FOR
most of the last century, our understanding of the cause of obesity has
been based on immutable physical law. Specifically, it’s the first law
of thermodynamics, which dictates that energy can neither be created nor
destroyed. When it comes to body weight, this means that calorie intake
minus calorie expenditure equals calories stored. Surrounded by
tempting foods, we overeat, consuming more calories than we can burn
off, and the excess is deposited as fat. The simple solution is to exert
willpower and eat less.
The
problem is that this advice doesn’t work, at least not for most people
over the long term. In other words, your New Year’s resolution to lose
weight probably won’t last through the spring, let alone affect how you
look in a swimsuit in July. More of us than ever are obese, despite an
incessant focus on calorie balance by the government, nutrition
organizations and the food industry.
But
what if we’ve confused cause and effect? What if it’s not overeating
that causes us to get fat, but the process of getting fatter that causes
us to overeat?
The
more calories we lock away in fat tissue, the fewer there are
circulating in the bloodstream to satisfy the body’s requirements. If we
look at it this way, it’s a distribution problem: We have an abundance
of calories, but they’re in the wrong place. As a result, the body needs
to increase its intake. We get hungrier because we’re getting fatter.
It’s
like edema, a common medical condition in which fluid leaks from blood
vessels into surrounding tissues. No matter how much water they drink,
people with edema may experience unquenchable thirst because the fluid
doesn’t stay in the blood, where it’s needed. Similarly, when fat cells
suck up too much fuel, calories from food promote the growth of fat
tissue instead of serving the energy needs of the body, provoking
overeating in all but the most disciplined individuals.
We discuss this hypothesis in an article
just published in JAMA, The Journal of the American Medical
Association. According to this alternative view, factors in the
environment have triggered fat cells in our bodies to take in and store
excessive amounts of glucose and other calorie-rich compounds. Since
fewer calories are available to fuel metabolism, the brain tells the
body to increase calorie intake (we feel hungry) and save energy (our
metabolism slows down). Eating more solves this problem temporarily but
also accelerates weight gain. Cutting calories reverses the weight gain
for a short while, making us think we have control over our body weight,
but predictably increases hunger and slows metabolism even more.
Consider
fever as another analogy. A cold bath will lower body temperature
temporarily, but also set off biological responses — like shivering and
constriction of blood vessels — that work to heat the body up again. In a
sense, the conventional view of obesity as a problem of calorie balance
is like conceptualizing fever as a problem of heat balance; technically
not wrong, but not very helpful, because it ignores the apparent
underlying biological driver of weight gain.
This
is why diets that rely on consciously reducing calories don’t usually
work. Only one in six overweight and obese adults in a nationwide survey
reports ever having maintained a 10 percent weight loss for at least a
year. (Even this relatively modest accomplishment may be exaggerated,
because people tend to overestimate their successes in self-reported
surveys.) In studies by Dr. Rudolph L. Leibel of Columbia and
colleagues, when lean and obese research subjects were underfed in order
to make them lose 10 to 20 percent of their weight, their hunger
increased and metabolism plummeted. Conversely, overfeeding sped up
metabolism.
For
both over- and under-eating, these responses tend to push weight back
to where it started — prompting some obesity researchers to think in
terms of a body weight “set point” that seems to be predetermined by our
genes.
But
if basic biological responses push back against changes in body weight,
and our set points are predetermined, then why have obesity rates —
which, for adults, are almost three times what they were in the 1960s —
increased so much? Most important, what can we do about it?
As
it turns out, many biological factors affect the storage of calories in
fat cells, including genetics, levels of physical activity, sleep and
stress. But one has an indisputably dominant role: the hormone insulin.
We know that excess insulin treatment for diabetes causes weight gain,
and insulin deficiency causes weight loss. And of everything we eat,
highly refined and rapidly digestible carbohydrates produce the most
insulin.
By
this way of thinking, the increasing amount and processing of
carbohydrates in the American diet has increased insulin levels, put fat
cells into storage overdrive and elicited obesity-promoting biological
responses in a large number of people. Like an infection that raises the
body temperature set point, high consumption of refined carbohydrates —
chips, crackers, cakes, soft drinks, sugary breakfast cereals and even
white rice and bread — has increased body weights throughout the
population.
One
reason we consume so many refined carbohydrates today is because they
have been added to processed foods in place of fats — which have been
the main target of calorie reduction efforts since the 1970s. Fat has
about twice the calories of carbohydrates, but low-fat diets are the
least effective of comparable interventions, according to several
analyses, including one presented at a meeting of the American Heart
Association this year.
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