The Arizona Republic

Your guide to intermitte­nt fasting done correctly

- Dr. Mehmet Oz and Dr. Michael Roizen

You may opt for one fad diet or another — paleo, keto, alkaline (Tom Brady’s) or carb cycling — but none of them takes into account an essential truth about your body: It uses calories, fat, carbs and glucose differentl­y at different times of the day.

Studies show that eating the same amount of calories early or later in the day produces two very different results. Frontload your food intake so you get 80 percent of your calories before 1 or 2 p.m., and you can lose weight. Eat more than 20 percent of your calories in the evening, and you’ll have trouble losing weight and may even pack it on. That’s because timing is everything — in music, love and nutrition.

Your body is made to consume food while the sun is shining and to not consume food while it’s dark. That aligns with the healthy choice of having at least 12 hours between dinner and breakfast.

How to Schedule Your Eating

One option that can help you cut out your late-night snacking or dinnerthen-right-to-bed syndrome is to consider some kind of intermitte­nt-fasting schedule. You eat so that there’s a chunk of hours in the day when you DON’T consume anything but water, coffee or tea.

It can improve your nutrition, superpower your energy level, help you sleep, reduce your risk for Type 2 diabetes and promote weight loss and improved HDL and LDL cholestero­l levels. (That is, if you don’t overeat on non-fasting days.)

How does it do that? As Mark Mattson, the senior investigat­or for the National Institute on Aging, says, “There is considerab­le similarity between how cells respond to the stress of exercise and how cells respond to intermitte­nt fasting.”

❚ One study of overweight adults with asthma had participan­ts eat just 20 percent of their regular caloric intake on alternate days for eight weeks. The results: They lost 8 percent of their initial body weight, reduced levels of markers of oxidative stress and inflammati­on and saw asthma symptoms and quality of life improve.

❚ Multiple studies indicate that intermitte­nt fasting may help stimulate production of adult stem cells, particular­ly in the intestines and skeletal muscles, which are essential to counter the decline in bodily functions associated with aging.

So what are your choices?

In “What to Eat When,” Dr. Mike’s new book with Dr. Michael Crupain, the “When Way” guidelines are:

1. Fast each night with at least 12 hours between dinner and breakfast. Want more benefits? Extend that to 14 hours, and then 18. This causes your body to burn up most circulatin­g glucose and stabilizes insulin levels. Then your body burns stored fat.

2. Breakfast and/or lunch should contain lean and plant-based protein (think whole grains, legumes, salmon) and fats (think healthy fats in salmon, or use extra-virgin olive oil with grains and veggies). Because your body is naturally more insulin-resistant at night, avoid simple carbs after mid-day. Dinner should be plant-heavy (salad and other green, leafy veggies) and calorielig­ht (about 400 calories, if you need 2,000 a day to maintain a healthy weight.)

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