starvation mode

what do you think it is and why do you think that?
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Replies

  • JennW130
    JennW130 Posts: 460 Member
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  • gazzajam
    gazzajam Posts: 28 Member
    Starvation mode is a state in which the body is responding to prolonged periods of low caloric intake levels.
    During short periods of caloric abstinence, the human body will burn primarily body fat stores. After prolonged periods of starvation the body has depleted its body fat and begins to burn lean tissue and muscle as a fuel source.
    It's a scientific fact , that this is how your body reacts to loss of calorific intake.
  • gleechick609
    gleechick609 Posts: 544 Member
    Is this a serious question...... ?
  • Moonbeamlissie
    Moonbeamlissie Posts: 504 Member
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    LOL!!!! this is awesome.. However, on the starvation mode issue.. I do not think it is a black and white subject. I feel if you are obese that there is not a starvation mode. If you are within normal weight I can see where starvation mode will come into affect. I do not believe however that there is a magic number of calories to eat in a day (i.e. 1200) everyone is different and everyone needs to figure out what works for them!
  • Starvation mode is a state in which the body is responding to prolonged periods of low caloric intake levels.
    During short periods of caloric abstinence, the human body will burn primarily body fat stores. After prolonged periods of starvation the body has depleted its body fat and begins to burn lean tissue and muscle as a fuel source.
    It's a scientific fact , that this is how your body reacts to loss of calorific intake.

    and what type of decline in metabolic rate can you expect at "starvation mode's" peak? and how long does it take on average to hit this peak?
  • Moonbeamlissie
    Moonbeamlissie Posts: 504 Member
    Starvation mode is a state in which the body is responding to prolonged periods of low caloric intake levels.
    During short periods of caloric abstinence, the human body will burn primarily body fat stores. After prolonged periods of starvation the body has depleted its body fat and begins to burn lean tissue and muscle as a fuel source.
    It's a scientific fact , that this is how your body reacts to loss of calorific intake.


    yes this!!!
  • Nana_Booboo
    Nana_Booboo Posts: 501 Member
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  • Is this a serious question...... ?

    serious question. i want all the people who are on these forums that throw around the term "starvation mode" to come in here and state what they believe it is and why they believe it.
  • StrongGwen
    StrongGwen Posts: 378 Member
    it's nature's way of protecting you from famine. If you barely eat, you biological systems recognize that there's not enough nutrition coming in, so it releases hormones that slow down your metabolism to keep you from starving to death until you have access to enough food. Your body does not know that there's plenty of food around you, it just figures if you're not eating it's because there's no food. It won't happen in a day or two, but if you are always eating less than it takes for your daily activities, your metabolism will slow down eventually.
  • it's nature's way of protecting you from famine. If you barely eat, you biological systems recognize that there's not enough nutrition coming in, so it releases hormones that slow down your metabolism to keep you from starving to death until you have access to enough food. Your body does not know that there's plenty of food around you, it just figures if you're not eating it's because there's no food. It won't happen in a day or two, but if you are always eating less than it takes for your daily activities, your metabolism will slow down eventually.

    and how much can your metabolism slow overall? and how long would it take on average for your metabolism to hit its low?
  • gazzajam
    gazzajam Posts: 28 Member
    and what type of decline in metabolic rate can you expect at "starvation mode's" peak? and how long does it take on average to hit this peak?
    [/quote]

    Beyond my scientific knowledge, but instinct tells me that it kicks in at different times and rates for everybody.
    I can assume this by the fact that 2 people can eat the same and one will not gain weight and the other puts weight on.
    One feels full, the other won't, one will be more energetic than the other, etc...etc
  • LuciaLongIsland
    LuciaLongIsland Posts: 815 Member
    Starvation mode is a state in which the body is responding to prolonged periods of low caloric intake levels.
    During short periods of caloric abstinence, the human body will burn primarily body fat stores. After prolonged periods of starvation the body has depleted its body fat and begins to burn lean tissue and muscle as a fuel source.
    It's a scientific fact , that this is how your body reacts to loss of calorific intake.

    That is exactly what my Doctor said. My door gf has severe celiac, among other issues. She get very sick when she eats anything. She id down to 80 pounds. It has been going on for months. It is severe and that is starvation Mode.
  • i ask because the main study, the minnesota starvation experiment, cut the subjects' calories to near starvation levels for 4 months and found that metabolism slowed some, but not much, in order to try to prevent tissue loss. but metabolism didn't slow that much. instead of losing 3 lbs a week, a subject would instead lose around 2.5 lbs a week.
  • LuciaLongIsland
    LuciaLongIsland Posts: 815 Member
    Is this a serious question...... ?

    serious question. i want all the people who are on these forums that throw around the term "starvation mode" to come in here and state what they believe it is and why they believe it.


    Yes!!!
  • Fit_Canuck
    Fit_Canuck Posts: 788 Member
    This question is caused so many arguments on the community boards,

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  • This question is caused so many arguments on the community boards,

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    i'm sorry, has this been brought up before? because if it has been brought up, there shouldn't be so much misunderstanding as to what are the implications of starvation mode and what causes it as there is in the forums.
  • meggy_182
    meggy_182 Posts: 60 Member
    what gets me is if you go under you cals once someone on here will pop up and say YOU'RE IN STARVATION MODE
    ¬_¬ jesus christ it doesn't happen that quickly
  • Fit_Canuck
    Fit_Canuck Posts: 788 Member
    i ask because the main study, the minnesota starvation experiment, cut the subjects' calories to near starvation levels for 4 months and found that metabolism slowed some, but not much, in order to try to prevent tissue loss. but metabolism didn't slow that much. instead of losing 3 lbs a week, a subject would instead lose around 2.5 lbs a week.

    Did that study also reveal any muscle loss, tissue loss, brain function change, organ damage? Did they even test to see if that was happening or was it strictly weight loss.
  • what gets me is if you go under you cals once someone on here will pop up and say YOU'RE IN STARVATION MODE
    ¬_¬ jesus christ it doesn't happen that quickly

    yes, it takes months of severely restricted calories to go into starvation mode unless you are a special case in which it might only take weeks.
  • cmriverside
    cmriverside Posts: 34,421 Member
    serious question. i want all the people who are on these forums that throw around the term "starvation mode" to come in here and state what they believe it is and why they believe it

    biologic, this question was only posed so you could call people out? Really, this is covered thousands of times already on this site and many others.

    After five years on this site, I have learned that you cannot reach everyone. It would be better if you just post helpfully and frequently, without trying to "fix" everyone to agree with you.

    There are tens of thousands of people on this site. Many people come and go every day. Please try to be a positive force.
  • I have no idea. Truly because I'm obese I didn't think it was possible for people my size to go into starvation mode. I know I read about it on here but I kept thinking I have enough fat in my body to last me months. I am pretty active for a fat girl. I tried to exercise 30 min a day. I always ate way under my calories for the day and never ate back my exercise calories. I lost 43 lbs. but it took me 7 months to lose that. (I try to eat clean but I do eat a few things that I shouldn't.) Then I just stopped losing. I started working two active jobs and still eating the same calories and exercising and I gained weight. I keep thinking NO WAY can you gain weight eating under your calories and exercising but I sure did. I don't know if its food choices, my ignorance or starvation. Starvation seems like a drastic word for me for being excessively hungry and I eat all the time, so how can you be starving when you eat 3 meals a day plus snacks? I think I agree with others. The same thing just doesn't work for all of us. Figure out what works and measure your own results.
  • Fit_Canuck
    Fit_Canuck Posts: 788 Member
    Are you really talking about the Minnesota Starvation Experiment in the 50's?? The one that showed weight loss but at a severe cost and I quote " Among the conclusions from the study was the confirmation that prolonged semi-starvation produces significant increases in depression, hysteria and hypochondriasis as measured using the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory. Indeed, most of the subjects experienced periods of severe emotional distress and depression " There were extreme reactions to the psychological effects during the experiment including self-mutilation (one subject amputated three fingers of his hand with an axe, though the subject was unsure if he had done so intentionally or accidentally).
  • kel7298
    kel7298 Posts: 1,542 Member
    Starvation mode is a state in which the body is responding to prolonged periods of low caloric intake levels.
    During short periods of caloric abstinence, the human body will burn primarily body fat stores. After prolonged periods of starvation the body has depleted its body fat and begins to burn lean tissue and muscle as a fuel source.
    It's a scientific fact , that this is how your body reacts to loss of calorific intake.

    IMO - Based on this, you would not go into starvation mode until all the body fat stores have been depleted. How long would that take before it happened, that would depend on how much fat you have stored.
  • i ask because the main study, the minnesota starvation experiment, cut the subjects' calories to near starvation levels for 4 months and found that metabolism slowed some, but not much, in order to try to prevent tissue loss. but metabolism didn't slow that much. instead of losing 3 lbs a week, a subject would instead lose around 2.5 lbs a week.

    Did that study also reveal any muscle loss, tissue loss, brain function change, organ damage? Did they even test to see if that was happening or was it strictly weight loss.

    go here and read about it

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minnesota_Starvation_Experiment

    the point wasn't that people should starve themselves for weightloss. the point is that hardly anyone is in "starvation mode" while dieting. the subjects in the study were ideal weight when the experiment was started, and it took months of severely restricted calories before it messed up their metabolism (and it didn't even mess it up that much).

    other side effects are pretty awful, such as depression, anxiety, hallucinations, etc. but that doesn't matter because most people who are overweight and on a calorie restricted diet aren't going to go into starvation mode.
  • LilMissFoodie
    LilMissFoodie Posts: 612 Member
    I think starvation mode is a RARE disorder found in people who have maintained a prolonged low calorie diet (by low calorie, it could be 500 calories, it could be 1500 calories - just less than your maintenance calories). It is basically where the body experiences an adaptation if you will to the amount of calories you are feeding it. This takes a very long time to occur and the changes will not be severe ie they will likely be less than 1000 calories ie I believe people who say they are eating 300 calories and not losing weight are lying, perhaps to themselves as well (unless they are severely underweight). It will make it difficult for you to lose weight or keep weight off in the long term as your maintenance calories may become closer to 1500 calories which is more difficult to sustain in the long term than the usual 2000-2500 calories.

    It is a disorder that takes a very long time to fix. It will not be 'fixed' overnight simply by eating back your exercise calories. If you started eating more calories and started to lose weight again then you were most definitely NOT in starvation mode - if you were, then your reduced metabolism would mean that when you first increased your calories you would gain weight. My guess is that when you started allowing yourself more calories you stopped feeling the need to 'cheat' and therefore maintained a greater deficit overall.

    Starvation mode has nothing to do with what size you are or actual 'starvation'.

    So there you go, my explanation of my view, as you asked.
  • Fit_Canuck
    Fit_Canuck Posts: 788 Member
    i ask because the main study, the minnesota starvation experiment, cut the subjects' calories to near starvation levels for 4 months and found that metabolism slowed some, but not much, in order to try to prevent tissue loss. but metabolism didn't slow that much. instead of losing 3 lbs a week, a subject would instead lose around 2.5 lbs a week.

    Did that study also reveal any muscle loss, tissue loss, brain function change, organ damage? Did they even test to see if that was happening or was it strictly weight loss.

    go here and read about it

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minnesota_Starvation_Experiment

    the point wasn't that people should starve themselves for weightloss. the point is that hardly anyone is in "starvation mode" while dieting. the subjects in the study were ideal weight when the experiment was started, and it took months of severely restricted calories before it messed up their metabolism (and it didn't even mess it up that much).

    other side effects are pretty awful, such as depression, anxiety, hallucinations, etc. but that doesn't matter because most people who are overweight and on a calorie restricted diet aren't going to go into starvation mode.

    Yes you can be on a calorie restrictive diet but those diets typically are not lower than your basal metabolism rate, they are a reduction of your current grossly high calorie intake. You are making it sound like this study is some sort of vindication for those who advocate a dangerously low calorie diet. Shame on you sir. You have taken a 1400 page study which ended with horrible side effect and in some case mutilation and have boiled it down to " you don't go into starvation mode right away "

    That's all I'm going to say about the subject, I've heard this crap from too many people who think they are medical experts. In my case my physician has told me that starvation mode is a really fact of metabolism and your goal should be too boost it not starve it if you want to live a long healthy life.

    The end.
  • biologic, this question was only posed so you could call people out? Really, this is covered thousands of times already on this site and many others.

    After five years on this site, I have learned that you cannot reach everyone. It would be better if you just post helpfully and frequently, without trying to "fix" everyone to agree with you.

    There are tens of thousands of people on this site. Many people come and go every day. Please try to be a positive force.

    frankly every time someone is using starvation mode as a reason why someone didn't lose any weight for a week it should be addressed. but there are too many threads where this is happening so i thought i would make a thread about it.

    besides, when people are giving advice on an internet forum what is wrong with asking where they got the idea that that advice was good? is it too much to ask people to give a concise definition of the terms they are using and why it pertains to whatever individual they are ascribing it to?
  • applekoko19
    applekoko19 Posts: 85 Member
    That Minnesota study was done using men who started out at a healthy weight so I don't really thing you can say that the same sorts of responses would occur in the bodies of obese people (like me). Also it was done only using men as test subjects and even my cat could tell you that weight-loss in men and women follows differing trends. Obviously the research is insufficient so for now we just need to listen to our own bodies and see what they are saying!
  • LethaSue
    LethaSue Posts: 285 Member
    I googled it a couple of weeks ago, because it seems many people fall back on it as an excuse to load on some more calories here. People fearing the dreaded "starvation mode". It does exist but not on the level that most people think it does. It pertains to actual "starvation". after being deprived of any or very little food for some period of time. And maybe at some reduced level at some point in your dieting, but certainly not something we life style changers are going to encounter on a weekly basis.
    I get tickled when I see someone post, "OMG I didn't consume enough calories today and I am not hungry but I will force myself to eat something so as not to go into starvation mode." Look at people that were stranded in a situation where there is no food, those people continued to lose weight.
  • That Minnesota study was done using men who started out at a healthy weight so I don't really thing you can say that the same sorts of responses would occur in the bodies of obese people (like me). Also it was done only using men as test subjects and even my cat could tell you that weight-loss in men and women follows differing trends. Obviously the research is insufficient so for now we just need to listen to our own bodies and see what they are saying!

    my point is that people need to stop using "starvation mode" as the response to people who are overweight not losing weight for some small amount of time. it is also absurd to expect overweight people to go into starvation mode faster, given their body's stores of energy, than people who are of ideal weight.
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