Intermittent fasting

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  • stevencloser
    stevencloser Posts: 8,911 Member
    edited June 2017
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    kgb6days wrote: »

    There are actually many benefits attributed to IF. The Endocrinologist in the physician practice I go to as well as the ones that are part of the hospital I work at all use IF with their patients with metabolic syndrome to normalize blood sugar among other things and are having great success with it. IF also increases mitochondria repair and function as well.

    The British Journal of Diabetes and Vascular Disease published a study showing that type 2 diabetes could be effectively managed and even reversed through intermittent fasting![viii] The study showed an improvement of pancreatic function, as well as an improvement in metabolic parameters, insulin levels, and insulin sensitivity.
    Intermittent fasting can also improve various risk factors for cardiovascular disease, including inflammatory markers, blood pressure, total and LDL cholesterol, blood triglycerides, and blood sugar levels.

    From a study published in the FASEB Journal:

    “Dietary restriction (DR) has been shown to increase life span, delay or prevent age-associated diseases, and improve functional and metabolic cardiovascular risk factors in rodents and other species.”[ix]

    Intermittent fasting triggers a certain metabolic pathway called ‘autophagy’, which eliminates waste materials from the cells while recycling essential nutrients within the cell. This increase in cellular detoxification may provide protection against Alzheimer’s disease and cancer.[x]
    Intermittent fasting has also been shown to reduce neurological damage (likely due to reductions in inflammation and oxidative stress). It also improves metabolic features important to brain health and may even increase the growth of new nerve cells (beneficial in the treatment of multiple neurological conditions).

    A study also showed that alternate-day fasting (restricting your meals on fasting days to about 600 calories) can boost brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) from 50 up to 400 percent![xiii] Deficiencies in this compound are linked to depression and other cognitive abnormalities.

    According to a study published in the Journal of Molecular Neuroscience, dietary restriction also helps suppresses age-related deficits in learning and memory, while increasing the resistance of neurons to degeneration.[xiv]

    Given these factors, it is not a surprise that an article published in Johns Hopkins Magazine would claim that “fasting twice a week could significantly lower the risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease or Parkinson’s.”[xv]

    Copy-pasting other people's articles without naming them is not very nice.
    https://discover.grasslandbeef.com/blog/intermittent-fasting-the-missing-piece-of-the-weight-loss-puzzle/

    And it's not even a particularly good place you got this from. It is outright lying about the content of the links it uses as sources for their claims.
  • Spartan_Gingi
    Spartan_Gingi Posts: 194 Member
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    This is cool! Great job!!
  • SnazzIT
    SnazzIT Posts: 215 Member
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    Steve25k wrote: »
    It's 2diffrent people there's not the same tattooon the arm what's up with that
    kpk54 wrote: »
    It's 2diffrent people there's not the same tattooon the arm what's up with that

    Could be but also may have gotten a nice tattoo anytime after the "before' pic was taken.

    No way it's the same person - In the first picture the person is inside, in the second one the person is at the beach - how do you explain that?

    Oh how I hope this response was a joke I am dying laughing!!!

    Hhaaha some people don't want to believe that IF actually works...:)
  • Hypsibius
    Hypsibius Posts: 207 Member
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    Cool thread but would like to hear more about what kind of intermittent fasting you chose.

    Questions:
    1. When did you fast / how long?
    2. Did you track macros?
    3. What was your program? (Cardio and weight training?) Clearly weight training but curious if you had an aggressive cardio plan on that of that.

    Cheers!
  • 902140
    902140 Posts: 10 Member
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    Wow, loads of information! Will try it out.
  • SnazzIT
    SnazzIT Posts: 215 Member
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    I have lost two kilos in two weeks on IF combined with over 10k steps a day using fitbit
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