Return to IndexStep 1: The Benefits of a Healthy WeightStep 2: What is Your Ideal Weight?Step 3: Medical ConsiderationsStep 4: How to Lose Weight the Healthy WayStep 5: Modify Your DietStep 6: Break Your Unhealthy Food HabitsStep 7: Get MovingStep 8: It is the Little ThingsStep 9: You CAN SO Do ItStep 10: Choosing a Weight Loss ProgramStep 11: Medication and SurgeryKey PointsMedTestGlossary *Close Menu* Return to IndexStep 1: The Benefits of a Healthy WeightStep 2: What is Your Ideal Weight?Step 3: Medical ConsiderationsStep 4: How to Lose Weight the Healthy WayStep 5: Modify Your DietStep 6: Break Your Unhealthy Food HabitsStep 7: Get MovingStep 8: It is the Little ThingsStep 9: You CAN SO Do ItStep 10: Choosing a Weight Loss ProgramStep 11: Medication and SurgeryKey PointsMedTestGlossary *Close Menu*
Cutting down the number of calories you consume in a day is the cornerstone of losing excess weight. As a rough rule of thumb, here is how calories translate to weight:
Warning on extreme diets Extreme diets of less than 1,100 calories per day carry health risks and are often followed by bingeing or overeating and a return to an obese state. Such diets often have insufficient vitamins and minerals, which must then be taken as supplements. Most of the initial weight loss is in fluids. Later, fat is lost, but so is muscle, which can account for more than 30% of the weight loss. No one should be on severe diets longer than 16 weeks or fast for more than 2 or 3 days. Severe dieting has unpleasant side effects, including fatigue, dizziness, intolerance to cold, hair loss, gallstone formation, and menstrual irregularities. There have been rare reports of death from heart arrhythmias when liquid formulas did not have sufficient nutrients. Those whose diets include a high intake of fluids and much reduced protein and sodium are at risk for hyponatremia (low sodium), which can cause fatigue, confusion, dizziness, seizures, and in extreme cases, coma.
Review Date:
6/28/2011 Reviewed By: Jeffrey Heit, MD, Internist with special emphasis on preventive health, fitness and nutrition, Philadelphia VA Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network. Also reviewed by David Zieve, MD, MHA, Medical Director, A.D.A.M., Inc.
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