Overnight Diet trend claims weight loss while you snooze
Dieters are flocking to the latest trend on the scene: the
Overnight Diet, a rapid weight-loss plan that claims you can actually
slim down while you sleep.
American obesity doctor Caroline
Apovian, of the Boston Medical Center, just penned a new book, "The
Overnight Diet," advising that dieters eat a high-protein diet for six
days, followed by one day of a liquid diet. That followed by lots of
sleep (with no exercise necessary) equals a slimmer you, up to one kilo
per night and four kilos in one week -- at least that's the promise.
The book is published April 9 and available internationally.
While
mounting research suggests that more sleep can help you lose weight,
skeptics say the diet is all a little too good to be true.
"In
order to lose two pounds of body fat overnight you'd have to burn up
about six or seven thousand calories and there's just no way to do that
by sleeping," Keith Ayoob, director of the nutrition clinic at the
college's Rose F. Kennedy Center, told ABC News.
"It goes without
saying that anything being touted as an 'overnight diet' is complete
and total bunk," writes fitness blog Blisstree. "But I'm gonna say it
anyway because people still fall for the allure of quick, fast, and easy
crash diets."
Apovian doesn't entirely disagree that the weight
loss is water, at least initially, and the diet does make room for a
variety of healthy foods, including some good carbs and plenty of fruit.
The
liquid diet day consists of all-you-can-drink smoothies that Apovian
claims are specifically engineered to produce a reduction in the body's
production of insulin.
If you're bloated or store fat around your
midsection, insulin is to blame, she says, and following the diet can
help release that stored water and salt weight -- leaving you slimmer
and feeling healthier.
To learn more about the diet: http://www.overnightdiet.org --
http://thestar.com.my/health/story.asp?file=/2013/4/10/health/20130410101856&sec=health