Okay_Try_Again

Okay_Try_Again t1_ivg1dbo wrote

Not just your bmr goes down, hunger hormones increase as well.

Look at the research you will see that all the studies here a large amount of people can keep off the weight are just one yr long. When you get to a 3-5 yr study, the numbers for people who can maintain the loss are 5-20 percent. And if you have obesity when you try to lose weight the odds go way down, because obesity changes your hormones even further.

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Okay_Try_Again t1_ivecp7v wrote

Nope, studies a have been done, very long term studies with huge numbers of people. When diet and exercise are maintained, this still happens. Done with very careful non starvation diets.

https://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/Dieting-Does-Not-Work-UCLA-Researchers-7832

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Okay_Try_Again t1_ivdpxmu wrote

You don't keep losing weight if you sustain a calorie deficit, your metabolism adjusts to match what you take in, among other factors. That is why 95% of people who restrict calories or increase exercise to lose weight regain within 3-5 yrs even when they keep it up, in reality 2/3 of dieters end up at a heavier weight than they started after 3-5 yrs.

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