Keto Means
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Simply put, OMAD means eating one meal in a day. It doesn't specify what you eat, or even what time you eat. It simply directs you to eat once. OMAD is the longest form of time-restricted eating, equivalent to a 23:1 fast (fasting for 23 hours and eating in a 1-hour window).
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Read More »OMAD — an abbreviation for One Meal A Day — is a popular pattern of eating many are using to lose weight or improve metabolic health. But is it a healthy and sustainable way to lose weight? And is it a healthy long-term lifestyle? This guide will answer these questions and help you understand if OMAD is right for you. Simply put, OMAD means eating one meal in a day. It doesn’t specify what you eat, or even what time you eat. It simply directs you to eat once. OMAD is the longest form of time-restricted eating, equivalent to a 23:1 fast (fasting for 23 hours and eating in a 1-hour window). In its purest sense, OMAD doesn’t dictate calorie restriction or specific macronutrient composition. That said, we encourage you to continue your healthy, low-carb diet at that meal. And be sure to keep reading to the end for other practical tips for eating OMAD. DD+ MEMBERSHIP Start your FREE 30-day trial! Get instant access to healthy low-carb and keto meal plans, fast and easy recipes, weight loss advice from medical experts, and so much more. A healthier life starts now with your free trial! Start FREE trial! Clinicians experienced in prescribing intermittent fasting and low-carb nutrition frequently use OMAD as a tool to help with weight loss stalls. When a patient is eating low carb but isn’t losing weight as expected, temporary use of OMAD can help kick-start weight loss. You can read more about addressing weight loss stalls in our evidence-based guide. Many who eat an OMAD pattern do so for the ease of preparing food and eating just once each day. This can be especially helpful for those who travel frequently, perform shift work, or have hectic and busy schedules.
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Read More »Just as OMAD promotes caloric restriction, it can also lead to protein restriction. Since protein helps you feel full and satisfied, it can be difficult to eat your entire daily requirement in one sitting. The average 5’10,” 81-kg male should eat about 110 grams of protein daily (read more about how much protein we should eat ). If you can eat a 16-oz ribeye plus a couple of fried eggs in one sitting, then it may not be a concern. But if that sounds like a lot to you, then your protein intake may be too low with daily OMAD.
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Read More »Closer to a standard OMAD, a 2009 crossover study compared eating 3 meals per day to eating the exact same food allotment in a 20:4 eating window. The diet was 15% protein, 35% fat and 50% carbs. When comparing the 1 meal/day group with the 3 meals/day group, body fat was 4.4 pounds (2 kg) less, while lean mass was the same. The 3 meals/day group did not lose any weight. In addition, immediately after the time-restricted eating portion of the study, the fasters had lower triglycerides (93 vs 102 mg/dL), higher HDL (62 vs 57 mg/dL), and higher LDL (136 vs 113 mg/dL). While the authors warned about the higher LDL, looking further we see that the total cholesterol-to-HDL ratio remained about the same (3.5 for time-restricted eating vs 3.4 for 3 meals/day), while the TG:HDL ratio was slightly better in the time-restricted eating group (1.5 vs 1.8). Although we can’t definitively state that the higher LDL is no cause for concern, there is evidence suggesting that high HDL and low triglycerides may predict lower cardiovascular risk, even in the setting of high LDL. Overall, it seems reasonable to extrapolate these data to OMAD and predict that it may provide similar benefits – at least in the short-term. But we still don’t know if the benefits would persist with long-term, daily OMAD. Because of this uncertainty and the lack of long-term data, we are hesitant to recommend daily OMAD. This is where alternate-day fasting becomes an attractive option. Alternate-day fasting appears to address concerns about excessive chronic caloric restriction because every other day is characterized by “normal” eating, with zero or severely reduced calories on fasting days. One short-term study compared ADF to daily caloric restriction and found it delivered similar benefits for weight loss and body composition with less of a reduction in adjusted resting metabolic rate. A longer one year study in patients with type 2 diabetes showed that one day of consuming 500 calories followed by two days of normal eating produced HbA1c improvements similar to those observed during chronic caloric restriction. OMAD appears to be a powerful tool to help with weight loss and metabolic health. That said, we caution against chronic daily use of OMAD for all the reasons outlined above. Instead, for those who may benefit from more pronounced time-restricted eating, using OMAD one to three times per week, on non-consecutive days, could be an effective tool. This is not a science-based protocol with plenty of high-quality evidence, but is instead based on the existing evidence plus clinical experience. Just remember, OMAD is not a license to eat whatever you want. What you eat for your one meal still matters. We recommend you stick with your low-carb plan on OMAD and non-OMAD days alike. In fact, clinical experience suggests that a well-formulated low-carb diet makes intermittent fasting and OMAD easier to do by reducing hunger and cravings. So, you can consider low carb as the secret weapon to enhance your OMAD superpower.
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