It generates major buzz. But does the research on intermittent fasting stack up, or is it simply starvation rebranded? Read on...
We suspect you first heard about fasting from that one friend who never fails to jump on the latest health trend just before it hits peak take-up, no doubt over a late Japenese fusion dinner where she eschewed food in favour of regaling you with the science behind eating intermittently. She’s done the 5:2, tried the 16:8 (“it’s the same science, just easier to follow!”) and is currently evangelising about the five-days-every-three months fasting mimicking diet. Yep, we’ve been there!
Since 5:2 came into our lives in 2012, intermittent fasting – the concept of shunning kilojoules for hours or days at a time – has been touted as a magical way to reduce the risk of heart disease, diabetes and cancer, while melting belly fat and offering your digestive system a reboot. The premises of the 5:2 (cutting back to 2100kJ two days a week) and the 16:8 (eating all your day’s food within an eight-hour window) are basically the same. When you give your body a break from eating, it begins feeding off your fat reserves.
Another iteration, the fasting mimicking diet (FMD) – which first hit headlines in 2015 but is now garnering mainstream interest as fasting rises in popularity – is a five day program based on the research of Dr Valter Longo, a biologist at the University of Southern California. It’s designed to make your body think all it’s being fed is water, while keeping actual starvation at bay via a kilojoule-controlled, scientifically developed diet. But it doesn’t come cheap: it costs $400 to buy the five-day kit devised by Dr Longo and sold as ProLon in the US.
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