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Are all calories the same??

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Replies

  • yarwell
    yarwell Posts: 10,477 Member
    fx1.jpg

  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,501 Member
    UG77 wrote: »
    If all calories were the same than most Americans wouldn't be overfed and malnourished at the same time.
    All 1 gallon containers in the world hold 1 gallon. The content of what those gallons hold will be different, but it's still a gallon in volume.
    Nutrient values matter for health aspects, but doesn't change energy aspects of a calorie.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png

  • yarwell
    yarwell Posts: 10,477 Member
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    All 1 gallon containers in the world hold 1 gallon.

    yet the ones in America are smaller than those in the UK :-)
  • macchiatto
    macchiatto Posts: 2,890 Member
    @nvmomketo, right there with you in terms of personal results and 140 gm carbs/day being their definition of "low carb."
  • psuLemon
    psuLemon Posts: 38,389 MFP Moderator
    edited February 2016
    yarwell wrote: »
    fx1.jpg

    Here is the text for that picture.

    Hall et al. investigated 19 adults with obesity that selectively restricted dietary carbohydrate versus fat. Cutting carbohydrates increased net fat oxidation while equal calorie fat restriction had no effect. However, cutting fat resulted in more body fat loss than cutting carbohydrates. Mathematical model simulations predicted small long-term differences in body fat.


    Highlights
    • Cutting carbohydrates increased net fat oxidation, but cutting fat by equal calories had no effect
    • Cutting fat resulted in more body fat loss as measured by metabolic balance
    • Mathematical model simulations predicted small long-term differences in body fat
  • EvgeniZyntx
    EvgeniZyntx Posts: 24,208 Member
    yarwell wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    All 1 gallon containers in the world hold 1 gallon.

    yet the ones in America are smaller than those in the UK :-)

    Imperial > US dry > US liquid

    all gallon containers are not the same.
  • yarwell
    yarwell Posts: 10,477 Member
    edited February 2016
    psulemon wrote: »
    Here is the text for that picture.

    Yes, the picture is the graphical summary from the paper in the OP. It illustrates the change in fat oxidation nicely.

    All references to fat loss should be prefixed with "calculated" as the DEXA measured fat losses were not significant. The model prediction of the clinical trial was poor :-

    jsz8drchwnw4.png
  • EvgeniZyntx
    EvgeniZyntx Posts: 24,208 Member
    psulemon wrote: »
    yarwell wrote: »
    fx1.jpg

    Here is the text for that picture.

    Hall et al. investigated 19 adults with obesity that selectively restricted dietary carbohydrate versus fat. Cutting carbohydrates increased net fat oxidation while equal calorie fat restriction had no effect. However, cutting fat resulted in more body fat loss than cutting carbohydrates. Mathematical model simulations predicted small long-term differences in body fat.


    Highlights
    • Cutting carbohydrates increased net fat oxidation, but cutting fat by equal calories had no effect
    • Cutting fat resulted in more body fat loss as measured by metabolic balance indirect calorimetry, but statistically not significant when evaluated with DXA scan.
    • Mathematical model simulations predicted small long-term differences in body fat without taking into consideration hormonal or metabolic mechanisms of homeostasis.

    ^^Corrections.
  • yarwell
    yarwell Posts: 10,477 Member
    psulemon wrote: »
    I believe one of the main objectives was to dispute this whole nonsense of carbohydrate insulin theory (Taubes), that one must reduce carbs to effectively cut fat. Which I believe this study does support that.

    Clearly there was weight loss in the fat reduced diet where carbohydrate intake was maintained. In the men the fasting insulin fell on the RF diet by 2.6 pg/ml, p=0.033, from a baseline of 10. The insulin secretion measured by 24h C-peptide is reported to have decreased by 22% (p=0.001) in the case of the RC diet which is perhaps an illustration of how reduced insulin secretion is associated with increased fat oxidation - the RC diet oxidised 400 kcal/day more fat where the RF diet saw a very small NS increase. Less carbs, less insulin, more fat oxidation - in line with what Taubes proposes ?
  • stevencloser
    stevencloser Posts: 8,911 Member
    yarwell wrote: »
    psulemon wrote: »
    I believe one of the main objectives was to dispute this whole nonsense of carbohydrate insulin theory (Taubes), that one must reduce carbs to effectively cut fat. Which I believe this study does support that.

    Clearly there was weight loss in the fat reduced diet where carbohydrate intake was maintained. In the men the fasting insulin fell on the RF diet by 2.6 pg/ml, p=0.033, from a baseline of 10. The insulin secretion measured by 24h C-peptide is reported to have decreased by 22% (p=0.001) in the case of the RC diet which is perhaps an illustration of how reduced insulin secretion is associated with increased fat oxidation - the RC diet oxidised 400 kcal/day more fat where the RF diet saw a very small NS increase. Less carbs, less insulin, more fat oxidation - in line with what Taubes proposes ?

    No, because Taubes talks like it's impossible to lose net fat without reducing insulin.
    Low carb has more fat oxidation but also more fat intake. It leads to equal amounts total fat lost.
  • yarwell
    yarwell Posts: 10,477 Member
    yarwell wrote: »
    psulemon wrote: »
    I believe one of the main objectives was to dispute this whole nonsense of carbohydrate insulin theory (Taubes), that one must reduce carbs to effectively cut fat. Which I believe this study does support that.

    Clearly there was weight loss in the fat reduced diet where carbohydrate intake was maintained. In the men the fasting insulin fell on the RF diet by 2.6 pg/ml, p=0.033, from a baseline of 10. The insulin secretion measured by 24h C-peptide is reported to have decreased by 22% (p=0.001) in the case of the RC diet which is perhaps an illustration of how reduced insulin secretion is associated with increased fat oxidation - the RC diet oxidised 400 kcal/day more fat where the RF diet saw a very small NS increase. Less carbs, less insulin, more fat oxidation - in line with what Taubes proposes ?

    No, because Taubes talks like it's impossible to lose net fat without reducing insulin.
    Low carb has more fat oxidation but also more fat intake. It leads to equal amounts total fat lost.

    Insulin did reduce in the low fat arm.

    The calculated fat loss was indeed greater on low fat because fat intake reduced and everything else was about the same. On low carb the fat oxidation increased substantially but the intake was the same, and as they didn't finish the experiment / do a proper run-in the fat oxidation was suppressed by glycogen depletion.
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    macchiatto wrote: »
    @nvmomketo, right there with you in terms of personal results and 140 gm carbs/day being their definition of "low carb."

    You should read the explanation for why that is (it was necessary to balance calories without changing other things and still allowed for testing the insulin hypothesis), as well as the discussion of the study I posted above, from examine.com. (The belief is that lower carb would have had slightly better results but been essentially the same as low fat over time.)

    But if people will stop claiming 140 g of carbs is low carb, I'd be happy, sure.
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    Low carb has more fat oxidation but also more fat intake. It leads to equal amounts total fat lost.

    Precisely. That someone eating more fat burns more fat is hardly shocking -- you tend to burn what you eat -- but also not significant.
  • auddii
    auddii Posts: 15,357 Member
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    macchiatto wrote: »
    @nvmomketo, right there with you in terms of personal results and 140 gm carbs/day being their definition of "low carb."

    You should read the explanation for why that is (it was necessary to balance calories without changing other things and still allowed for testing the insulin hypothesis), as well as the discussion of the study I posted above, from examine.com. (The belief is that lower carb would have had slightly better results but been essentially the same as low fat over time.)

    But if people will stop claiming 140 g of carbs is low carb, I'd be happy, sure.

    Meh, people can find all sorts of ways to justify calling themselves "lower carb". I'm not sure if it's needing to fit in with a group or really wanting to label yourself as something or what. I eat how it works for me. I'm still working on finding macro levels that I'm good with. And I really need to start tracking binge patterns with macro splits.
  • tincanonastring
    tincanonastring Posts: 3,944 Member
    auddii wrote: »
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    macchiatto wrote: »
    @nvmomketo, right there with you in terms of personal results and 140 gm carbs/day being their definition of "low carb."

    You should read the explanation for why that is (it was necessary to balance calories without changing other things and still allowed for testing the insulin hypothesis), as well as the discussion of the study I posted above, from examine.com. (The belief is that lower carb would have had slightly better results but been essentially the same as low fat over time.)

    But if people will stop claiming 140 g of carbs is low carb, I'd be happy, sure.

    Meh, people can find all sorts of ways to justify calling themselves "lower carb". I'm not sure if it's needing to fit in with a group or really wanting to label yourself as something or what. I eat how it works for me. I'm still working on finding macro levels that I'm good with. And I really need to start tracking binge patterns with macro splits.

    +1!!!!
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    auddii wrote: »
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    macchiatto wrote: »
    @nvmomketo, right there with you in terms of personal results and 140 gm carbs/day being their definition of "low carb."

    You should read the explanation for why that is (it was necessary to balance calories without changing other things and still allowed for testing the insulin hypothesis), as well as the discussion of the study I posted above, from examine.com. (The belief is that lower carb would have had slightly better results but been essentially the same as low fat over time.)

    But if people will stop claiming 140 g of carbs is low carb, I'd be happy, sure.

    Meh, people can find all sorts of ways to justify calling themselves "lower carb". I'm not sure if it's needing to fit in with a group or really wanting to label yourself as something or what. I eat how it works for me. I'm still working on finding macro levels that I'm good with. And I really need to start tracking binge patterns with macro splits.

    I'm just biased since I often end up around 140-150 even though I don't cut carbs at all and am certainly not low carb.
  • doxeposse
    doxeposse Posts: 17 Member
    ndj1979 wrote: »
    Zmac34 wrote: »
    No, all calories are not the same. Over time if you're consuming more processed foods, dairy, meat then that will add more weight than if you consume a whole foods and mostly plant based diet high in antioxidants, and nutrients.

    sorry, but that is wrong.

    If person A is in a 500 calorie deficit and eats processed foods, dairy, and meat and Person B is eating a plant based and whole foods diet, they will both lose the same amount of weight.

    Unless, of course, you have some peer reviewed studies that show that a whole food, plant based diet somehow override CICO and the basic laws of math and physics....

    Actually, this isn't true. Depending on Thyroid levels, hormone levels, etc., some people can gain weight on a 500 calorie deficit diet. The body does amazing things. Sometimes it helps us and sometimes it inadvertently hurts us. It is important to remember that only "normal" and hormonally balanced people will behave as expected during a calorie deficit.
  • senecarr
    senecarr Posts: 5,377 Member
    doxeposse wrote: »
    ndj1979 wrote: »
    Zmac34 wrote: »
    No, all calories are not the same. Over time if you're consuming more processed foods, dairy, meat then that will add more weight than if you consume a whole foods and mostly plant based diet high in antioxidants, and nutrients.

    sorry, but that is wrong.

    If person A is in a 500 calorie deficit and eats processed foods, dairy, and meat and Person B is eating a plant based and whole foods diet, they will both lose the same amount of weight.

    Unless, of course, you have some peer reviewed studies that show that a whole food, plant based diet somehow override CICO and the basic laws of math and physics....

    Actually, this isn't true. Depending on Thyroid levels, hormone levels, etc., some people can gain weight on a 500 calorie deficit diet. The body does amazing things. Sometimes it helps us and sometimes it inadvertently hurts us. It is important to remember that only "normal" and hormonally balanced people will behave as expected during a calorie deficit.

    No. By definition, you don't gain weight on a deficit. A person with thyroid issues could have their calorie deficit poorly predicted to such an extant that it is off by 500 calories. That's why proper weight loss is a feedback cycle - if you aren't losing weight, you may have to adjust the estimated TDEE. Lowering TDEE repeatedly will eventually cause weight loss, but if it is out of predicted range for no explainable reason, it might be worth consulting a doctor about medical conditions.

    I'll also say, thyroid conditions are usually more to the tune of 100 to 200 differences in BMR, and even less in terms of TDEE because if you're moving, your body can't really avoid spending some energy.
  • auddii
    auddii Posts: 15,357 Member
    senecarr wrote: »
    doxeposse wrote: »
    ndj1979 wrote: »
    Zmac34 wrote: »
    No, all calories are not the same. Over time if you're consuming more processed foods, dairy, meat then that will add more weight than if you consume a whole foods and mostly plant based diet high in antioxidants, and nutrients.

    sorry, but that is wrong.

    If person A is in a 500 calorie deficit and eats processed foods, dairy, and meat and Person B is eating a plant based and whole foods diet, they will both lose the same amount of weight.

    Unless, of course, you have some peer reviewed studies that show that a whole food, plant based diet somehow override CICO and the basic laws of math and physics....

    Actually, this isn't true. Depending on Thyroid levels, hormone levels, etc., some people can gain weight on a 500 calorie deficit diet. The body does amazing things. Sometimes it helps us and sometimes it inadvertently hurts us. It is important to remember that only "normal" and hormonally balanced people will behave as expected during a calorie deficit.

    No. By definition, you don't gain weight on a deficit. A person with thyroid issues could have their calorie deficit poorly predicted to such an extant that it is off by 500 calories. That's why proper weight loss is a feedback cycle - if you aren't losing weight, you may have to adjust the estimated TDEE. Lowering TDEE repeatedly will eventually cause weight loss, but if it is out of predicted range for no explainable reason, it might be worth consulting a doctor about medical conditions.

    I'll also say, thyroid conditions are usually more to the tune of 100 to 200 differences in BMR, and even less in terms of TDEE because if you're moving, your body can't really avoid spending some energy.

    Yes, this. Medical issues, especially hormone imbalances could make online calorie calculators inaccurate, but tdee is personal. A 500 calorie deficit from your own actual maintenance calories will result in weight loss.
  • yarwell
    yarwell Posts: 10,477 Member
    edited February 2016
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    Low carb has more fat oxidation but also more fat intake. It leads to equal amounts total fat lost.

    Precisely. That someone eating more fat burns more fat is hardly shocking -- you tend to burn what you eat -- but also not significant.

    They weren't eating more fat, the LC arm ate the same amount of fat and cut down the carbs. Fat oxidation increased, insulin secretion reduced. See the graphical summary.

    The people eating less fat oxidised the same amount of fat, so your hypothesis "you tend to burn what you eat" fails. For that to work the fat oxidation would have gone down on LF and stayed the same on LC surely.