The Intermittent Fasting Dilemma: How Many Meals Per Day Should You
Eat?
September 14 2012
By Ori Hofmekler
The intermittent fasting approach has been getting
increased recognition these days. But 10 years ago, it was a
different story.
When I introduced The Warrior Diet concept about
12 years ago, it was highly criticized by mainstream fitness
authorities as an "extreme and dangerous" approach to
dieting. Telling people to skip breakfast and lunch was like
committing dietary heresy.
The Warrior Diet book was the first to offer a
diet plan based on intermittent fasting. Yes, at that time,
it felt like I was the only person in the world arguing for
substituting the frequent feeding approach of several meals
per day with one meal per day.
Then, a few years later, studies on intermittent fasting
(conducted by Dr. Marc Mattson/NIH) shocked the world with
the news that this "radical" pattern of eating yielded a
substantial increase in the lifespan of rodents along with
outstanding improvements in major health markers including
insulin sensitivity, body composition and neuro-regeneration
capacity. Since then, a growing number of health and fitness
gurus have been jumping on the intermittent fasting (IF)
wagon. Just Google intermittent fasting and check for
yourself.
Multiple websites and many bloggers are now claiming
credit for their IF plan. The variations include fasting all
day, every other day, every third day, twice per week, once
per week, or once every other week. Some recommend skipping
breakfast or skipping dinner, whereas others advise "eating
only when hungry," or "not eating when not hungry."
Incredibly, even Andrew Weil is now blogging in favor of
IF. According to Weil, simply eating three meals per day
with no snacks should be called in America "a form of
intermittent fasting"… yes indeed, to be popular in this
country, a diet plan must be easy to follow… But fasting is
never easy. And there is always a reason to avoid fasting.
Virtually all IF websites are happy to give you these
reasons.
Plenty of Reasons (or Perhaps Excuses) to Avoid Fasting
They tell you: don't fast if you're hypoglycemic; don't
fast if you're diabetic; don't skip meals if you suffer from
heartburn, or don't get yourself overstressed with fasting
if you're already overstressed.
It is also very popular these days to say, "fasting is
not for everyone"… hence, if you're looking for a reason to
avoid fasting, that's the easiest one to pick.
Note that there are cases that may prohibit long-term
fasting, such as with young children, type I diabetics (on
insulin medication), or in the case of clinical myopathy
(muscle wasting disease). Nonetheless, even in these or
similar cases, the exclusion of fasting is not necessarily
wise, as fasting could be potentially useful as a
therapeutic strategy. Fasting has shown to improve
conditions of metabolic disorders, lower the need for
insulin medication, and help relieve inflammation.
So how can fasting benefit you?
To figure that out, you need to take a look at the
science behind fasting. You need to know how fasting induces
its beneficial effects on your body, and what meal frequency
allows you to take maximum advantage of that.
How Fasting Benefits Your Body
Scientists acknowledged three major mechanisms by which
fasting benefits your body, as it extends lifespan and
protects against disease:
- Reduced oxidative stress – Fasting
decreases the accumulation of oxidative radicals in the
cell, and thereby prevents oxidative damage to cellular
proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids associated with
aging and disease.
- Increased insulin sensitivity and
mitochondrial energy efficiency – Fasting
increases insulin sensitivity along with mitochondrial
energy efficiency, and thereby retards aging and
disease, which are typically associated with loss of
insulin sensitivity and declined mitochondrial energy.
- Increased capacity to resist stress, disease
and aging – Fasting induces a cellular stress
response (similar to that induced by exercise) in which
cells up-regulate the expression of genes that increase
the capacity to cope with stress and resist disease and
aging.
There is Only One Fasting Regimen that Makes Sense in
Practice...
So given the above, what kind of fasting regimen will
benefit you most?
If you learn the facts behind human biology and how your
body is programmed to thrive, you will realize that almost
every popular IF program today, including alternate day
fasting, once or twice a week fasting, and once every other
week fasting are, in the best case, only partially
beneficial.
Most IF programs cannot and will not yield the results
you're looking for. The reason: Your body operates around a
24-hour cycle that dictates your innate circadian clock.
Most IF programs are not designed to accommodate that cycle.
Most IF Programs Disregard Your Circadian Clock
Your innate clock is an essential factor in your life as
it controls all your circadian rhythms. Called the
Suprachiasmatic Nucleus (SCN), it is located in your
hypothalamus, where it regulates how your autonomic nervous
system operates along with your hormones, your wake and
sleep pattern, your feeding behavior, and your capacity to
digest food, assimilate nutrients, and eliminate toxins.
What happens when you go against your innate clock?
If you're routinely disregarding your innate clock –
working during sleeping hours, or feeding at the wrong time
– you'll sooner or later pay the consequences with symptoms
that may include disrupted sleep, agitation, digestive
disorders, constipation, chronic fatigue, chronic cravings
for sweets and carbs, fat gain, and lower resistance to
stress.
Note that chronic disruptions in circadian rhythms have
been linked with increased risk for chronic inflammatory
disease and cancer. Most IF programs overlook this issue.
Their timing of feeding is either random or wrong.
But the timing of your feeding is not something you can
afford overlooking. There is a dual relationship between
your feeding and innate clock. And as much as your innate
clock affects your feeding, your feeding can affect your
innate clock. Routinely eating at the wrong time will
disrupt your innate clock and devastate vital body
functions; and you'll certainly feel the side effects as
your whole metabolic system gets unsynchronized.
Your Biological Feeding Time is at Night
So when is your right feeding time?
Your body is programmed for nocturnal feeding. All your
activities, including your feeding, are controlled by your
autonomic nervous system which operates around the circadian
clock. During the day, your sympathetic nervous system (SNS)
puts your body in an energy spending active mode, whereas
during the night your parasympathetic nervous system (PSNS)
puts your body in an energy replenishing relaxed and sleepy
mode.
These two parts of your autonomic nervous system
complement each other like yin and yang. Your SNS, which is
stimulated by fasting and exercise, keeps you alert and
active with an increased capacity to resist stress and
hunger throughout the day. And your PSNS, which is
stimulated by your nightly feeding, makes you relaxed and
sleepy, with a better capacity to digest and replenish
nutrients throughout the night. This is how your autonomic
nervous system operates under normal conditions.
But that system is highly vulnerable to disruption.
If you eat at the wrong time such as when having a large
meal during the day, you will mess with your autonomic
nervous system; you'll inhibit your SNS and instead turn on
the PSNS which will make you sleepy and fatigued rather than
alert and active during the working hours of the day. And
instead of spending energy and burning fat, you'll store
energy and gain fat. This is indeed a lose-lose situation.
Unfortunately, most IF programs fail to recognize this.
Most IF Programs Miss the Boat
Let's take a brief look at some of the most notable IF
regimens.
- Alternate day fasting.
This program seems to be the most difficult to handle.
Followers of this regimen have been complaining of a
significant increase in hunger and a chronic
excruciating desire to eat on their fasting day. But
what makes this IF program even more problematic is the
adaptability issue – as followers seem to be just as
hungry on the last day of fasting as on their first day.
There have also been reports of side effects such as
sleeping disorders, constipation, and a persistent
fatigue among the followers.
The alternate day fasting has one major caveat: the
24 hours fast seems too long to handle (both physically
and mentally). This regimen has been shown to cause
sleeping issues due to the fact that night fasting turns
on the SNS which keeps you alert and anxious rather than
relaxed and sleepy during the night – thereby disrupting
your sleep-wake cycle.
Furthermore, based on epidemiological evidence, it
seems that the human body is programmed for a daily
cycle of 24 hours and its optimum fasting threshold
should be within the range of 18 hours. Anything beyond
that may put your body in a starvation-catabolic mode
which if done chronically, may lead to metabolic
shutdown's symptoms such as underactive thyroid,
decreased sex hormones, loss of muscle mass, and
declined energy.
- Once a week or twice a week fasting.
Both once or twice a week seem to be
easier to follow than the alternate day fasting, only
that these regimens are less effective than the
alternate day fasting. Eating 3-4 square meals every day
for most of the week is a serious compromise of the
original IF concept, as it minimizes the weekly impact
of fasting to merely 1-2 days per week.
- Fasting every other week or every month.
Worse than that is "fasting every other
week" or every month. These IF programs seem to target
the typical American dieter who is constantly looking
for an "easy to follow" program to lose weight or
improve health. The motto "better fasting once or twice
per month than not fasting at all" is just an excuse to
choose mediocrity over excellence.
- Skipping dinner. The
skipping dinner approach goes against your innate clock.
This regimen may cause sleep disorders and similar side
effects as the alternate day fasting diet, only that
skipping dinner is less effective than the alternate day
fasting due to its shorter fasting time.
Advocates of skipping dinner argue that breakfast is
an important meal and should not be skipped.
Nonetheless, the science clearly indicates the opposite
– the typical breakfast antagonizes the SNS and disrupts
healthy circadian rhythms.
There is growing evidence that the typical breakfast
is the most harmful meal of the day. A study by the
Human Nutrition Research France1 indicated
that the typical high energy breakfast caused major
adverse effects in the short and long terms. These
included a strong inhibition of fat burning throughout
the day, increase in serum triacylglycerol, decrease in
HDL (good cholesterol), and over-glycemic reactions. The
researchers concluded that high-energy breakfast does
not appear to be favorable to health; they also
indicated that the study's results do not support the
current advice to consume more energy at breakfast.
Note that the average consumption of energy at
breakfast among breakfast eaters is between 15-20
percent of total daily energy intake. The typical
breakfast composition: 12 percent of calories from
protein, 25 percent from fat and 63 percent from
carbohydrates.
Other reports coming from epidemiological surveys
have been indicating that the consumption of a high
energy breakfast leads to a significant higher energy
consumption for the whole day. Furthermore, a big
breakfast has shown to yield only a limited satiety
effect which lasts merely 2 hours after breakfast.
Overall, science confirms that the typical high
carbohydrate breakfast tends to increase fat storage,
increase body weight, and increase the risk for
cardiovascular disease and long term health.
Note that some of the healthiest societies in the
past did not eat breakfast; the word breakfast was not
part of their vocabulary. The typical breakfast did not
exist during Biblical times. In the original Hebrew text
of the Bible, breakfast is called "pat shacharit" which
meant a tiny piece of bread at dawn – nothing more. And
there isn't a single mention of breakfast in the new
testament; supper was the main meal of the day (hence,
the Last Supper). The ancient Greeks and Romans were
very particular about eating their main meal at night.
According to Plutarch and Cicero, only slaves and farm
animals were fed breakfast and lunch, as contrary to
free men and soldiers who ate one meal per day at night.
- Skipping breakfast.
Skipping breakfast is certainly a better idea than
skipping dinner. This protocol seems to be particularly
viable for those who exercise during the morning hours.
In this case a specially modified high protein lunch can
serve as a post exercise recovery meal. The skipping
breakfast regimen is nevertheless problematic.
Proponents of this approach speculate that skipping
breakfast after a night fast yields about 16-18 hours of
fasting including sleeping time. That seems good in
theory but in reality this regimen doesn't yield as many
hours of fasting as claimed.
Here is why: What really counts is your net fasting
time, the gap between your meals minus digestion time.
It typically takes your body between 6-8 hours to fully
digest a hearty evening meal (depends on your meal
density – content of protein and fat, etc). If for
instance you start your evening meal at 8pm and finish
eating at 9-10pm, your body will only shift into a
fasting state by the early morning hours (about 3-6am).
Hence, your body will not be in a fasting state for most
of the night.
So when you skip your morning meal until noon, your
net fasting time is merely 6-9 hours. That might be good
but not enough to grant maximum impact. So what is the
ideal way to fast? What should be your right meal
frequency?
The One Meal Per Day Plan
The one meal per day plan is the only regimen that can
accommodate your innate clock and maximize the beneficial
effects you get from IF on a daily basis. That's if your
food choices and meal timing are adequate.
The one meal per day yields 14-16 hours of net fasting
time provided that you have a window of about two hours to
finish eating. And in the case that you have a feeding
window of four hours, you're still left with 12-14 hours of
daily net fasting – sufficient to get you the results you're
looking for.
Other IF regimens yield a net fasting time that is either
too long or too short. And most of these programs cause
adverse side effects as they fail to accommodate your innate
clock.
Can the One Meal Per Day Regimen Satisfy Your Physical
Needs?
The one meal per day regimen can accommodate your
physical needs, but you need to know how to modulate this
regimen to fit your specific condition. For instance, if you
routinely exercise during the day you'll need to feed your
muscle after your workout with a low glycemic recovery meal
made with fast assimilating protein, such as that from high
quality whey. You can also feed your muscle before your
workout as this will help increase your capacity to sustain
intense exercise.
Can One Meal Per Day Accommodate Intense Training?
If you're engaged in max strength conditioning or MMA
training, you should feed your muscle before and after your
workout. Only in this case, your pre-workout meal should
consist of protein and carbs. Note that max strength
exercise work your fast glycolytic muscle fibers (Type IIB
white fibers), which are inherently carb dependent. Having
fast assimilating protein and carbs before your workout can
help load glycogen in your muscle, nourish your fast fibers;
and boost your max strength performance.
Your best choice for your pre-exercise and post-exercise
meal is quality whey protein, derived from raw milk of
pasture-fed or grass-fed cows. For pre-workout carbs use
nutrient dense fruits such as berries, which can swiftly
fuel your muscle with carbs and antioxidants and thereby
enhance your performance while reducing the oxidative stress
in your muscle to allow a faster recovery after your
training.
Having an oatmeal or porridge an hour before training can
be a viable option in case you're engaged in prolonged
intense training sessions. Again, make sure your
post-exercise recovery meal is low glycemic with no sugar
added, to support your insulin and accommodate your IF. High
glycemic meals negate the benefits you get from fasting.
Foods That Can Be Safely Consumed During Fasting
So is it ok to eat whey protein during fasting? What
other foods could be safely consumed during the fast? How
often can you eat these foods and how much?
In the Warrior Diet Book, I introduced the
concept of "undereating" as a viable alternative to water
fasting. Undereating means minimizing your food intake to
small servings of specific foods, which you're allowed to
consume in a certain frequency during your fast. If done
properly, undereating can yield the same benefits of fasting
and even more. Let me explain.
Most foods negate the effects of fasting, but there are
some exceptions. Some foods can be safely eaten without
compromising your fast. These include fast assimilating
nutrient-dense foods such as quality whey protein, green
vegetables and berries. But you need to know how much you're
allowed to consume and how often.
What makes these foods complimentary to fasting are the
following properties:
- They're rich in antioxidant and anti-inflammatory
nutrients
- They target the same genes as fasting
- They induce similar effects to those you get from
fasting
Having small servings of whey protein, green vegetables
or berries during your fast isn't just ok, it may actually
increase the benefits you get from fasting.
Being fast assimilating, these foods nourish your body
without taxing your digestion, as they enhance the
anti-inflammatory and metabolic modulating effects of your
fasting. They also increase your body's antioxidant defenses
against reactive oxygen species (ROS) which tend to
accumulate in your body during fasting and exercise as
byproducts of fat breakdown and detox. ROS are unstable and
highly reactive molecules which search, bind to, and destroy
cellular lipids, proteins and DNA. The above foods help
protect your body from that oxidative damage.
Most importantly, non-denatured whey protein, green
vegetables and berries contain nutrients (antioxidant
polyphenols, flavons, resveratrol, cyanidins, indoles, in
plants; leucine, calcium and immune factors in whey) that
target the same genes and pathways as fasting and exercise.
Most notable among these are the SIRT-1 gene (the longevity
gene) and the transcriptional co-activator PGC-1α, known to
counteract oxidative stress and inflammatory pathways
associated with declined health and increased mortality.
SIRT-1 and PGC-1α increase mitochondrial biogenesis and
thereby prevent the typical decline in mitochondrial
function (and decreased cellular energy) associated with
aging and disease.
How Much, and How Often Can You Eat These Foods?
You can have a small serving of whey protein (20-30g net
protein) every 3-6 hours, depending on your level of
physical activity. Those who do not exercise can have one or
two servings of whey protein during their daily fast.
Similarly, you can have 8oz of berries or green
vegetables (or freshly squeezed green vegetable juice) every
3-6 hours while you fast. Do not mix berries with whey
unless you use that blend as a pre-workout meal to support
your strength conditioning.
Having a small serving of whey protein, berries or greens
will hardly affect your body's negative energy balance
throughout the fast. Hence, if you eat them at the right
amount and frequency, the above foods will not compromise
your IF.
It may take science another 10-15 years to figure out the
difference between water fasting and that mode of
undereating. Nonetheless, based on what we know today about
the nutritional properties of whey, berries and greens, and
based on testimonials coming from Warrior Diet followers,
and my own experience, I can tell you that having these
foods during the fast isn't just making it easier, but also
makes it more effective and beneficial to your body than a
sheer water fast.
Summary of Key Points
- The one meal per day is the only regimen that can
maximize the benefits of your IF on a daily basis.
- Eat your main meal at night to accommodate your
circadian clock.
- Whey protein, berries and greens compliment your
fast if you know how much to consume and how often.
- If you exercise during the day, have a recovery meal
after your workout consisting of whey protein with no
sugar added.
- If you're engaged in super intense training, have a
pre-workout meal consisting of whey protein and berries.
- If you're engaged in prolonged intense training,
have a bowl of oatmeal with your whey protein about an
hour before your workout.
The Science Behind Circadian Rhythms
- Circadian regulation of immune response and
resistance to disease. Recent studies published
by the PNAS, January 2012, revealed the existence of a
specific nuclear receptor that mediates circadian
regulation of innate immunity and resistance to disease.
This circadian regulation is controlled by an internal
mechanism which is highly conserved in humans and
animals and orchestrates the daily patterns of diverse
physiological processes such as wake/sleep cycles,
feeding, and metabolism.
According to the researchers, many diseases exhibit a
disrupted circadian rhythmicity in their pathology… and
lifestyles that disrupt the inherent timing system, such
as chronic shift work, are associated with increased
risk of cancer, metabolic disorders, cardiovascular
disease and cerebrovascular disease.
The researchers indicated that inflammatory diseases
in particular exhibit strong time-of-day symptoms. They
concluded that in humans, circadian rhythms are driven
by a complex of feedback loops that mediate gene
activities throughout a period of 24 hours and
speculated that daily risk of infection is likely to be
a direct consequence of wrong timing of activity and
feeding.
- The 24 hours cycle. A study by
Czeisler et al. at Harvard University found that the
range for normal healthy adults of all ages to be quite
narrow: 24 hours and 11-16 minutes. This innate clock
resets itself daily to the 24 hour cycle of the Earth's
rotation.
- The sympathetic/parasympathetic division.
Based on biology textbook (see Wikipedia –
autonomic nervous system), the sympathetic and
parasympathetic divisions typically function in
opposition to each other. Consider sympathetic as "fight
or flight" and parasympathetic as "rest and digest" or
"feed and breed."
The sympathetic nervous system – corresponds with
energy generation, and inhibits digestion. The
parasympathetic nervous system – promotes "rest and
digest" response, along with calming of the nerves.
- Light and the innate clock.
According to a 2010 study, completed by the Lighting
Research Center, daylight has a direct effect on
performance and wellbeing. The research showed that
students who experience disruption in lighting schemes
in the morning experienced disruptions in sleep
patterns. Removing circadian light in the morning delays
the dim light melatonin onset by 6 minutes a day, for a
total of 30 minutes for five days.
- Feeding and the innate clock. The
feeding clock mechanism is the same as the light/dark
driven clock controlled by the innate master clock – the
suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) which is a cluster of
neurons in the hypothalamus. But the machinery that
inter-regulates feeding and the innate clock is located
in a different part of the hypothalamus (DMA).
Recent studies reveal that mice on a daily 4 hours
feeding window shifted their circadian rhythms so that
their peak physical activity was before feeding and not
after. This rhythm continued even if the mice were kept
in constant darkness. Hence, the animals are inherently
programmed for post action feeding and not the other
way.
If You Didn’t Fast, Don’t Eat Breakfast
When you think about it from an evolutionary perspective,
the idea of "having to wait for a meal"… especially the
first one of the day, is actually so intuitively logical
that it is somewhat tragic that people misunderstand the
statement that "breakfast is the most important meal of
the day" as an invitation to start binging the very
moment they get up, instead of waiting for lunch or even
dinner to begin stuffing junk down their gullets.
Actually this is quite ironic, because if we take a look
at the etymological origins of the word "breakfast," it's
plain obvious that this is not - as in Germany, where it is
called "Frühstück" = "the first piece," the first meal of
the day, but the meal that breaks the fast! Unfortunately,
though, fasting has become something, the average TV
watching couch-potato of the Western hemisphere is a total
foreigner to.
The answer to the endlessly debated question of whether
or not you should have breakfast is – as long as we
understand "breakfast" correctly, i.e. as "breaking the
fast" – stupidly simple: Without fasting there is no
"break(ing the)fast"! Our diurnal metabolic rhythm is
geared towards cyclic fasting and feeding patterns, where
the feeding hours have always been shorter than the fasting
hours.
About the Author
Ori Hofmekler is the author of
The Warrior Diet,
The Anti-Estrogenic Diet,
Maximum Muscle Minimum Fat, and
Unlock Your Muscle Gene.
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