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Intermittent fasting two days versus one day per week, matched for total energy intake and expenditure, increases weight loss in overweight/obese men and women
Paul J. Arciero, Karen M. Arciero, Michelle Poe, Alex E. Mohr, Stephen J. Ives, Autumn Arciero, Molly Boyce, Jin Zhang, Melissa Haas, Emma Valdez, Delaney Corbet, Kaitlyn Judd, Annika Smith, Olivia Furlong, Marley Wahler
Nutrition Journal · 2022 · ▲ 44 citations
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intermittent fasting (IF), consisting of either a one-day (IF1) or two consecutive days (IF2) per week, is commonly used for optimal body weight loss. Our laboratory has previously shown an IF1 diet combined with 6d/week of protein pacing (P; 4-5 meals/day evenly spaced, ~ 30% protein/day) significantly enhances weight loss, body composition, and cardiometabolic health in obese men and women. Whether an IF1-P or IF2-P, matched for weekly energy intake (EI) and expenditure (EE), is superior for weight loss, body composition, and cardiometabolic health is unknown. METHODS: This randomized control study directly compared an IF1-P (n = 10) versus an IF2-P (n = 10) diet on weight loss and body composition, cardiovascular (blood pressure and lipids), hormone, and hunger responses in 20 overweight men and women during a 4-week weight loss period. Participants received weekly dietary counseling and monitoring of compliance from a registered dietitian. All outcome variables were assessed pre (week 0) and post (week 5). RESULTS: Both groups significantly reduced body weight, waist circumference, percent body fat, fat mass, hunger, blood pressure, lipids, glucose, and increased percent fat-free mass (p < 0.05). However, IF2-P resulted in significantly greater reductions in body weight (-29%) and waist circumference (-38%) compared to IF1-P (p < 0.05), and showed a strong tendency for greater reductions in fat mass, glucose, and hunger levels (p < 0.10) despite similar weekly total EI (IF1-P, 9058 ± 692 vs. IF2-P, 8389 ± 438 kcals/week; p = 0.90), EE (~ 300 kcals/day; p = 0.79), and hormone responses (p > 0.10). CONCLUSIONS: These findings support short-term IF1-P and IF2-P to optimize weight loss and improve body composition, cardiometabolic health, and hunger management, with IF2-P providing enhanced benefits in overweight women and men. TRIAL REGISTRATION: This trial was registered March 03, 2020 at www. CLINICALTRIALS: gov as NCT04327141 .
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- 10.1186/s12937-022-00790-0
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- 2026-06-16 MST
Cite this
APA
Arciero, P.J., Arciero, K.M., Poe, M., Mohr, A.E., Ives, S.J., Arciero, A., Boyce, M., Zhang, J., Haas, M., Valdez, E., Corbet, D., Judd, K., Smith, A., Furlong, O., Wahler, M., & Gumpricht, E. (2022). Intermittent fasting two days versus one day per week, matched for total energy intake and expenditure, increases weight loss in overweight/obese men and women. <em>Nutrition Journal</em>. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12937-022-00790-0
Vancouver
Arciero PJ, Arciero KM, Poe M, Mohr AE, Ives SJ, Arciero A, et al. Intermittent fasting two days versus one day per week, matched for total energy intake and expenditure, increases weight loss in overweight/obese men and women. Nutrition Journal. 2022. doi:10.1186/s12937-022-00790-0.
BibTeX
@article{paul2022Interm,
title = {Intermittent fasting two days versus one day per week, matched for total energy intake and expenditure, increases weight loss in overweight/obese men and women},
author = {Paul J. Arciero and Karen M. Arciero and Michelle Poe and Alex E. Mohr and Stephen J. Ives and Autumn Arciero and Molly Boyce and Jin Zhang and Melissa Haas and Emma Valdez and Delaney Corbet and Kaitlyn Judd and Annika Smith and Olivia Furlong and Marley Wahler and Eric Gumpricht},
journal = {Nutrition Journal},
year = {2022},
doi = {10.1186/s12937-022-00790-0},
}
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