I’m please to announce the release of the latest, greatest, most updated edition of Eat Stop Eat!
In order to keep Eat Stop Eat as the leading resource in intermittent
fasting information, I’ve expanded this edition to cover all the latest
research on weight loss as well as some of the fasting controversies
that hit the interwebs this year.
There are new chapters on:
*Longer fasts
*Fasting and women
*Fasting as a form of physical training
and I’ve updated the chapters on:
*Building muscle while fasting,
*Fasting and Leptin,
*Fasting and Testosterone
I’m really happy with this version. I’m sure you’ll be pleased too.
After more than 6 years of updates I finally feel like Eat Stop Eat is
complete.
You can get you copy here –> THE NEW EAT STOP EAT
Plus, as a special bonus, if you get your copy before July 20th
you can take part in an exclusive teleseminar with me where I explain
the reasons behind all the changes I’ve made to Eat Stop Eat.
Fasting and testosterone
"After
thoroughly reviewing the available research, I found that short term
fasting does not negatively affect testosterone levels. More prolonged
fasts seem to be associated with slight decreases in Testosterone
levels. A 58-hour fast
has been noted to cause reduced morning serum Testosterone measurements
by the third straight morning of fasting; however, these measurements
were still well within the normal range for healthy adults.
In fact, other studies have found that it takes about 9 straight days of fasting before a significant decrease in Testosterone levels is observed. Research
examining the effects of brief fasting (14-18 hours) over 21 days found
that testosterone levels were not affected by almost a month of
short-term fasting."
"Low blood sugar"
"The basic story is that if they don’t eat every three or four hours then they become
hypoglycemic
and become irritable, moody, light-headed and shaky. I find this an
interesting phenomenon considering as little as 5-10% of the population
actually has a malfunction in their ability to regulate their blood
sugar levels. There is no actual cut off value for blood glucose levels
that truly defines hypoglycemia for all people and purposes."
"According to the research I reviewed on the effects of short term fasting on blood sugar,
a 24-hour fast should not place you into a hypoglycemic state, and I
have not seen any research that has shown a subject going below 3.6
mmol/L blood sugar during a short term fast."
Brad later explains
what those people who apparently can't go a few hours without keeling
over really are suffering from. It ain't "low blood sugar"...and if I
got a dollar each time I heard someone complain about that, I'd be a
millionaire by now.
Fasting and mental performance
"In a test
where twenty-one university aged people were asked to perform a series
of intellectual tests after having either a normal meal, skipping one
meal, skipping two meals or going 24 hours without food, researchers
found no difference in performance on measures of reaction time, recall
or focused attention time. This led the authors of the study to conclude
that short-term food deprivation did not significantly impair cognitive
function.
These results have been confirmed in additional studies
where healthy young adults ate as little as 300 Calories over a two day
period and experienced no decrease in tests of cognitive performance
(including vigilance, choice reaction time, learning, memory, and
reasoning), activity, sleep, and mood)."
Fasting and cold fingers
"Q: Sometimes when I fast my finger tips get cold, why is that?
Fasting increases the blood flow
to you body fat (the process is called adipose tissue blood flow). So
when you are fasting more blood is travelling to your body fat,
presumably to help move it to your muscles where it can be burned as a
fuel. Do to this increased travel to your body fat, micro-vasodilation
occurs in your fingertips and sometimes toes to compensate. So in some
cases it’s a ‘necessary evil’ in the fat loss process."
I've
heard people mention cold fingers, hands and feet after longer fasting
periods so the above is a good addition to the FAQ at the end of the
book.
OK, now on with the formal review.
Who is this book for?
Anyone interested in intermittent fasting: the science behind it, as a lifestyle, or as a way to lose fat and maintain leanness.
What will I learn from it?
Besides
learning how to practice the Eat Stop Eat lifestyle, this book covers
topics pertaining to intermittent fasting and metabolism, health, body
composition, hormonal effects and much more.
Strong points
*
The book is almost twice as long as the original Eat Stop Eat - and
it's 100% interesting and valuable information, not useless filler
material. Brad has added information and research on the effects of
fasting on testosterone, leptin, cortisol, inflammation, fasted
training, whole new chapters devoted to blood glucose and fasting,
fasting and the brain, workout design, and more. The FAQ is also greatly
expanded. I was very impressed with the plethora of new information and
how it was presented. To be honest, and this is just the cynic in me
speaking, I only expected fluff and maybe some more on the practical
side of things.
* One of the weak points of the original was
Pilon's advice and recommendations for resistance training. Instead of
advocating heavy resistance training to maintain or gain muscle during
dieting, Brad linked to some of his affiliates circuit training
workouts. Not so in this edition. Instead, Brad covers resistance
training basics and research, and offers solid non-retarded advice to go
with it: i.e. the importance of progressive overloading, guidelines
regarding training frequency, volume, etc. The new chapter on workout
design is a very welcome addition for beginners purchasing the book. I
am also pleased to see that Brad and I are on the same page when it
comes to cardio for fat loss (which is that it's a poor return on your
time investment).
* Very newbie friendly, yet well referenced and
scientifically accurate. This is the only book on the market with a
substantial collection of research on intermittent fasting.
*
Does a good job of dispelling the various diet myths out there:
"starvation mode," the claim that you will lose muscle if you don't eat
every so often, and much more.
* An enjoyable reading experience.
Weak points
*
There are no calorie/macronutrient specific guidelines given in this
book, which might be a problem for some people. Of course, if you have a
good grasp on calorie counting and such, this is a non-issue. On the
other hand, I think Brad left out meal plans/nutritional guidelines
intentionally, since he pushes this as a lifestyle diet rather than a
"diet" diet, so to speak.
* If I have to to nitpick: Brad talks a
lot about the importance of low insulin for fat burning and fat loss.
While he does not state anything outright incorrect, it might give the
beginner the impression that maintaining low insulin is absolutely
critical to lose fat. That in turn might lead to the conclusion that
lower carb diets are preferable to higher carb diets, and so forth. On
the other hand, he does mention the importance of calorie intake rather
macronutrient intakes and backs this up with references.
There
is also one part where Brad talks about a "glucagon-dominant" metabolism
for fat loss, which is not the case (glucagon does not cause fat
burning). In one part Brad also cites a researcher who claims that "the
idea that there is golden period of getting amino acids into your
muscles is speculative at best," which is untrue. Several studies show
increased muscle protein synthesis when protein is consumed pre-workout.
This is the only claim I take major issue with.
Overall
I
rarely give praise or a glowing review unless it's warranted but Brad
deserves one. While I don't agree with Brad's views about protein (as
stated in his protein book; however, he does mention the positive
effects of high protein intake during dieting in this one), there's not
much I disagree on, or can critique, here. It's in every way a
significant improvement over the original, which was already a good
book. If you're remotely interested in the topic, get this. You will not
regret it.
Is it worth the purchase if you have the old Eat Stop
Eat? For someone like myself, a total geek about intermittent fasting
and the research surrounding it, definitely. With the material Brad
added, this is one of the best and most interesting books on physiology
and dietetics I have ever purchased. I rank it right up there with Lyle
McDonald's books. Eat Stop Eat Expanded Edition is a fantastic contribution to the intermittent fasting community.
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