Vegan diet: how your body changes from day one
Veganism, the plantbased diet that shuns meat and dairy, is having its time in the sun. Since 2008, there has been a 350% increase in the number of selfdescribed vegans in the UK alone. Where this motivation stems from is varied, but includes concerns about animal welfare and the environment, as well as religious reasons.
Research suggests veganism can have health benefits, if well planned. For those who have pursued a diet rich in meat and dairy for most of their lives, embarking on a vegan diet can lead to significant changes within the body.
The first few weeks
The first thing someone starting a vegan diet might notice is an energy boost with the removal of the processed meat that is found in many omnivorous diets, in favour of fruit, vegetables and nuts. These foods will boost your vitamin, mineral and fibre levels, and thinking ahead about your meals and snacks rather than relying on convenience foods can help sustain consistent energy levels.
As time without animal products grows into weeks, there is likely to be a shift in bowel function either towards a more regular, healthy pattern, or an increase in bloating, wind and loose motions. This is due to the higher fibre content of a vegan diet and the simultaneous increase in carbohydrates that ferment in the gut and can cause irritable bowel syndrome.
This may settle eventually and could lead to some positive changes in the diversity of the bacteria in the colon, depending on whether a vegan diet is made up of processed food and refined carbohydrates or is well planned and balanced. Though not proven yet, scientists believe a high species diversity for gut bacteria could be beneficial for the whole system.
Three to six months later
Several months into a vegan diet, some people may find the increase in fruit and vegetables and reduced processed food can help acne to clear up. By this point, however, your stores of vitamin D might be dropping as key sources of it in our diet come from meat, fish and dairy, and it isn’t always noticeable until it is too late.
Vitamin D isn’t well understood, but it’s essential in keeping bones, teeth and muscles healthy and deficiency has been linked to cancer, heart disease and depression.
This is because vitamin D stores are thought to last about two months in the body. How long your stores last will depend on the time of year you decide to go vegan because the body can make vitamin D from sunlight. Make sure you eat plenty of fortified foods or take a supplement in winter.
Within a few months, a wellbalanced vegan diet, which is low in salt and processed food, may have impressive benefits for cardiovascular health, helping to prevent heart disease, strokes and reduce the risk of diabetes.
As the intake of nutrients such as iron, zinc and calcium are reduced on a vegan diet, our bodies get better at absorbing them from the intestine. The adaptation may be enough to prevent deficiencies in some people but not for everyone, in which case supplements can fill the shortfall.
From six months to several years on
Approaching a year on a vegan diet, vitamin B12 stores may become depleted. Vitamin B12 is essential to the healthy functioning of blood and nerve cells and can only be found in animal products. Symptoms of B12 deficiency include breathlessness, exhaustion, poor memory and tingling in the hands and feet.
B12 deficiency is easily prevented by eating three portions of fortified food a day or taking a supplement, but managing it is important, as any deficiency would negate the benefits of a vegan diet for heart disease and stroke risk and can cause nerve and brain damage.
A few years down the line and even our bones will start to notice the change. Our skeleton is a mineral store and up until the age of 30 we can add minerals to it from our diet, but after that, our bones can’t absorb minerals any more and so getting enough calcium when we’re young is vital.
After the age of 30, our bodies harvest the calcium from our skeleton for use in the body, and if we don’t replenish the calcium in our blood through our diet, our bones fill the deficit and become brittle as a result.
Vegetables rich in calcium such as kale and broccoli may protect bones, but many vegans don’t consume their optimal calcium requirements and there is a 30% increased risk of fracture among vegans when compared to vegetarians and omnivores.
Plant-based calcium is also harder to absorb and therefore supplements, or plenty of fortified foods, is recommended.
When contemplating the years ahead on a vegan diet, balance is key.
Well-balanced vegan diets may have major health benefits. Many of those benefits can be offset by deficiencies if the diet isn’t managed carefully.