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There’s a new calorie-controlled regime on the block

- Lisa Armstrong

Lisa Armstrong tries out a calorie-controlled regime

SOMETIME LAST YEAR, largely in the name of vanity – a highly motivation­al tool, don’t knock it – I tried out an 800-1,100-calorie-a-day mail-delivered ‘fast’ diet called Prolon. Eight hundred calories isn’t a lot (although since when did a fast have any calories?), but it happens to be the same amount as the meal-replacemen­t diet that the NHS recently announced it would be prescribin­g to type-2 diabetics, following some promising results in its trials, which saw both weight and insulin levels plummet.

I needed every last ounce of motivation when my five days of Prolon first arrived in a box the size of a medium handbag. ‘Where’s the rest?’ I asked Kim Pearson, the down-to-earth nutritioni­st overseeing me. ‘What rest?’ she replied.

I circled the derisory amount of soup packets, nut bars, seaweed crackers and herbal teas for a few weeks, waiting for ‘the right moment’ (ie a week when I had run out of excuses for not doing it), and guess what? Things weren’t as terrible as I’d anticipate­d. I can’t claim it was as much fun as five days of Christmas comfort food... but then again, the results were infinitely more satisfying.

There’s a lot of science testifying as to why this constitute­s a ‘fast’: the bottom line is that, despite the low calories, it provides balanced nutrients for a fiveday kick-start blast. Devised by Dr Valter Longo PHD, an American biogeronto­logist, it is – here’s the sales hook – designed to work on the body the same way an intermitte­nt fast would.

Who understand­s, apart from Dr Longo, how this actually works? What we do seem to know (or, at least, most nutritioni­sts agree to be the case) is that when you fast intermitte­ntly – either the 5:2 (sticking to 500 calories, two days a week), the 16:8 (consuming all your calories within an eight-hour period out of every 24) or variations thereof – the body benefits. Weight drops off, digestion improves, fat-burning increases, cholestero­l decreases, mental clarity improves... and so it goes.

I have to say, I’ve never seen any of these benefits on the 16:8 (and each time I tried the 5:2, I would wake up at 3am ravenous). But on the Prolon eating plan, I didn’t have these problems. Yes, I was peckish on day four and five. Yes, there are a lot of powders – all a bit space age, and not my usual MO (which is to eat healthy, home-cooked organic food). And it’s not exactly cheap (£225 for five days).

But it’s cheaper and more convenient than schlepping to a spa for the week, and all the thinking’s done for you.

After five days, I’d lost 2.5lb. My IGF-1 (insulin-like growth factor), which findings at Longo’s research centre suggest may be a precurser to cancer in adults, dropped, while my bad cholestero­l also reduced from slightly high (3.3) to 3 (within acceptable limits). For optimal results you’re meant to follow the plan three times in three months; thereafter, three times a year. Weight-wise, it won’t work as a sustainabl­e strategy if you go straight back to your old ways, but it can be a very helpful reset tool. prolon.co.uk

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