Discover the secrets of weight loss and gain – it’s not calories!
- A calorie is a calorie, but are all calories equally likely to cause fat gain?
- Calories In/Calories Out and the ‘Energy Balance’ equation
- It’s just as much about when you eat as what you eat
- Weight loss and weight gain is about our hormonal response to food, not caloric intake or expenditure
By Jason Fung, M.D., Co-founder of The Fasting Method
A calorie is a calorie. This is obviously true. Just like a dog is a dog, a dollar is a dollar, or a desk is a desk. But that’s the wrong question. I never asked if a calorie is a calorie. No, the real question we’re asking is are all calories equally likely to cause fat gain? Here, the answer is a simple, but emphatic NO. Some calories are more fattening than other calories. 100 calories of cookies is much more likely to make you fat than 100 calories of broccoli.
Definition of a Calorie
A calorie is simply a unit of energy. Foods are composed of 3 macronutrients – proteins, carbohydrates, and fats. When eaten, our body produces a substantially different hormonal response to each of these macronutrients. Carbohydrates, for example, often stimulate insulin, where dietary fat does not. Dietary protein stimulates the hormone peptide YY, and dietary fat stimulates the hormone cholecystokinin. When burned in a laboratory (a bomb calorimeter), you can reduce these three macronutrients to a single measure of how much heat is released. This is not a measurement the human body actually cares about. Our body does not know or care how many calories we ingest. It simply has no way of knowing. No living thing in the world has calorie measuring receptors. By contrast, science has spent decades working out the detailed physiological pathways of metabolism to the macronutrients and the responses of the human body to various hormones. Yet, many people believe our body somehow measures those calories we ingest, subtract the calories we expend and deposit the rest as body fat. They believe it doesn’t matter whether we eat salad or ice cream, in the end the only important thing is the physiologically irrelevant calories. Hence the saying, “a calorie is a calorie.” This is a relatively new belief. Back in our grandmother’s day – and mostly any time before the 1970s, people didn’t think about the amount of calories they were eating, but instead worried about the foods they were eating. That is, eating foods like sweets and starchy foods more likely caused obesity, and cutting those out often reversed weight gain. Nobody, they would argue, got fat eating broccoli. In other words, a calorie is not a calorie when it comes to weight gain. Not all calories are equally likely to cause weight gain. So, who’s right?
Calories In/ Calories Out
Let’s return to the ‘Energy Balance’ equation, which is always correct but almost always misinterpreted.Body Fat = Calories In – Calories Out
At first glance, it appears fairly simple. If you increase ‘Calories In’, then Body Fat should also increase, and if you decrease ‘Calories In’, Body Fat should decrease. But this makes an incredibly erroneous assumption – that ‘Calories Out’ does not change in response to ‘Calories In’. It’s a well established fact that following most calorie restriction diets result in a lower basal metabolism that requires less caloric expenditure. If you’re burning fewer calories in response to eating fewer calories, then body fat may not be reduced at all. Put another way, reducing ‘Calories In’ only reduces Body Fat if ‘Calories Out’ is an independent variable. That is, if you eat 500 fewer calories per day, and your body burns 500 fewer calories, then body fat will not decrease as expected. The opposite is true, too. If you eat more calories, but burn more, then body fat is not affected. In colonial times, Americans were eating an estimated 3000-4000 calories per day, yet there was virtually no obesity, because they must have been also burning 3000-4000 calories per day. In the 1940s, the ‘starvation’ army of the Minnesota Starvation Study was given 1570 calories per day. This was considered disastrously low compared to the average American man, who, at the time was eating 30-40% more. This same 1500 calories or so is considered today a fairly reasonable diet. Despite eating far more calories per day, Americans in the 1940s had virtually no obesity.
A Calories Analogy
What is crucial is not simply the ‘Calories in’, but also ‘Calories Out’ and understanding changing one of these variables changes the other. ‘Calories Out’ consists of both voluntary activities (exercise) but more importantly, basal metabolism, which is the energy needed simply to survive. This is the energy used for generating body heat and powering the organs like the brain, kidney, liver, and heart. We spend obsessive amounts of time considering the ‘Calories In’ part of the equation without any consideration of the ‘Calories Out’. Why? Ignoring exercise for the moment, it is much more difficult to measure. Therefore, we make the simple but erroneous assumption the basal metabolic rate is constant. For example, if your body temperature lowered from 36.5 degrees to 35.5, you would burn far fewer calories. This is not easily measured but it is a crucial error. Consider an analogous situation. Our personal savings can be expressed as an equation, the ‘money balance’ equation:Savings = Money In – Money Out


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