Why Biggest Loser stars put the pounds back ON after the show: How the body fights for YEARS to restore dramatic weight loss caused by crash diets


  • Dr. Kevin Hall examined 14 Biggest Loser contestants over six years
  • He found their metabolisms slowed, making it harder to burn calories
  • Also their levels of leptin, a hormone that stops hunger, dropped by half
  • Nobody expected these conditions would continue for six years
  • The body, he argues, will always try to return to its 'ideal weight'
  • But the 'ideal weight' seems to go up by one or two pounds each year


In the Fall of 2009, they were the idols of overweight couch potatoes everywhere: the stars of weight-loss game show The Biggest Loser, shedding thousands of pounds between them over 13 gruelling weeks.
But in the six years since, almost all of them, including winner Danny Cahill who shed a massive 239 pounds, have put the weight they'd lost back on - some even ending up heavier than before.
And what science has discovered about their post-show failure has changed what we know about weight loss, The New York Times reported.











Similar things happened to other competitors: Rudy Pauls weighed 442 pounds before the show and 234 pounds after, but had ballooned to 390 pounds by 2014.
That year he had surgery on his digestive system to reduce weight again, and now weighs 265 pounds. He now burns 516 fewer calories a year than might be expected.
And Sean Algaier, who started Biggest Loser at 444 pounds and dropped to 289 pounds, now weighs MORE than he did before, with a weight of 450 pounds and a metabolism that burns 458 fewer calories than it should.
The problem, The New York Times reported, is that the human body appears to have an 'ideal weight' - one it is easy to maintain - and will fight to restore that weight, even when efforts are being made to burn it off.

Robert Huizenga, the Biggest Loser's doctor, expected the contestants’ metabolic rates to fall, just not quite as far - and he questioned whether the measurements made by Dr. Hall six years later were accurate.
However, he did admit that keeping weight off is hard, and said that he advises contestants to exercise at least nine hours a week and carefully control their diets to keep weight down.

'Unfortunately, many contestants are unable to find or afford adequate ongoing support with exercise doctors, psychologists, sleep specialists, and trainers, he said, 'and that’s something we all need to work hard to change.'
But the long-term effects that Dr. Hall discovered weren't just about the metabolism - weight loss also affected hormone production, he said.
Specifically, leptin - a hormone produced by the body that stops hunger cravings.
Losses: This graph shows how four contestants fought to lose weight - and how three ended up getting it back. Rudy Pauls, the yellow line, weighed 390lbs when he had stomach surgery in 2014; his weight dropped again
Losses: This graph shows how four contestants fought to lose weight - and how three ended up getting it back. Rudy Pauls, the yellow line, weighed 390lbs when he had stomach surgery in 2014; his weight dropped again
Slowdown: This graph shows how the metabolisms of four contestants slowed down dramatically, causing them to burn off far fewer calories per day than someone of their respective weight ought to
Slowdown: This graph shows how the metabolisms of four contestants slowed down dramatically, causing them to burn off far fewer calories per day than someone of their respective weight ought to
Hormones: Arrows point to leptin receptors in cells. The hormone leptin stops people from feeling hungry. All contestants had nearly no leptin after the show, making them ravenous, and only got half their leptin back later 
Hormones: Arrows point to leptin receptors in cells. The hormone leptin stops people from feeling hungry. All contestants had nearly no leptin after the show, making them ravenous, and only got half their leptin back later 
Before the show, the contestants all had normal levels of leptin. Afterwards they had almost none - which left them feeling permanently ravenous.
Those leptin levels went up as the contestants put on weight, Dr. Hall said, but only to about half the level they were at before.
That's left them with fierce cravings that must be fought to keep weight down. 
Errin Egbert is the only one of the contestants tested whose weight is lower now than when she finished Biggest Loser.
Now a fitness coach according to her Facebook profile, she went from 263 pounds to just under 176 on the show, and now weighs between 152 and 157. Her metabolism now burns 552 fewer calories than is expected for her size.
She told The New York Times that she can't let herself give in to the cravings. 'What people don’t understand is that a treat is like a drug,' she said. 
'Two treats can turn into a binge over a three-day period. That is what I struggle with.'
In a separate study at the University of Melbourne, Dr Joseph Proietto and his colleagues studied leptin and four other hunger hormones in the bodies of 50 overweight people who were asked to eat just 550 calories a day.
They lost weight dramatically, but put it back on afterwards - the result of an increase in another hormone that makes people feel hungry. 
'The body puts multiple mechanisms in place to get you back to your weight,' Dr. Proietto told The New York Times.
'The only way to maintain weight loss is to be hungry all the time. We desperately need agents that will suppress hunger and that are safe with long-term use.'
Hard worker: Erinn Egbert (left before The Biggest Loser, right in 2015) was the only one tested who kept the weight off. Her metabolism slowed, burning 552 fewer calories than it should, and she struggles with cravings
According to Dr. Lee Kaplan, an obesity researcher at Harvard, the body's 'ideal' weight is set in the brain - and the body will hold on to any spare calories it can to keep at that weight, especially when people are on a diet.
And to make things worse, that 'ideal weight' seems to creep up year by year.
According to Dr. Michael Rosenbaum, an obesity researcher at Columbia University, of the 900,000-1million calories eaten on average every year, most people have 3,000-5,000 they don't burn off.
Per day, that's only one Starburst candy.
But per year, that's an increase of one to two pounds. 'The cumulative consequences over time can be devastating,' Dr. Rosenbaum said.
Dr. David Ludwig, director of the New Balance Foundation Obesity Prevention Center at Boston Children’s Hospital, who examined Dr. Hall's research, told The New York Times said for most people losing weight purely by changing their diet was impossible.
'There are no doubt exceptional individuals who can ignore primal biological signals and maintain weight loss for the long term by restricting calories, he said. 
'[But] for most people, the combination of incessant hunger and slowing metabolism is a recipe for weight regain - explaining why so few individuals can maintain weight loss for more than a few months.' 



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