Forget expensive gym memberships or
'miracle' diet pills, researchers have found the cheapest way to lose
weight is by simply drinking more water.
A
study has found that adults who drank two cups before a meal lost
around 4lb more than a group that didn't drink the extra water.
The
research was included in a review of 11 different studies looking at
impact drinking water can have on diets - with three showing clear
evidence that consuming more water helps increase weight loss.
Brenda Davy, a professor at Virginia
Tech in the U.S. who assisted in the review, said that water could help
'squelch' the feelings of hunger and help dieters reduce their calorie
intake.
This is
backed by another study which found that women who increased their water
consumption while they dieted lost more weight than those who kept it
below one litre a day.
Rebecca Muckelbauer, a researcher at
the Berlin School of Public Health, Charité University Medical Center
Berlin in Germany, who led the new review of the water studies, agreed
the feeling of fullness was the most likely reason for the weight-loss.
But she suggested another possibility - 'water-induced thermogenesis' - could be behind it.
Muckelbauer said the idea is that
'drinking water itself increases energy expenditure of your body. It has
an energy consuming effect.'
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But she admitted: 'This is not very well studied.'
The
Institute of Medicine recommends that adults consume around 2.5 litres
of fluid a day, but this total can come through food, plain water or
other drinks.
While the
experimental studies suggest that drinking water may aid in weight
loss, the surveys Muckelbauer examined didn't always show that people
who drink more water are slimmer.
In
fact, some found that obese or overweight adults drank more water than
people of normal size, Muckelbauer's team reports in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
She
said people in the U.S. typically drink about 400 to 500 calories a day
from other beverages, and replacing them with water is not a bad idea.
One
study found that women who drink water, rather than sweet drinks, had a
slightly lower chance of developing diabetes. And women who don't drink
plenty of water have greater odds of getting kidney stones.
'There's not a lot of risk for recommending (increased water intake) for individuals,' Davy said.
The review comes after research by supermarket Tesco showed that drinking fruit juice can help pile on the pounds.
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