation mode. Few posts up are a few links with plenty of studies to educate yourself about the mode, not the starving.
And yes, to above post, obviously 1200 was the goal, and was not adhered to constantly very well, probably some binges in there, hence the weight gain.
Exact reason for one of the myths attached to starvation mode, you'll gain fat and weight and burn off muscle. Never mind the fact if deficit was that much you likely burned off muscle anyway, right along with the fat.
Eating more finally just unstressed their body and likely some decent water weight dropped, as well as generally less stress is better for weight loss anyway.0 -
I am keenly aware of the starvation mode myth and AT but thank you for your concern. I have been on this site for a while after all. The person who wrote that clearly believes in the starvation mode myth:I think it's more likely in reference to the problem you get when you undereat and your body decides to hang on to every last calorie out of some biological programming (OMG THERE'S A FAMINE!!).
This, along with what ever I quoted above where my main contentions. This was never about starving vs starvation mode. The remark about the African kids was a sarcastic way of telling the person her logic is askew if she thinks she's gaining weight while eating at a deficit.0 -
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as long as you are up and moving around and breathing....then your metabolism is running.....
If starvation mode existed, I guarantee all those stringy, skeleton looking kids over in Ethiopia would not exist.
When people lose weight there metabolism will slow, because they have gotten smaller, the demand for energy is not as great.
Now if said person has lost a lot of weight, and along with that, they lost a lot of muscle.....then your metabolism will slow even more....
That is why you see a lot of people recommend lifting weights while losing weight.....
To keep the muscle you have, and keep an elevated demand for energy......0 -
I don't think most people associate "starvation mode" with literally starving to death, but good on you all who went down that road. I think it's more likely in reference to the problem you get when you undereat and your body decides to hang on to every last calorie out of some biological programming (OMG THERE'S A FAMINE!!).
Weight loss is more than calories in v calories out, sorry. I've eaten 1200 cals for weeks and lost NOTHING, even gained a kg or two, and upped my calories to 1300 or 1400 and started losing again regularly. Lots of people have experienced this. Eating too little and not losing? Up your calories by 100 - 200 and start losing again.
If you were eating at 1200 exactly, and meaning you weighed and measured everything, then you would have still lost weight.
Most likely you were not doing this, and were actually eating at maintenance during that time.
Will your metabolism slow? Yes
Your body by design is meant to preserve life....so if there are less calories coming in, than what is needed, it will do what it can to protect the body and sustain life. But will you stop losing weight? No.
Then you have a hormone (as mentioned by another poster) leptin
Its job / role signals the body to oxidize body fat.....as you get smaller, you have less leptin in your system.....
That is why (depending on where you are with BF% and body weight).....doing a High Carb refeed is recommended.
By doing a high carb refeed, it triggers the release of more leptin in the body.
So do a refeed that is high in carbs, moderate in protein, and little fat.I eat around 1700 to 2100 calories a day these days but less than 20g a day of carbs. I lose weight at the rate of about 1.5kg a week. I'm 40, 5'9" and 104kg. I've lost about 23kg since I started.I would eat close to or slightly over my BMR most days, and I don't exercise. I work in an office. What you eat is equally as important as how many calories. Those who love your internet science, go look it up.
You don't have to exercise to lose weight.
I will say this though.....be careful, the more weight you lose, without doing exercise.....the more of that weight loss will be from muscle.
Which will slow your metabolism
What you eat is important....but it will still come down to calories....
I mean if you could clarify which foods or calories you are referring too, I would like to hear.0 -
Why do you want to starve yourself????????????????
PLEASE EAT! EAT! EAT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Eating 1,700 and burning 1,700 is NOT good!!!
FOOD IS FUEL
THESE FORUMS - AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!! Repeating myself, time & time again
ZZZZZ!!!0 -
When people up calories and lose weight - its water weight they lose. Dieting is stressful on the body - and as a result, it retains water.
Biggest issues with very low calories are getting enough micro and macro-nutrients, the increased risk of sustainability/adherence as well as its impact on energy levels.0 -
A 20% reduction in metabolism (which I think is a slight overestimate as the literature I've read suggests more along the lines of 15%) is not enough to cause weight loss to cease. This is basically an excuse people use to stay fat. 20% is just that, 20%. If a "normal" male can maintain on 2700 calories then you'd simply need to eat 2160 calories to maintain. You can increase that number by living an active lifestyle and building muscle. Metabolic adaptations can make it harder to lose weight and maintain weight but it's completely different then saying if you eat to little you'll stop losing weight which is what starvation mode is usually associated with.
What it means is that after you lose body fat, you will have to eat 20% less food than normal just to maintain your weight compared to someone who was never overweight. In your example, that means eating 540 calories less a day than you normally would. That's significant.
Yes, you can offset that with exercise, but 540 calories is a lot of exercise each day. I typically burn about 120 calories with 30 minutes on the exercise bicycle. I'd have to ride it for over 2 hours a day to burn off 540 calories.
Anyway the point is, it does appear that for many people there is a metabolic slow down response to losing body fat as the body tries to restore the fat stores to their previous level.0 -
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:happy: I started on the 22nd May and have lost 3 stone. It has been the most amazing journey. I have got a long way to go yet but am taking the relaxed approach and weight is just dropping off. I eat what I like, as long as it fits in with calories. Sometimes I am under, sometimes over, but from day to day it all balances out. I am learning to listen to my body and not worry about the finer details. Stressing out about this can also affect metabolism. My advice is just to relax, don't become obsessed and let your body do the rest. If you do a lot of excercise and burn a lot of calories, your body will tell you when its hungry. Just don't go overboard.0
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Okay, okay so starvation mode is a myth. Calories out > than calories in will result in weight loss. Some slowing of the metabolism will happen if the deficit is large enough for long enough.
Maybe OP wants to know how large a deficit can he maintain without adverse effects on his metabolism? I'd like to know that too.
I'd like to know that too, although in addition to effects on metabolism, I'd like to know effects on muscle mass, and on my ability to sustain it, as well as my ability to make fitness gains. I can figure out the latter two, and perhaps observe somewhat the first two (by monitoring yourself for negative effects) but I'd love to know the research.
I don't think there's been a lot that is especially definitive on this topic. There's that study you see cited here a lot that shows that a VLCD has much great effects on metabolism that a 25% deficit and that a 25% deficit without exercise has a more significant effect than a 25% deficit made up of half exercise and half calorie cutting (which seems to have no significant negative effect that won't be cured quickly after one stops dieting), but just that one study seems insufficient and it doesn't address the question I have (and OP seems to have), which is what about a greater deficit where the additional deficit is created by exercise?
As it is, 1-2 lbs per week seems to be the usual advice, unless you are extremely obese and ideally under a doctor's care, so that's what I'm going with, but I'd love more information too.0 -
Again, I highly recommend folks watch this video:
http://videocast.nih.gov/summary.asp?live=2993&bhcp=20
For the part on the metabolic effects of body fat mass loss, skip ahead to 35:00 and watch to 40:00.
The metabolic effect is not (directly) related to caloric intake. It is related to loss of body fat and, consequently, reduction in leptin levels.
The effect is a 15%-20% reduction in metabolism, and this effect has been seen in a study of over 100 patients over a 3-4 week period. It has been extrapolated from an NIH database on long-term weight loss to also exist out to 3-4 years of maintained weight loss.
Losing body fat does cause a metabolic slowdown as your body fights to restore fat stores to their previous level. It does not mean your metabolism stops, nor does it mean that you cannot reduce your caloric intake even further to counter the metabolic slowdown and continue to lose weight.0 -
20% reduction is an overstatement mostly. The reduction in caloric requirements to maintain weight or continuing to lose weight isn't the body defending against fat loss. It's a reduction in the bodies energy demands due to reduced caloric expenditure post fat/lbm reduction.
Please see this video:
http://videocast.nih.gov/summary.asp?live=2993&bhcp=20
And skip to 35:00.
Metabolic reduction is 15%-20%, and is directly related to leptin reduction which is directly related to body fat mass loss.0 -
I believe from what I've read on here that I will not go into "starvation mode" I just find it rather amusing I guess that on a day (like yesterday) when I consume less than 1200 (I think I was at like 1165 or something) that when I complete my diary for the day MFP itself tells me that eating this amount of calories could cause me to go into starvation mode! Why on earth would it say that? I don't get it...I just choose not to believe it and to try to keep a large deficit anyway because I want the maximum loss I can get. I'm not starving, if I was I'd eat more but I feel fine at this level.
Anyone else have MFP "yell" at you when you don't eat at least 1200? I assume it does this for everyone....0 -
The effect is a 15%-20% reduction in metabolism, and this effect has been seen in a study of over 100 patients over a 3-4 week period. It has been extrapolated from an NIH database on long-term weight loss to also exist out to 3-4 years of maintained weight loss.
There seems to be a difference between this and the study that heybales cited (which you should look at), which found that the negative effect could be overcome more quickly, especially for those who had a 25% deficit half made up of exercise. Personally, I monitor my TDEE, and (while I admit my way of doing so is imperfect), I've not yet seen a decrease beyond that explained by simply weighing less, which I think can be somewhat explained by the fact that most of the loss occurred while I was extremely overweight, and (to a lesser degree) because I've been working hard to maintain LBM and to do as much of this as possible through exercise.
But let's say that you are right, and the experience of the people in the study or the personal accounts of people like vismal are not representative of what you or I could expect. What difference does it make? I'm fine at the deficit necessary to lose weight, and if at my goal my TDEE isn't about 1900 (which is what's predicted) but 1600 or so, well, that's a bummer, but I'd rather do what is necessary to deal with that than not lose weight at all. I mean, better not to have gotten fat, but that milk is split, right?0 -
Some people use "starvation mode" to mean "metabolic adaptation beyond that necessary when one is losing weight"--essentially the effect that the study cited by heybales shows for people on a VLCD or even those on a 25% deficit who do it all through calorie cutting. I think that's what MFP means, although who knows--mostly I just think MFP wants to warn against going under 1200 for liability purposes. I know when I "fasted" on Good Friday (I had a small salad, so logged), it gave me the 1200 message, but also told me that if I kept eating like that day (about 100 calories) my weight in 5 weeks would be amazing. I did wonder about the mixed message if one were inclined to overrestrict--it seemed subject to criticism as to the effect on those with EDs, and thus I think it's good that they have modified that somewhat and now don't give the "in 5 weeks" if you eat under 1000, although I doubt it really makes much difference.
The problem is that it seems to be more common, around here anyway, to use "starvation mode" to mean what vismal was talking about, the idea that you actually stop losing weight entirely, as your body "hangs on to fat." I never knew anyone believed that until I started reading the MFP forums, but it sure seems common, and that is a myth.0 -
Why do you want to starve yourself????????????????
PLEASE EAT! EAT! EAT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Eating 1,700 and burning 1,700 is NOT good!!!
FOOD IS FUEL
THESE FORUMS - AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!! Repeating myself, time & time again
ZZZZZ!!!
Overwrought much?
He clearly said he's using that as an example to simplify his question.0 -
But let's say that you are right, and the experience of the people in the study or the personal accounts of people like vismal are not representative of what you or I could expect. What difference does it make? I'm fine at the deficit necessary to lose weight, and if at my goal my TDEE isn't about 1900 (which is what's predicted) but 1600 or so, well, that's a bummer, but I'd rather do what is necessary to deal with that than not lose weight at all. I mean, better not to have gotten fat, but that milk is split, right?
Absolutely. It just means that maintaining weight loss is harder than just losing the weight to begin with. It's why most people fail at long-term weight loss.
But the topic here is metabolic reduction, and my point here is that metabolic reduction due to fat loss is real and is scientifically proven in a clinical setting of over 100 people in a 3-4 week period, and has been extrapolated using NIH data to persist out to at least 3-4 years with people who have maintained weight loss.0 -
This topic gets debated to death around here. Here's some factual information:
You can starve. If you deprive yourself of enough calories for a long enough period of time, you will die. It has and does happen to people. When people starve to death, they lose TONS of weight. They do not magically stop losing weight because they are starving. They do see some slowdown to their metabolisms but not enough to cease weight loss. They exhaust the great majority of their stored fuel. They look like skeletons before they die.
In order to die you need to be at or near zero intake for a very long time (depending on how much stored energy you have).
So is starvation mode real? It just depends what you mean by starvation mode. If you mean a magical metabolic condition that stops you from losing weight because you are eating low calories, then no, it's a myth. If you are asking can you starve to death by eating nothing or next to nothing for a long long time, then yeah, that can happen.0 -
Again, I highly recommend folks watch this video:
http://videocast.nih.gov/summary.asp?live=2993&bhcp=20
For the part on the metabolic effects of body fat mass loss, skip ahead to 35:00 and watch to 40:00.
The metabolic effect is not (directly) related to caloric intake. It is related to loss of body fat and, consequently, reduction in leptin levels.
The effect is a 15%-20% reduction in metabolism, and this effect has been seen in a study of over 100 patients over a 3-4 week period. It has been extrapolated from an NIH database on long-term weight loss to also exist out to 3-4 years of maintained weight loss.
Losing body fat does cause a metabolic slowdown as your body fights to restore fat stores to their previous level. It does not mean your metabolism stops, nor does it mean that you cannot reduce your caloric intake even further to counter the metabolic slowdown and continue to lose weight.
Is there literally anything you can do to improve adaptive thermogenesis? Because the notion that I might have to eat 400+ fewer calories (20% reduction in my BMR) than the average person just to maintain a healthy weight for the rest of my life is incredibly depressing to me. So much so that I find it very demotivating. I don't want to have to eat a low number of calories and exercise for hours a day just to be able to eat a more sensible amount.0 -
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But let's say that you are right, and the experience of the people in the study or the personal accounts of people like vismal are not representative of what you or I could expect. What difference does it make? I'm fine at the deficit necessary to lose weight, and if at my goal my TDEE isn't about 1900 (which is what's predicted) but 1600 or so, well, that's a bummer, but I'd rather do what is necessary to deal with that than not lose weight at all. I mean, better not to have gotten fat, but that milk is split, right?
Absolutely. It just means that maintaining weight loss is harder than just losing the weight to begin with. It's why most people fail at long-term weight loss.
But the topic here is metabolic reduction, and my point here is that metabolic reduction due to fat loss is real and is scientifically proven in a clinical setting of over 100 people in a 3-4 week period, and has been extrapolated using NIH data to persist out to at least 3-4 years with people who have maintained weight loss.
Leptin will only be a concern for people who are sitting ~8% BF
If your BF% is higher....than you have leptin floating through your system....
And also as I stated earlier, if you want to kick up the hormone, then down a ton of carbs for a day or two.
That triggers production of said hormone
And also metabolic reduction due to fat loss....
Yes possible, again as I mentioned earlier, if you are smaller than what you were before, your energy requirements are less.
If said individual has also lost a lot of muscle during their fat loss period, well that is going to lower energy demands as well.....
Hence people who are obese or overweight, I always encourage they do weight training while they lose......
Keep as much lean mass as possible.....helps keep energy requirements up.
So this is not metabolic damage...
Things are working as they should be.0
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