Monday, 13 May 2013
Juice Diet- detox & weight loss?
Juice diet is a popular diet that many people try to follow- most people use detox diet for weight loss. The juice diet has many forms: lemon juice diet, orange juice diet, carrot juice diet, vegetable juice diet, and other possibilities of juice diets. We told you about the lemon detox diet. Here, we talk about all juice diets
It is basically a fad diet or crash diet form, involves intake of raw vegetable and fruit juices, and water only. It is an extreme diet form, as no solid food is consumed during the length of the diet. So, is the juice diet good for weight loss? Is the juice diet healthy?
Does the juice diet detox your system? The juice diet is like a mine field. Read on to find out, if you're going to lose weight, or lose something else…
Juices, Smoothies Diet for detox & weight loss
So, does the juice diet help weight loss? Think of it this way. The point of the juice detox diet for weight loss, is to consume fewer calories than your current metabolic rate (The number of calories your body burns on a daily basis). With the calorie deficit, you assume the juice diet will help you lose weight. But is there really a calorie deficit in your juice diet? Or are you consuming too many calories on your juice diet?
Say, you are on an orange juice diet or fruit juice diet- is this fresh juice or packaged juice? If its packaged orange juice (and most packaged juices are sweetened), and you're drinking 8-10 glasses of orange fruit juice, then you might be consuming a large amount of sugar with it. We've told you how sugar makes you store fat. See this for the healthiest orange juice. So, stay off the package fruit juice diet.
Now, if you are on an unsweetened fresh fruit juice diet or vegetable juice detox diet, then you know you're not consuming the extra sugar calories, and fewer calories. If weight loss was just a game of calories, then this could possibly work, but there are some complications to it.
Besides, vegetables and fruits are loaded with vitamins, minerals and nutrients, so you assume vegetable juices and fruit juices are also good for your health. Yes, these vegetable and fruit juices have some of these nutritional benefits, but being on a juice diet completely deprives you of macro nutrients like protein and fat.
Let's take protein first. On the juice diet, there is no protein source. Now, everyone's body has a certain amount of muscle weight (both men & women). Besides giving your body shape, muscles also help protect your bone structure from injury, and store energy for your body. When you eat little or no protein on the juice diet, then its not enough to maintain these muscles. As a result, your body experiences muscle catabolism- where your body uses muscle protein to maintain essential muscles. As a result, one of the side effects of the juice diet is that you lose muscle. When you lose this muscle, you lose muscle weight. So, the weighing scale might say you've lost weight, but is that the weight you wanted to lose? Then further, with a lower muscle content in your body, your metabolic rate goes down. With a lower metabolic rate, your body's calorie requirements go down further. So, you need fewer calories to maintain your body. As a result, your previously low calorie diet might not be low enough. Do you need to go lower?
Now, let's talk about no fat in your diet- fat is an essential component to the digestion process. It improves absorption of nutrients into your body. With no fat in your diet, fewer nutrients from your juice diet get absorbed in your body.
Besides this, there are other possible issues with the juice diet:
- Hypoglycemia: A vegetable juice diet can be low on carbohydrates. Being so low on carbohydrate can lead to hypoglycemia, leading to severe head ache and low blood pressure.
- Acidic Blood/Ketosis: When a diet is changed from a high carbohydrate diet to a diet that does not provide sufficient carbohydrate to replenish glycogen stores, the body goes through a set of stages to enter ketosis, with side effects including fainting, dizziness, low blood pressure, heart arrhythmia (irregular heart beat), hunger, vomiting and more.
- Juice-Drug Interaction: Juice diet can affect you adversely if you are on prescription drugs or medications. According to American Journal of Cardiology, pomegranate and grapefruit juice interact with statins (cholesterol lowering medicines), anti-allergens, blood pressure drugs, pain killers and immune suppressants. American Chemical Society found out apple and orange juice also interacts with antacids and antibiotic therapy. These interactions can lead to potential hazard to your health.
So, you still want to do the juice diet to lose weight?
Labels:
detox,
diet,
juice,
weight loss
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