Alternate day fasting is a type of intermittent fasting that can be used for weight loss and other potential health benefits. It may not be the best form of intermittent fasting for everyone, and we encourage you to explore other types if you find it doesn’t suit you. In particular, women and those with underlying health conditions should be careful.
Fasting has numerous health benefits, possibly due to ancestral eating patterns. Early hunter-gatherer humans would go for longer periods of time without eating than we do in the modern day, and the body might have used these periods to ‘clean’ itself of toxins and potentially dangerous mutated cells. As well as this cleaning system, when the body goes into fasting mode, it switches from using food as fuel to using ketones, which the body makes by metabolizing fat stores. We can still trigger these responses through fasting, for results such as weight loss.
There are many different types of intermittent fasting, such as 5:2 diet and 16:8 diet. Here, we’ll cover everything you need to know about alternate day fasting in particular, including the potential benefits and risks.
Josie Porter, a Doctify-reviewed dietitian, also explains that fasting days don’t necessarily require abstaining from food completely. “Alternate day fasting is a form of intermittent fasting that requires dieters to carry out a fast every other day,” she says. “This means that the restriction is only required half of the time. When we look at the literature, fasting days typically are up to 800 calories per day, with the non-fasting days being eating to satiety – not seeing this as a free day to make up for the fast.”
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Porter agrees that alternate day fasting can be useful for weight loss. “A lot of people carry out forms of intermittent fasting like alternate day fasting, for goals of weight loss or improvements to health conditions, such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease,” she says. “Generally evidence appears to suggest that alternate day fasting is as beneficial as more traditional methods of weight loss, such as creating a daily calorie deficit. Interestingly, of all intermittent fasting regimes, such as time-restricted eating, alternate day fasting appears to have a slight advantage.”
A study in the journal Autophagy also suggests that short-term fasting, as one might do with alternate day fasts, triggers the process of autophagy. Autophagy is a state of ‘starvation’ the body enters when fasting, where energy usually used to digest food can be used on cellular renewal and clearing debris and free radicals from our bodies. A study in Carcinogenesis indicates that autophagy may be protective of cancer and integral in tumor suppression, making it a promising area for cancer research.
Related: Intermittent fasting for womenKumaran also encourages women to take care with alternate day fasting due to the effect it can have on their menstrual cycle. “Women can be more sensitive to fasting due to the monthly menstrual cycle and subsequent hormonal fluctuations that women experience,” she says. “Women also have a greater sensitivity to changes in energy balance, as fasting can trigger an exaggerated response to stress. This can then have the opposite effects of the intended health benefits.”
New to intermittent fasting? Check out our guide to intermittent fasting for beginners for a more detailed guide.
If you have a chronic health condition or mental health condition, you will also want to take extra caution when undertaking big dietary changes, such as alternate day fasting. We recommend you don’t try alternate day fasting without the support of your doctor or a nutrition specialist if you have any underlying conditions.
Porter adds: “Those taking medication for their diabetes or blood pressure should always seek advice from their GP or dietitian before trying any form of restrictive diets. This is because eating minimal or no calories may work against these medications.”
This article is for informational purposes only and is not meant to offer medical advice.