Long-term maintenance of lost weight is the primary challenge of
managing obesity. In fact, 80% of lost weight is regained in the
aftermath of a diet.
So why is it so difficult to lose weight and keep it off?
Professor Emeritus of Medicine & Past-Chair in Obesity Research
and Management at the University of Alberta, Dr. Arya Sharma, invited
Medical Director of the Weight Management Program at the Toronto
Medcan Clinic, Dr. David Macklin, to share some thoughts on this topic
on his blog “Dr. Arya Sharma´s Obesity Notes.”
Here, Dr. Macklin shares the 7 biggest factors contributing to
weight regain and offers perspective on what realistic long-term
weight management should look like. You can find the link to the
original post here.
1. BIOLOGY
“The principal reason for weight regain is biology. The brain defends
against weight loss because of an old biological play book. If our
ancestors lost weight, it was not to look good for a wedding or
because of bathing suit season. Back then, weight loss was either
because of illness or an interrupted food supply. Simply put,
defending against weight loss was defending against death.
In the last 30 years we have learned how the brain does this. The
brain is expert at 1) recognizing fat loss, 2) defending against fat
loss, and 3) promoting weight regain. The brain does this by:
a) increasing appetite – the motivation for calorie intake
b) decreasing metabolic rate
Increased appetite seems to be more complicit than slower metabolism
in weight regain. Increased appetite, in the form of an increased
motivation to eat, leads to increased overall calorie intake, which in
turn leads to weight regain.
A reminder, the remaining reasons for weight regain operate through
the main mechanism, biology.”
2. DIETING
“The next common reason for weight regain relates to dieting. Note
that dieting is not an effective method of preventing weight regain.
Instead, the three pillars to preventing weight regain are behavioural
therapy, medication, and surgery. Simply put, the risk of weight gain
is greater the more “diet-like” the weight-loss method. Specifically:
a) if the weight-loss effort involved a commitment to a reduced
calorie intake that was unsustainable.
b) if the weight-loss effort involved a commitment to a level
and type of effort that was unsustainable.
c) if the weight-loss effort did not accept and involve a
conscious commitment to the value of fun, food, drink, friends,
socialization, and travel.
The greatest predictor of thwarting weight regain is sustained
adherence to the method used to lose weight. The above methods predict
poor adherence. They also predict that for someone losing too much
weight, going to a weight lower than what is sustainable, weight loss
will be overwhelmed by biology.
Thus, we have the definition of best weight. One’s best weight is
arrived at by committing to the opposite of dieting. Best weight is
discovered by committing to 1) a sustainable calorie level, 2) at a
sustainable effort, 3) while accepting a conscious commitment to the
value of fun, food, drink, friends, socialization, and travel. Best
weight is the weight you softly land at when committing to a lifestyle
that is, by definition, sustainable.”
3. A CHANGE IN EXTERNAL CUES, TIMES AND SETTINGS
“The next and rather poorly understood reason for weight regain is a
sustained change in one’s overall environment. A common current
example of this would be someone who was working in an office and is
now working in their home, or the opposite: someone who was working at
home and now is working at an office. Another example is someone who,
during weight loss, avoided high-risk settings for the purpose of
weight loss and now inevitably is re-engaging in these setting. For
example someone who avoided social setting or restaurants temporarily
just for the purpose of weight loss. The cues in our physical and
social environments trigger the biological response of appetite –
wanting – the subconscious motivation to eat. If the cues experienced
during weight loss change, weight regain can follow.”
4. DISCONTINUATION OR POOR COMPLIANCE WITH BEHAVIOURAL THERAPY AND/OR
ANTI-OBESITY MEDICATIONS
“If treatment is discontinued, the condition can come back. Evidence
based behavioural therapy has been demonstrated, if continued long
term, to offer a defence against weight regain. Anti-obesity
medications (AOMs) work by defending against an individual’s biology.
AOMs defend against increased appetite and dampen the subconscious
motivation for calorie intake (wanting). If AOMs are discontinued or
poorly complied with, the defence against weight regain is lost and
the biology does the rest.”
5. DEMOTIVATING SELF-CRITICAL THINKING THAT FOLLOWS SETBACKS
“A highly underestimated reason for weight regain is in an
individual’s response to “weight loss setbacks.” Common weight loss
setbacks include 1) the aftermath of off-track eating and/or drinking
episodes, and 2) the moments after seeing a number on a scale not in
one’s favour. Unless effective behavioural therapy has been provided,
these setbacks may often be followed by negative self-critical
thoughts and negative emotions including demotivation. Yet it is
precisely when one is at a lower weight that they are most subject to
their biological drivers of weight regain and most likely to
experience over-consuming and unfavourable scale results. Screening
for and treating these unhelpful cognitive responses is an important
part of understanding and addressing weight regain. To reiterate, this
is probably the most underestimated non-biological complication of
weight loss.”
6. WEIGHT-PROMOTING MEDICATION(S)
“Weight gain can be a possible serious side effect of many commonly
used medications. Some medications more commonly cause weight gain
than others, and significant inter-individual differences exist.
Weight regain may be caused by the addition of a weight-promoting
medication and if possible, a substitution can be made for an
alternative medication that is more weight neutral.”
7. MODULATORS
“Finally, there is a finite list of internal states that may promote
weight regain. It is intuitive to most that stress, fatigue, lack of
sleep, depressed mood, and lower levels of activity may promote weight
regain. For many individuals, especially in a state of reduced body
weight, each of these factors can increase wanting, the motivation to
eat, and decrease self-regulation skills (restraint). If someone is
regaining weight, it is imperative to screen for each of these
modulators and to recognize how a change in any of these may be
leading to higher calorie intake and weight regain.”
Dr. Macklin further adds an important note regarding this list:
“While biology is the most important and most common reason for weight
regain, the other reasons can make the primary reason more complicated.”