
Forscher zeigen, dass intermittierendes Fasten den Gewichtsverlust langfristig aufrechterhält, unabhängig vom Zeitpunkt der Mahlzeiten. Die Ergebnisse bieten den Patienten wertvolle Flexibilität bei der Auswahl des Zeitplans, der am besten zu ihrem Lebensstil passt, und verbessern so die Therapietreue und den Erfolg bei der Adipositasbehandlung.
https://www.ugr.es/en/about/news/intermittent-fasting-maintains-long-term-weight-loss
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The study, in which the University of Granada (UGR) participated and which was recently published in the journal *Clinical Nutrition*, involved 99 adults—half of whom were women—who were overweight or obese
A team of scientists from the University of Granada (UGR), the Granada Institute for Biomedical Research (ibs.GRANADA), the Public University of Navarra, and the Biomedical Research Networking Center (CIBER) has demonstrated that limiting food intake to an eight-hour window helps maintain weight loss 12 months after the end of the intervention in overweight or obese adults.
The research has revealed that intermittent fasting—specifically the method popularly known as 16:8, in which participants fast for 16 hours and are allowed to eat during the remaining eight hours—is an effective strategy for maintaining weight loss in the medium term. The study shows that these benefits persist one year later regardless of whether the eight-hour eating window occurs early in the day (between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., known as early fasting) or later (between 1 p.m. and 9 p.m., known as late fasting), compared to people who maintain their usual eating routine for 12 hours or more.
The results show that both the early-fasting and late-fasting groups managed to maintain significantly greater weight loss after 12 months. Furthermore, the early-fasting group maintained a greater reduction in fat mass. According to the researchers, these findings suggest that this type of nutritional intervention is not only feasible and effective in the short term but now also demonstrates sustainable effects over time.
https://www.clinicalnutritionjournal.com/article/S0261-5614(26)00133-0/fulltext
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So, if I’m reading this correctly, subjects who had an enforced 12 week medical intervention of an intermittent fasting still gained back weight, just not as much
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Meta studies routinely show little to no advantage in terms of weight loss between any specific diet plan, the only thing that correlates with long term weight loss success is long term adherence to a given diet. So yeah, this is entirely unsurprising to me, but you could replace intermittent fasting with any diet and achieve the same results. The best diet for you to lose weight on is the one you can maintain for 2+ years, or ideally the rest of your life.
IF, Mediterranean, Keto, Paleo, low fat, doesn’t really matter for the purposes of weight loss. Most people are just not paying attention to what they’re eating and any plan works better than no plan.
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When it comes to mass disparities, I dont believe that the obese/morbidly obese‘ issue stems from overeating exclusively. I believe there has got to be a genetic/hereditary disposition which may be exacerbated BY overeating but which is most likely, from a etymological perspective, a highly malfunctioning metabollic process(es).
There isnt enough time in a day for intake to be the sole contributor to the condition which would further suggest the possibility that several, separate factors are the cause for such.
„Early TRE windows (e.g., 9:00 to 17:00) may offer greater short-term benefits through circadian alignment [16], whereas later TRE window (e.g., 12:00 to 20:00) may be more feasible in the long term due to compatibility with social and family routines [17“
This is exactly my experience. I would prefer my TRE to be late as i am not hungry in the morning, and the evening is when the fun eating happens,
But my doctor advised me to try early eating and have my window end at least 4 hour before I went to sleep, because if my prediabetes numbers.
I switched almost a year ago and all my sugar numbers are better as well as cholestero, but I hate my eating window, am still not hungry in the morning and end up messing up my fast at least once a week for some evening event.
Intermittent fasting just works because it limits the available time you have to ingest calories. They really want to make it into some magical scientific phenomenon but unsurprisingly, if you spend a significant portion of the day restricting your food intake, you eat less food.
It still hits the same wall that pretty much all diets do, which is hunger. Hunger is a biological impulse that eventually outweighs almost every other biological behavioural drive we have.
Humans didnt evolve eating 3 meals a day. Our metabolisms are built for fasting. I used to fast before my college exams because of the clarity it causes.
The problem is society is obsessed with this idea of being “full”. That shouldnt be the goal. The goal is sated.
I have a very weird eating schedule for 2-3 months. I drink a cup of coffee with (150 ml / 5 fl oz) milk around 7-9am depending when I woke up. Then I don’t eat till 7 pm, followed by eating between 7pm to 11pm-1am. Sometimes I feel less energetic around 5-6pm but most of time I am actually okay. I am not sure how healthy this is but maybe it is not as bad as I thought.
„Fasting for Survival“ is an interesting and entertaining lecture on YouTube(you can easily watch it at 1.5x speed).
It’s about how fasting has always been a natural part of our evolution and has led to specific genetic adaptations. How a fasting state alters your gene expression, what processes and mechanisms are activated by that change, the health benefits they provide, and, as the key to switching on the process, why fasting is important.
For most people, some intermittent fasting is probably the best thing you could do to improve your health, and since it costs you nothing to try, there’s only a lot you could gain but nothing to lose.
i do 36 hour fasting and 12 hour eating ,been at it for 3 months. i can say that after the long fasting you feel full faster,last time i went to all you can eat sushi and i almost threw up eating s little less of what i used to because i felt so freaking full.
I was ravenous in the morning,now a yogurt actually keeps me full until lunch in the day I’m eating.
So these sort of eating pattern do help in the medium term unless you purposely overeat out of gluttony