fitness news
,
Font size Women’s Health
Hot Mila Kunis Quick Weight Loss and Quick Weight Gain Revealed: Harper’s Bazaar
– Reported, October 18, 2012
Losing weight like a star may seem like a dream come true. With a personal trainer, personal chef, personal dietitian and personal assistant at your side, who couldn’t shed 20 pounds in a few short weeks?
But a new interview with actress Mila Kunis in Harper’s Bazaar indicates that fast weight loss (in this case for a role) can sometimes result in fast weight gain — in all the wrong places.
After her drastic weight loss for Black Swan (20 pounds off her already lean frame), Mila notes that her body “has never been the same. My shape is different. When I got down to 95 pounds, I was muscles, like a little brick house, but skin and bones. When I gained it back, it went to completely different areas.”
Like the rear? “No, I’d be happy if my ass got bigger. All the weight that left my chest went to my side hip, my stomach.” She’s wary of another role that would require a body transformation. “I’m not going to say I’d look forward to it, but if an offer came along, I’d do it.”
Unfortunately, when she gained the weight back, Kunis says it ended up in completely different places.
“All the weight that left my chest went to my side hip, my stomach,” she told the magazine.
Andrea N. Giancoli, a registered dietitian and spokeswoman for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, says redistributed weight isn’t uncommon after drastic weight loss (and weight gain).
“What often happens with extreme weight loss and when you lose weight very quickly is that you lose muscle tissue,” she says. “Unfortunately, when we gain the weight back, it comes back as fat.”
And that fat tends to show up wherever you’re genetically predisposed to get it.
“Some people store fat in their bellies, others in their thighs or their breasts or their buttocks,” she says. “Wherever you typically store fat, you’re going to see it go back there.”
What’s more, fast weight loss usually affects your metabolism, slowing it down so your body will burn the calories it gets more efficiently.
“You turn down the fire of your body furnace,” she says. “But when you go back to eating normally again, that furnace is still turned down to low, therefore you gain weight more easily and you gain it as fat, unless you’re really diligent about not overeating and exercising.”
If you’re dieting, Giancoli advises you shoot for losing 1-2 pounds a week, which gives your body opportunity to adapt to the weight loss and minimizes the loss of lean tissue and muscle.
As for celebrities and their weight-related ups and downs, she says they’re often a perfect example of what not to do.
“Celebrities are great Petri dishes for us in a way,” she says. “They demonstrate what happens with extreme weight loss. We’ll hear that so-and-so lost 20 pounds in 20 days and we’ll see her all thin and gorgeous. Then a few months down the line, she’ll have gained all the weight back because she did it too rapidly. And we blame the celebs, not the ridiculous diets. But really, it all comes down to human physiology and biology. Your body doesn’t like it when you lose weight that fast.”
Credits: