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Myth busting: is fasting good for you?

Myth busting: is fasting good for you?

December 09, 2022 4 min read

Myth busting: is fasting good for you?

Modern fasting is a popular way to lose weight, but is it safe and healthy – and does it work?

Fasting is a practice as old as time, deeply rooted in religious and cultural routines that go back millennia. But modern-day fasting claims to be about biohacking, longevity, and – of course – weight loss. Let’s look at the physiological facts about fasting to sort the myths from the truths.

Is fasting good for you?

Fans of fasting will tell you that not only does it fast-track fat loss, it will also help with cognitive performance, digestive health, long-term wellness, and even cell turnover. But does fasting actually do all of those things any better than a standard healthy diet?

The main argument seems to rest on the length of a fasting period. Short periods of fasting – around 16 hours – can be good for you. It can give your digestive system a break from food intake, allow you the chance to get in touch with your appetite, and regulate your food intake. But 16 hours of fasting isn’t a huge deal – it’s a good night’s sleep, plus a short break from eating beforehand, and a short delay on breakfast.

When fasting becomes more prolonged and extreme (24- or 48-hour fasts for example), the risks to physical and mental health outweigh the potential benefits.

When did fasting become a diet trend?

Fasting can be traced back to the 5th Century, but modern fasting started around the 1940s when studies on mice found that short periods of intermittent fasting appeared to extend the rodents’ life spans.

It’s no surprise that fasting has become more popular as our lifestyles change. We now have 24/7 access to food, and round-the-clock media means there’s no clear cut-off time to go to bed. These days, we could stay up eating delivery food all night if we wanted to. The structure of fasting has an appeal. But is it really any different to simply stopping eating after dinner, going to bed, and getting a good night’s sleep?

3 different forms of modern fasting

Intermittent fasting

 Intermittent fasting is a loosely structured way of eating that involves a regular schedule of eating within a set “window”. 16 hours fasting, 8 hours eating would come under this umbrella. 

5:2 fast

The 5:2 diet is a popularised form of fasting where you eat a normal, healthy diet for 5 days a week. On the other 2 days, you fast and restrict your calorie intake to 500-600 kcals. 

24-hour fasts

24-hour (or 48-hour) fasts are as they sound – long periods of going without solid food, although calorie-free drinks are allowed.

Myths and truths about fasting

Fasting will help you lose weight

Myth: there’s nothing inherently magical about fasting that will make you lose more weight or bodyfat

Truth: if fasting helps you reduce your calorie intake so you are eating in a deficit, you will lose weight

Fasting is good for cognitive health

 Myth: most of the research into this area is on rats

Truth: anecdotally, many people report that fasting makes them feel sharper, helps with concentration, and can even boost creativity and alertness. Studies are now being done into the possible impact of fasting o Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s.

Fasting lowers your blood pressure

Truth: seems to be true, as shown by scientific studies, but the effects only last for as long as you use fasting as a protocol

Fasting improves insulin resistance

 Truth: some studies show that fasting can improve how well insulin works in the body – but…

Myth: these studies only concern people with insulin resistance. Most of us have no reason to worry about or control the role of insulin in the body.

Fasting controls cholesterol

 Truth: some small studies have shown that regular short-term fasting may lower LDL cholesterol

Myth: there is no evidence that fasting affects HDL cholesterol

 Fasting reduces inflammation

 Truth: fasting can reduce the number of cytokines (proteins that start the inflammatory process in your body) but…

Myth cytokines are important for the growth and activity of blood cells and immune system cells, so be sure you understand the meaning of inflammation in this context

Fasting boost long-term health and longevity

Myth: there isn’t enough research on this yet, it is mostly anecdotal from fans of biohacking

Truth: the studies that have been done do suggest that short-term regular fasting can improve health in ways that are likely to help you live longer

 How exactly does fasting help you lose weight

 The majority of people are interested in fasting for weight loss. So, does fasting help you lose weight? Yes, but also maybe not. The overriding factor for weight loss is energy balance – aka a calorie deficit. If you consume fewer calories than your body burns, you will lose weight because your body will find the extra fuel from stored tissue.

 So, if fasting helps you reduce and control your calorie intake over a long enough period of time for you to lose weight, then – yes, fasting can help you lose weight.

 But if fasting makes you hungrier, leads to cravings and binges, or if you simply end up eating excess calories in your “eating window”, then no – fasting will not lead to weight loss.

 There is nothing inherently magical or special about the act of fasting itself that will lead to weight loss. The reason it might work is that reducing your eating window can reduce your total calorie intake and help you manage your appetite.

How to know if you should try fasting

 Should you try fasting? It depends on why you want to do it, what results you’re expecting, and whether it will fit into your lifestyle without being stressful. If you have a hard time controlling your appetite and find yourself overeating from grazing all day, it could be just the thing you need to introduce some structure and get you back in touch with your true hunger. But if you enjoy eating at regular intervals and need to eat with family, friends, or a partner who doesn’t want to fast, fasting isn’t right for you.

 Whilst there are some interesting studies into possible long-term health benefits of fasting, there’s not enough compelling evidence to suggest that fasting is healthier than regular healthy eating.

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