A very low-calorie diet (VLCD) may be considered if you are
obese and need to lose weight quickly to protect your
health and if your health professional decides it is safe for you. VLCDs
generally are not recommended. A VLCD is also known as a rapid weight-loss
diet.
VLCDs supply from 250 to 800 calories per day. However, VLCDs of less
than 900 calories a day are not permitted in Canada. Diets this low in calories
do not provide enough vitamins and minerals for good health unless the diet is
specially prepared. A diet that does not have enough vitamins or minerals can
lead to serious, potentially fatal health problems.
These diets are not recommended if you have heart problems, blood
clotting problems, bleeding ulcers, liver disease, kidney disease, or cancer or
if you have had a
stroke. If you are older than 50, you will need
frequent monitoring by your health professional to be sure you are losing fat
and not muscle.
However, research reports that although initial weight loss is
greater on a VLCD than on a low-calorie diet, in the long term about the same
amount of weight is lost in both types of diets.1
People on these diets often feel tired or have constipation, nausea,
or diarrhea as a side effect. However, for most people, this goes away in a few
weeks.
The most common serious side effect is developing
gallstones. People who are obese are more likely to
develop gallstones than people who are lean, and when a person who is obese
uses a very low-calorie diet, the chance that he or she will develop gallstones
becomes even greater. People who lose a large amount of weight quickly are at
greater risk than those who lose weight more slowly. Studies have shown that
people who lose more than
1.5 kg (3 lb) per week are at
greater risk for developing gallstones.2 However, you
can take medicine that helps prevent gallstones from forming.
Following are the changes your body goes through during a
VLCD:
- Your
metabolism slows to conserve energy because the body
thinks it is starving.
- To get the
carbohydrate it needs, your body breaks down
protein. This causes a loss of lean body mass such as
organ and muscle tissue. It is important to preserve lean tissue, because it
increases your
basal metabolic rate. Losing too much lean tissue
increases the percentage of fat in your body. The result is a reduced
metabolism. This is one reason why it is so easy to regain weight after you
lose weight quickly.
- In a VLCD (or during starvation), about half
the weight you lose is fat and the other half is lean tissue, such as muscle.
On a more moderate diet, you lose 3 times more fat than lean tissue.
- Mineral and
electrolyte imbalances can occur. These imbalances can
be life-threatening. This is the reason these VLCDs must only be used under a
health professional's supervision.
- Bone mass is lost. This is more
risky for women, because they diet more often than men, and they are also at
higher risk for developing
osteoporosis.