There are literally hundreds of weight loss diets available. Moving from diet
to diet in a cycle of weight gain and loss — yo-yo dieting — that stresses the
heart, kidneys and other organs can also be a health risk.
Doctors who prescribe and supervise diets for their patients usually create a
customized program with the goal of greatly restricting calorie intake while
maintaining nutrition.
These diets fall into two basic categories:
-
Low Calorie Diets (LCDs) are individually planned so that the patient takes in
500 to 1,000 fewer calories a day than he or she burns.
-
Very Low Calorie Diets (VLCDs) typically limit caloric intake to 400 to 800 a
day and feature high-protein, low-fat liquids.
Many patients on Very Low Calorie Diets lose significant amounts of weight.
However, after returning to a normal diet, most regain the lost weight in
under a year. Ninety percent of people participating in all diet programs will
regain the weight they've lost within two years.
Behavior modification uses therapy to help patients change their eating and
exercise habits. Like low-calorie diets, behavior modification, in most
patients, results in short-term success that tends to diminish after the first
year.
If diet and behavior modifications have failed you and surgery is your next
option, it is important to understand that diet and behavior modification will
be instrumental to sustained weight loss after your surgery. The surgery
itself is only a tool to get your body started losing weight -- complying with
diet and behavior modifications required by most surgeons would determine your
ultimate success.