Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - “Metabolic Damage” and “Starvation Mode,” Debunked by Science
Episode Date: January 30, 2019If you’re reading this, there’s a good chance you’re either experiencing or have experienced the following scenario: You’re dieting to lose weight and are doing everything right. You’re... -... Maintaining a calorie deficit - Eating enough protein - Sticking to your meal plan - Lifting weights regularly - Limiting your cardio And at first, everything more or less went as planned. Your weight and waist went down and muscle definition went up like clockwork. And then, the gears inexplicably ground to a halt. For no apparent reason, the scale stopped moving and your reflection in the mirror stopped changing. You understand energy balance and so, determined to get the ball rolling again, you further cut your calories and increased your cardio. It worked, of course...to a point. And then you got stuck again, and this time you felt even more haggard than before. What to do? Is this as far as your body will go? Have you reached its “set point”? Is a lower body fat percentage just not in the cards for you? And then you hear about “starvation mode” and “metabolic damage.” You find stories about people, typically women, who say they aren’t losing weight with extremely low-calorie dieting and hours of exercise every week, and the culprit is (supposedly) metabolic abnormalities caused by calorie restriction. Essentially, the story goes like this: Dieting dramatically and incrementally decreases your basal metabolic rate, which eventually halts fat loss, and which requires a lengthy and involved “recovery” protocol to fix the “damage” should you ever want a healthy metabolism again. Hence, the term “metabolic damage.” When your body is experiencing the complex set of physiological adaptations that apparently cause metabolic damage, it’s said to be in “starvation mode.” This apparently kicks in the first day of your diet and gets progressively worse and worse as time goes on. How true are these claims, though? Well, the short story is this: - “Metabolic damage” isn’t real, has never stopped someone from losing weight, and doesn’t need to be “fixed” with complex and meticulous diet voodoo. - “Starvation mode” is sort of real, but isn’t nearly as dramatic as many people think. And in this podcast, you’ll learn why. Furthermore, you’ll also learn the real reasons why weight loss stalls and what you can do to easily break through weight loss plateaus. Let’s dig in. Time stamps: 6:28 - What is metabolic damage? 11:40 - What is starvation mode? 22:06 - Is starvation mode real? 26:48 - What are the real reasons you stop losing weight? Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
In short, when you restrict your calories to lose fat, your body sets out to decrease your energy
expenditure and increase your energy intake. In other words, it wants to erase the energy deficit
to balance the intake with the output and thereby halt fat loss.
hey mike matthews here from muscle for life and legion athletics and welcome to the next and newest episode of the muscle life podcast this one is about metabolic damage and starvation mode
what science has to say about these things now Now, if you are listening to this, there is a
good chance that you are either experiencing or have experienced the following scenario.
So here you are, you are dieting to lose weight and you're doing everything right.
You know, you're maintaining a moderate, maybe aggressively moderate calorie deficit. You are
eating enough protein. You're sticking to your
meal plan. You are training your muscles regularly and you are limiting your cardio. And at first,
everything is going more or less as planned. Your weight and your waist are going down. Your
waist measurement are going down and your muscle definition is improving.
And then the gears inexplicably grind to a halt for no apparent reason. The scale has
stopped moving and your reflection in the mirror has stopped changing. And you probably,
if you're listening to this, and if you are familiar with me and my work, you probably do understand energy balance.
And so you figure to get the ball rolling again, you should just cut your calories further and maybe increase your cardio.
And so you do that.
And that works, of course, to a point.
And then you get stuck again.
And this time you feel even more run down than before.
And so you have a predicament here.
What should you do?
Is this just as far as your body will go?
Have you reached its set point or its settling point?
Is a lower body fat percentage just not in the cards for you?
And then you go online and you hear about starvation mode and
metabolic damage. And you probably find many stories about people, typically women, who say
that they are just not losing weight despite eating very few calories per day and doing hours
and hours of exercise per week. And the culprit, they say, is supposedly metabolic abnormalities caused by calorie
restriction. So essentially, the story usually goes like this. Dieting, restricting your calories
dramatically and incrementally decreases your basal metabolic rate or your resting metabolic
rate. Those are not exactly the same, but they are
usually used interchangeably in the story, which then eventually halts fat loss altogether,
which then requires a lengthy and rather involved recovery protocol to fix the quote unquote damage
should you ever want a healthy metabolism again, hence the term metabolic damage.
you ever want a healthy metabolism again, hence the term metabolic damage. Now, when your body is experiencing the complex set of physiological adaptations that apparently cause metabolic
damage, it is said to be in starvation mode, which according to many people, many so-called
experts apparently kicks in the very first day you begin your diet and just gets progressively
worse and worse as time goes on. How true is all of this though? Well, the short story is this,
metabolic damage isn't real, has never stopped anyone from losing weight and doesn't need to be
quote unquote fixed with complex and meticulous diet voodoo. And starvation mode is sort of real,
but isn't nearly as dramatic as many people think. And in this podcast, you are going to learn why.
Furthermore, you are also going to learn the real reasons why weight loss stalls and what you can do to easily break through weight loss plateaus.
This is where I would normally plug a sponsor to pay the bills, but I'm not big on promoting stuff
that I don't personally use and believe in. So instead, I'm just going to quickly tell you about
something of mine, specifically my fitness book for men, Bigger, Leaner, Stronger. Now this book has sold over
350,000 copies in the last several years and helped thousands and thousands of guys build
their best bodies ever, which is why it currently has over 3,100 reviews on Amazon with a four and
a half star average. So if you want to know the biggest lies and myths that are keeping you from
achieving the lean, muscular, strong, and healthy body that you truly desire, and if you want to
learn the simple science of building the ultimate male body, then you want to read Bigger, Leaner,
Stronger, which you can find on all major online retailers like Amazon, Audible, iTunes, Kobo, and Google Play. Now, speaking of
Audible, I should also mention that you can get the audio book 100% free when you sign up for an
Audible account, which I highly recommend that you do if you're not currently listening to audio
books. I love them myself because they let me make the time that I spend doing stuff like commuting, prepping food,
walking my dog and so forth, so much more valuable and productive. So if you want to
take Audible up on this offer and get my book for free, then simply go to www.bitly.com
slash free BLS. And that will take you to Audible. And then you just click the sign
up today and save button, create your account and voila, you get to listen to Bigger, Leaner,
Stronger for free. Alrighty, that is enough shameless plugging for now, at least. Let's
get to the show. All right, as always with these monologue
podcasts of mine, let's start at the top and answer the question, what is metabolic damage?
Well, according to most theories, metabolic damage refers to a condition where various
physiological systems have been disrupted and as a result, your metabolism burns less energy than it should. In other words, it is a hypothetical state wherein you burn far
fewer calories than you should based on your body weight and your activity levels. And I would add
to that your body composition as well. So how your body weight breaks down into muscle, fat,
bone, and so forth. Additionally, once you have damaged your metabolism,
people say it apparently remains hamstrung even when you have finished dieting and gone back to
eating normally and really just want to maintain a steady body weight. Now it's called metabolic
damage because the theory is your metabolism is quite literally broken to one
degree or another and requires fixing. And in case you're not familiar with the term,
your body's metabolism is the collection of physical and chemical processes that it uses to
produce, maintain, and destroy material substances and to make energy available.
So it encompasses a lot of things.
It's what keeps us alive fundamentally. Now, the causes of metabolic damage are allegedly
remaining in a calorie deficit for too long and or starvation dieting, which is of course
heavily restricting calories and also doing too much cardio. That's also fingered often as well. Therefore, when you
stop losing weight for no good reason or struggle to prevent weight gain after a period of dieting,
some people will claim that you probably have metabolic damage that needs repairing.
And the evidence to support all of this is almost always stories. Stories of people failing to lose weight on a
measly few hundred calories per day, and even worse, stories of people gaining weight on
very low calorie diets and intense exercise routines. And so people everywhere have become
convinced that dieting has just screwed up their bodies, maybe even irreversibly, and that their only hope for
returning to normalcy is special dietary measures, which usually revolve around some form of
reverse dieting, where you slowly and carefully increase your calories back up to what should be maintenance. And in some cases,
there are also very precise instructions regarding how your macronutrients should break down. So how
those caloric increases should break down in terms of protein, carbs, and fat. And the rationale for
this approach is that by slowly eating more calories instead of just drastically
increasing your intake, which many people do after they've been dieting for a while,
you are allowing your injured metabolism to keep up and process the food efficiently,
resulting in a gradual increase in metabolic rate and metabolic health without any unwanted
fat gain. As I mentioned, this is
generally referred to as reverse dieting. And while I do think it is a good idea to gradually
increase your food intake after a prolonged period of calorie restriction, you don't need to do it
for the reasons commonly claimed. And we'll get into a bit more of that a little bit later in this podcast.
Hey, before we continue, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, and if you want to help me help more people get into the best shape of their lives,
please do consider picking up one of my best-selling health and fitness books.
My most popular ones are Bigger, Leaner, Stronger for men,
Thinner, Leaner, Stronger for women,
my flexible dieting cookbook, The Shredded Chef,
and my 100% practical hands-on blueprint
for personal transformation,
The Little Black Book of Workout Motivation.
Now, these books have sold well over 1 million copies
and have helped
thousands of people build their best body ever. And you can find them anywhere online where you
can buy books like Amazon, Audible, iTunes, Kobo, and Google Play, as well as in select Barnes & Noble
stores. So again, that is Bigger Leaner Stronger for Men, Thinner Leaner Stronger for Women,
The Shredded Chef,
and The Little Black Book of Workout Motivation. Oh, and one other thing is you can get any one
of those audio books 100% free when you sign up for an Audible account. And that's a great way
to make those pockets of downtime, like commuting, meal prepping, and cleaning more interesting,
entertaining, and productive. Now, if you want
to take Audible up on that offer and get one of my audio books for free, just go to
legionathletics.com slash Audible and sign up for your account.
So that is a good overview of metabolic damage. Let's now talk about starvation mode. What is starvation mode?
So the idea here is similar to metabolic damage, and it goes like this.
If you are too aggressive with your calorie restriction, your metabolism will slow to a crawl, which makes it more or less impossible to continue losing weight without eating less than your average runway model.
And according to many fitness gurus and influencers, if you remain in starvation mode for
too long, then the next phase of punishment will begin, which is muscle loss and fat gain. Now, the only way to avoid all of this, we are told, is losing weight
slowly through a small, you know, 10 to 15% calorie deficit. If we get greedy, we will pay for it
later. And the way that most people describe it, metabolic damage and starvation mode, work
together to stymie your progress in a process that looks like this.
First, you eat too little and you lose weight too fast. Second, you plunge your body into starvation
mode and then weight loss eventually stops. Third, you eat even less and move even more,
which supercharges the response from your body and causes metabolic damage. And then fourth, the
longer you remain in this state, the less and less weight you lose regardless of what you do,
and the more and more metabolic damage you accrue that will require more and more time to fix.
Well, as you are going to learn in this podcast, there is a bit of truth here. There's a shade of
truth, but like many things that everybody knows
in the fitness space, it is more wrong than right. So let's start in that direction with this.
Weight loss does not damage your metabolism. That's it. Drop the mic. No. Okay. Pick the
mic back up. All right. So let's break that down. To understand the real science of fat loss, you have to start with the principles of energy balance, which you are
probably familiar with. That is how your energy intake and your energy expenditure alone dictate
weight gain and weight loss. Once you understand that, you realize that meaningful weight loss
requires that you eat
fewer calories, less energy, than you burn for an extended period of time. For most people,
the learning stops there. They wanted the one weird trick that would melt away belly fat and
love handles, and they got it. Eat less and move more. What they don't know, however, can come back
to haunt them because restricting your calories does more than just reduce your total fat mass.
It also affects your metabolism in various ways that make getting leaner increasingly difficult as time goes on.
In short, when you restrict your calories to lose fat, your body sets out to decrease your energy expenditure and increase your energy intake. In other words,
it wants to erase the energy deficit to balance the intake with the output and thereby halt fat
loss. You see, the reality is losing fat requires that you force your body to do something it
doesn't want to do. It really is mild and prolonged starvation. And in the spirit
of self-preservation, your body has defense mechanisms to employ to fight back. And I think
it would be helpful if we covered the major ones. So first, your basal metabolic rate will slow
down. Basal means forming a base. It means fundamental. So your basal metabolic rate is the amount of
energy that your body burns while at rest. The biggest energy hogs in your body are your organs
and your muscles. And those are the prime determinants of your basal metabolic rate.
They burn a lot of energy. They require a lot of energy to keep working. Now, when you place your
body in a calorie deficit, hormonal adaptations occur that cause your body to burn less energy while at rest. The major ones, the
major hormones involved in these adaptations include leptin, ghrelin, thyroid hormones,
and testosterone, which are all unfavorably impacted by calorie restriction and weight loss.
Another defense mechanism relates to the thermic
effect of food. The thermic effect of food decreases and the thermic effect of food or
TEF as it's often referred to is the amount of energy that is required to eat, digest, absorb,
and store food. Now research shows that TEF accounts for about 10% of total daily energy expenditure in
most people with amounts varying based on the macronutrient composition of the diet. TEF is
higher with protein and carbohydrate than fat, for example. Now, while restricting calories doesn't appear to directly reduce TEF.
The reduction in overall food intake naturally results in a reduction of TEF.
Another defense mechanism that your body has is when you are in a calorie deficit, you
tend to burn less energy through spontaneous physical activity.
So every day you engage in varying amounts of spontaneous
activity, like walking around while you're on the phone, hopping to the bathroom, drumming your
fingers when you read, bobbing your legs when you think, and so forth. And the energy burned by
these activities is known as non-exercise activity thermogenesis, or NEAT, N-AT plays a much larger role in total daily energy expenditure
than most people realize. In fact, research shows that NEAT can vary by up to 2,000 calories per day
among people, and the same research indicates that people could burn an additional 350 calories per day
by just doing simple things to increase their general activity levels, like taking the stairs
when possible, walking relatively short distances instead of driving, doing chores instead of
watching TV and so forth. And when you are in a calorie deficit, your body naturally decreases its spontaneous
activity levels. And this happens subconsciously. We're not even aware of it. We just naturally
tend to move less. And this often significantly reduces our total daily energy expenditure,
our average daily energy expenditure. Furthermore, studies show that this
NEAT adaptation can remain for quite some time after regular eating has resumed, which by the
way, is one of the reasons why weight gain after dieting is so common. Okay, one last defense
mechanism is burning less energy during exercise. As you reduce your body weight,
you also reduce the amount of energy that you expend during exercise because it costs more
energy to move a heavier body. That said, there does appear to be a bit more to this because
research has shown that even when body weight is artificially increased during weight loss, energy expenditure
during exercise remains lower than normal. And the scientists that conducted that research that
I'm referring to are not exactly sure why, but it has been observed. So when we put this all together,
what we see is that our total daily energy expenditure really is a moving target. And one of the challenges of dieting is adapting our exercise routines and our meal plans as
needed to ensure that we remain in a large enough energy deficit to keep losing weight
and keep losing fat.
So all of these changes that we just discussed to our basal metabolic rate, NEAT, TEF, and
so forth are collectively known as adaptive
thermogenesis. And they constitute our body's primary weight loss countermeasures, you could
say. And these things can be very effective as well. If you do not know how to deal with them
properly, they can significantly slow your rate of weight loss or
even stop it altogether. What they can't do, however, is break your metabolism. Even when
you heavily restrict your calories, eat too little protein, and do little or no strength training,
you can expect a larger reduction in your basal metabolic rate if you do
those things, but the effects are far smaller than many people would have you believe.
Several studies have shown that the metabolic decline associated with dieting, including long
periods of very low-calorie dieting, ranges from less than 5% to about 15%. Furthermore, it took about a 10%
reduction in body weight to produce the larger double digit drops. And most of the research on
the matter was conducted with people who made every mistake in the book. They ate far too few
calories and far too little protein and did
no resistance training whatsoever. We also know that while these effects can persist long after
weight loss has stopped, they can also be easily reversed by just raising your calories, lifting
weights, or doing some form of resistance training at least, and eating a high protein diet. That's all it really takes. Now, what happens to your body when you do things correctly, when you use a
moderately aggressive but not reckless calorie deficit, when you eat somewhere around one gram
of protein per pound of body weight per day, and you do a few hours of heavy resistance training
every week and don't overdo it with the cardio? Well, studies show that that approach
to fat loss can actually increase your metabolic rate and your total muscle mass.
So really what we are talking about is this. Metabolic damage is a misnomer. The more accurate
term is metabolic adaptation, which can work for or against you depending on your goals, actions, and circumstances.
Okay, so now let's shift gears and talk starvation mode because starvation mode is not real,
not in the strict sense of how most people understand the term at least. So as you now know, your body does respond
to calorie restriction with cross currents that are meant to stall weight loss, right? Adaptive
thermogenesis, but there is no mode that it enters or physiological switch that flips that makes any
further weight loss impossible. And the best example of this and really of everything that we are going over
in this podcast that I know of is one of the most extreme studies on human metabolism that was ever
conducted, the Minnesota starvation experiment. So this experiment started in 1944 as the end of
World War II was approaching. And its purpose was to discover the healthiest way to help the millions of starving
people in Europe return to a normal body weight. As you can guess, this study involved starving
people. And by starving, I truly mean starving. So what scientists did is they took 36 volunteers.
Now, these were guys who had the choice of shipping off to the front lines or doing this, and they chose this. And to replicate the conditions of your average POW camp, the researchers had these men do several hours of manual labor every day in March, about 22 miles per week. And they put them on a diet that provided about 50% of their average daily energy expenditure. And they did all that for six months. So as you
can imagine, things got pretty grim. By the end of the study, many of the men looked downright
skeletal and some had almost starved to death. And one dude even cut off several of his fingers to
wash out early. What about their metabolisms though? Were they as
devastated as proponents of metabolic damage and starvation mode would predict? Absolutely not.
After losing about 25% of their body weight on average, their basal metabolic rates were on
average about 20% lower than scientists predicted based on their body weights. In other words,
their metabolisms were underperforming by about 20% on average after enduring six months of the
most extreme weight loss regimen you could ever devise. Then in the next phase of the study,
subjects were put on a recovery diet to allow them to regain most of the weight they had lost. And after 12 weeks of this, their metabolic rates were assessed again.
This time, the average metabolic rates were only about 10% lower than where they should have been.
And in some cases, everything was back to normal as if nothing had ever happened,
just 12 weeks of normal eating. Now that's not great news. Of course,
when you take it on the whole, you still had some lingering effects, but not too bad considering
what these guys had put their bodies through. For example, if you started your weight loss journey
with a basal metabolic rate of about 1800 calories per day, And then you went and played concentration camp for six months and
then regained the weight lost. You could expect a basal metabolic rate of about 1600 calories per
day. Again, not ideal, but not enough to make you incapable of losing more weight. It's also worth
noting that according to a recent study that was largely compiled by a member of my
scientific advisory board, Menno Henselmans, when you look at the data over the long term and not
just the first 12 weeks of recovery dieting, there's no evidence any of the people in the
experiment suffered from lingering metabolic damage. In other words, everything went
back to normal, but in some people, it just took longer than 12 weeks. Now, this groundbreaking
experiment provided another nail to drive into the coffin of starvation mode, and that is every
participant continued to lose weight up until the very end. The rate of weight loss
slowed down, of course, for reasons we've already gone over, but it never came to a complete stand
still. So it is safe to assume then that if people can eat about 1500 calories per day
and do many hours of moderately intense exercise every week and still lose weight steadily
for six months, then we have nothing to worry about. So if metabolic damage and starvation
mode cannot cause you to stop losing weight, what can? What are the real reasons you stop losing
weight? Well, there are three main reasons why you stop losing weight. And they are one, you are retaining water. Two, you are gaining muscle. And three, you are eating too much and most often eating more than you think. That's it. flake. Your body runs on the same type of machinery as mine and everyone else's. You just
have to learn how yours is tuned and you got to make sure that you are not making some of the
major weight loss mistakes that keep people fat and frustrated. And if you want to learn more
about that, you can head over to musclecle for Life and search for an article called The Definitive Guide to Why You Are Not Losing Weight. And I'm not sure if I have recorded
a podcast on it or not, so I may have also recorded a podcast on it. All right, so let's wrap up here.
Let's summarize. Metabolic damage and starvation mode are mostly boogeymen. Your metabolism might
decline as you lose weight, but it might not,
depending on where you're at and what you're doing. But if you do things right, if you don't
heavily restrict your calories, if you eat enough protein, if you train your muscles and don't
fry yourself with cardio, the metabolic effects of the diet will be negligible and will be quickly reversed with
either a short period of reverse dieting where you just jump your calories up to maintenance in a
couple of steps or just going right back to maintenance or somewhere right around where
your maintenance should be once you have reached your target body fat percentage or your target body composition. And even if you have
already done everything wrong to drop pounds, even if you have already starved yourself and
eaten very little protein and done way too much cardio, you still do not have anything to worry
about. Your metabolism is okay because even the most extreme dietary measures can only produce a relatively small decline in the future, it almost always comes down to one or more of three things, water retention, muscle gain,
overeating. And again, if you want to know why, head over to Muscle for Life and search for
not losing weight, and you will find an article I wrote called the definitive guide to why you
are not losing weight. And I may or may not have recorded a podcast on it as well. So
you can search that in the podcast feed. Hey there, it is Mike again. I hope you enjoyed
this episode and found it interesting and helpful. And if you did, and don't mind doing me a favor
and want to help me make this the most popular health and fitness podcast on the internet,
then please leave a quick review of it on iTunes or wherever you're listening from. This not only convinces people
that they should check the show out, it also increases its search visibility and thus helps
more people find their way to me and learn how to build their best bodies ever too. And of course,
if you want to be notified when the next episode goes live, then just subscribe to the podcast and you won't miss out on any of the new goodies.
Lastly, if you didn't like something about the show, then definitely shoot me an email
at mike at muscleforlife.com and share your thoughts on how you think it could be better.
I read everything myself and I'm always looking for constructive feedback, so please do reach
out.
All right, that's it. Thanks again for listening to this episode and I hope to hear from you soon.
And lastly, this episode is brought to you by me. Seriously though, I'm not big on promoting stuff
that I don't personally use and believe in. So instead I'm going to just quickly tell you about
something of mine, specifically my fitness book for men, Bigger,
Leaner, Stronger. Now this book has sold over 350,000 copies in the last several years and
helped thousands and thousands of guys build their best bodies ever, which is why it currently has
over 3,100 reviews on Amazon with a four and a half star average. So if you want to know the biggest
lies and myths that are keeping you from achieving the lean, muscular, strong, and healthy body that
you truly desire, and if you want to learn the simple science of building the ultimate male body,
then you want to read Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, which you can find on all major online retailers like Amazon,
Audible, iTunes, Kobo, and Google Play. Now, speaking of Audible, I should also mention
that you can get the audio book 100% free when you sign up for an Audible account, which
I highly recommend that you do if you're not currently listening to audio books.
I love them myself because they let me make the time that I
spend doing stuff like commuting, prepping food, walking my dog, and so forth so much more valuable
and productive. So if you want to take Audible up on this offer and get my book for free,
then simply go to www.bitly.com slash free BLS. And that will take you to Audible. And then you just click the
sign up today and save button, create your account and voila, you get to listen to bigger,
leaner, stronger for free.