VLCD Very Low Calorie Diet can they make you live longer and be younger?
The New You Plan offers a Very Low Calorie Diet (VLCD) plan offering between 400 and 800 calories per day, this can help you to quickly metabolise your fat and kick start a healthier, slimmer, more in control New You.
Total food replacement and a Very Low Calorie Diet of less than 800 calories should only be used as a temporary method to lose weight, and to kick start a healthy lifestyle. If you go back to old habits, you will go back to your old body, no matter what diet you do.
It is important that you take time to plan your refeed, and eat a healthy balanced diet when you get to your goal. So many people do not spend enough time planning their new healthy eating plan, and slip back into old habits. A lot of people eat too much food, and need to get control of their portions, which is why we recommend the diet plate to relearn healthy portion control and food groups as part of your refeed and maintenance program. In this article we show you two studies that show how keeping a low calorie diet might be able to help you live longer and stay younger for longer too.
Many studies have been carried out into the benefits of living on reduced calories, and how it can help you to live longer and look younger by slowing down the aging process. I want to share with you 2 of these studies, as they are very interesting and thought provoking.
The first is in the form of a BBC Horizon documentary, you can watch in this video. Grab a coffee and watch this as it is very interesting and really worth it.
If you are pushed for time the watch this 10 minute video about alternate day fasting, where you only have food abstinence every other day. In the end the researcher decides that doing 2 days a week is the best option for him.
Also this news article is taken for the BBC News Website. – Low-cal diet ‘long-life benefits’
Low-cal diet ‘long-life benefits’ | |||
Scientists have found tangible signs that a low-calorie diet could reverse signs of ageing in the body.A six-month study showed cutting calories lowered insulin levels and core body temperatures. The Louisiana State University team said further studies were needed to confirm the findings, in the Journal of the American Medical Association. A British expert said the research was interesting, but that many other factors affected life expectancy.
It is known that reducing the amount of calories that rodents and other animals take in long-term lengthens their life. It is thought that restricting calorie-intake affects processes in the body such as metabolism and sensitivity to insulin – as well as the health benefits from losing weight. Less energy Researchers from Louisiana State University studied 48 overweight men and women between March 2002 and August 2004. All were healthy, but none exercised. They were either put on an eating plan to maintain their existing weight, given a plan to cut their calorie intake by 25%. A third group was told to restrict their calorie intake and exercise, and a fourth was put on a very low-calorie diet – 890 kcal a day until their weight had gone down by 15%, – followed by a weight maintenance diet. After six months, the non-diet group had lost an average of 1% of their weight, the calorie restriction group, 10.4%, those who were on a calorie restricted diet plus exercise, 10% and the very low-calorie diet, 13.9%. Fasting insulin levels – recorded between meals – were significantly reduced in all the three diet groups. Low insulin levels is one of the common factors to have been recorded in people who live to over 100. People on either of the calorie restriction diets had reduced average core body temperature, which has been previously suggested to be an aid to living longer. Being cooler means the body does not have to expend as much energy. In addition, there was a reduction in the amount of DNA damage – errors that occur when a cell divides – seen in the three groups. Ageing reversal? Dr Leonie Heilbronn, who led the research, said: “Our results indicate that prolonged calorie restriction caused a reversal in two of three previously reported biomarkers of longevity. But she added: “Longer-term studies are required to determine if these effects are sustained and whether they have an effect on human ageing.” Dr Frankie Phillips, of the British Dietetic Association, said the research was interesting because it gave an insight into how losing weight affected the body. But she said it did not tell the whole story about how long someone will live. “Socio-economic factors and the environment can also influence how long you live.” She added: “We also know that being obese can cut up to nine or 10 years off someone’s life. So by losing weight, you are effectively increasing your life expectancy by that long.” “This study reinforces the importance of being a healthy weight.” But Dr Phillips said she was concerned that some people in the study were put on extremely low-calorie diets – something she said people should only do for a short period of time and under the supervision of their GP or a dietician. |
I would love to re post this entry on my own website will that be okay