Postscript from Owner:
1. Prophet David fasted every other day.
2. Prophet Muhammad [PBUH] totally [no food no water for daylight hrs.] fasted on Mondays and Thursdays [2 days] every week, excluding Ramadhan and other voluntary fasts.
Man Didn’t Eat For 382 Days, But Somehow Lived — And Lost 276 Pounds!
By Lou Schuler
One man fasted for over a year and survived. How far can you go without risking your health? (Photo: Thinkstock)
If
you were an avid newspaper reader in 1966, you might have seen a
strange little story from United Press International. Under the headline
“Stout Scot Peels Off 293 Pounds,” it told the story of 26-year-old
Angus Barbieri eating breakfast. In his case, it was literally a broken fast, one that had begun more than a year before.
“Apart from feeling a wee bit weak, I feel no ill effects,” he told a reporter.
The
doctor who supervised Barbieri’s 382-day fast published a case report
in 1973, describing not only his 276-pound weight loss—from 456 to 180
pounds—but also the many vitamins and minerals they used to keep him
alive, and the fact his patient went “37 to 48 days between stools.”
(Just in case you have trouble going #2, here’s How To Make Yourself Poop.)
Reading
the study today, it’s hard to decide which is more appalling: the
doctor’s conclusion that “starvation therapy can be completely
successful, as in the present instance”; his expression of gratitude to
Barbieri for his “cheerful cooperation and steadfast application to the
task in attaining a normal physique”; or the paragraph describing “five
fatalities coinciding with the treatment of obesity by total
starvation.”
“I
don’t think you could ethically publish a study like that today,” says
Krista Varady, Ph.D., an associate professor at the University of
Illinois-Chicago and author of The Every-Other-Day Diet, who has studied fasting for the past decade.
Varady
says that a starvation study would violate the Declaration of Helsinki,
which established guidelines for human experimentation with an emphasis
on the welfare of the subject.
Related: 5 Incredible Things Your Body Can Do
Although
Barbieri’s doctor, William K. Stewart, clearly thought he was doing his
patient a service by helping him attain that “normal physique,” no
modern-day university would overlook the obvious risk of open-ended
starvation.
But that doesn’t mean there aren’t good reasons to consider fasting for both weight loss and long-term health.
Life in the Fast Lane
You
may think, as I did when I read the study, that “the treatment of
obesity by total starvation” would by definition be considered so
horrible and barbaric that no doctor would ever consider it.
But
according to “Fasting: The History, Pathophysiology, and
Complications,” a study published in 1982, fasting and starving are the
same thing, medically. (You don’t need to starve to drop your dead
weight. Check out The Lose Your Spare Tire Program—it’s the easiest and most effective way to lose 20, 30, even 50 pounds and flatten your belly forever.)
The only difference is semantic. When someone fasts, we assume he’s doing it voluntarily.
Throughout
history, fasting was mostly a religious practice, and still is for
Muslims during Ramadan.
For weight loss, though, the story probably
begins with Bernarr Macfadden in the early 20th century.
Macfadden
was an influential health and fitness guru who was often far ahead of
his time. He advocated strength training for both men and women,
condemned white bread for its empty calories, and argued that tobacco
caused both lung cancer and heart disease.
But when he was wrong, he was spectacularly, insanely wrong.
He rejected the germ theory of disease, for example, and opposed vaccinating children. Here’s an actual quote, recounted in "Weakness Is a Crime: The Life of Bernarr Macfadden"
When
it came to fasting, Macfadden had a firm belief, based first on
observations of farm animals and later on a lifetime of
self-experiments, that fasting helped the body heal itself.
Macfadden
was never confused about whether to starve a fever or cold. He believed
in fasting for any reason, or no reason at all.
We
now know he was right on many counts. Today fasting is considered a
mild form of stress that can ramp up the process of autophagy—the cells
scrubbing themselves of metabolic waste. It also helps generate a
hormone called BDNF, for brain derived neurotrophic factor, which is
crucial for the survival of brain cells.
And it obviously has a benefit for weight loss. If you eat less often, you’ll probably end up eating less food. (Learn all The Facts About Fasting For Weight Loss.)
Varady’s
studies use alternate-day fasting, or ADF. Subjects eat about 25
percent of the amount of food they would need to maintain their weight
on “fast” days, and anything they want on “feed” days.
“Our
research shows that people only eat about 110 percent of their energy
needs on their feed day,” she says. “They don’t binge, and that’s why
they lose weight.”
They
average a daily calorie deficit of about 25 to 35 percent over time,
Varady says. For an average overweight guy, that’s probably 500 to 750
calories less per day than he’s used to.
Which
leads to the next logical question: Is there any benefit to achieving
that deficit by fasting, versus eating less food on a daily basis?
Less Is Less
In his terrific new book, Spring Chicken: Stay Young Forever (or Die Trying),
Bill Gifford recounts the story of Luigi Cornaro, a wealthy
16th-century Italian who, in his late 30s, began to suffer what we now
know as type 2 diabetes.
“His doctors immediately pinpointed the cause of his distress in his ‘intemperate’ lifestyle,” Gifford writes.
Cornaro
eventually restricted himself to a single daily bowl of soup—just 12
ounces—with a little bread, washed down with three glasses of wine. He
went on to live a full and surprisingly healthy life, culminating with
the publication, in 1558, of what Gifford describes as the world’s first
bestselling diet book.
He
was 81 at the time, and revised it multiple times before his death at
98. Remember, this was a guy whose doctors didn’t think he’d make it
past 40.
Cornaro’s
plan is what we now call calorie restriction, or CR, and it’s been the
template for both weight loss and life extension ever since.
There are two basic ways to achieve it, says Spencer Nadolsky, a family physician who specializes in weight loss:
1. Track daily calories, usually with the goal of cutting about 500 a day.
2. Choose a low-fat or low-carb diet, “which ends up cutting those calories without having to track directly.“
Either
way, the goal is to cut about a quarter of daily calories, similar to
the deficit created by alternate-day fasting. Is there any reason to
think one is better than the other?
“We
found people lose the same amount of weight,” Varady says, based on the
results from a just-completed yearlong study. “We thought that with ADF
they’d lose more weight, since they have every other day off.”
The
study did show one potential advantage to fasting: “It may be better
for weight maintenance,” she says. The subjects who fasted didn’t gain
back any weight during the 6-month maintenance phase, whereas the CR
group regained 3 to 4 pounds, on average.
“Probably all these diets work,” Varady says. “We’re just trying to figure out viable options for people.”
Eating
less, and subsequently weighing less, is what drives all the beneficial
effects of any diet, she adds. “It doesn’t really matter how you do it,
as long as it’s not unhealthy.”
That brings us back to Angus Barbieri and his 382-fast. If nothing else, it landed him in the Guinness Book of World Records. But was it healthy? Nobody today would think so.
William
Stewart, his doctor, says Barbieri regained just 16 pounds in the next 5
years. And Barbieri himself told a reporter at the time that he felt
good.
(Lose up to 18 pounds in just 6 weeks with The Anarchy DVD Workout.)
I hope he went on to live a long and healthy life, like Luigi Cornaro, but I couldn’t find any evidence that he did or didn’t.
As for Bernarr Macfadden, his lifelong enthusiasm for fasting leaves us with a cautionary tale, described by Robert Ernst in Weakness Is a Crime:
“Early in October 1955, Macfadden developed a digestive disorder, which
he tried to cure by fasting for 3 days.” A hotel manager found him
passed out in his room and had him rushed to a hospital, “where his
malady was diagnosed as jaundice, complicated by his fast.”
He died a few days later, at 87 years old.
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