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Atkin's Diet

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check the atkins website for ice cream locations near you!
www.atkinsdiet.com or www.atkinscenter.com
if you reside in the Northeast, you can get it at Stew Leonards.
Some upscale health food stores carry it too. Maybe Walmart as well.
 
If you live out west, you can get Atkins ice cream (and lots of other low/no-carb foods) at Trader Joe's...there are lots of locations here. In the Midwest and east you can find Trader Joe's but not as easily. Stew Leonard's has Atkins products too, as well as Wegman's, if you're anywhere near western NY/PA.

Stephanie
 
I think the Atkin's diet may work for some with regards to "weight loss" but I just wonder/question what it is doing to your heart and other organs by taking in all the fats/calories that one can while on this diet. It cannot be doing wonders for the body other than loosing weight.

I take meal replacements such as Metrx/Myoplex/etc, and I have been able to obtain pretty good results and I know that I am not hurting my body in the process. GNC has some pretty good (all natural) products that will surely produce desired/wanted results. The packets are easy to mix so they are great to pack away and take on trips.

a good workout routine also does help and you will get more results if you can add even more cardio work into your gym routine.


3 5 0
 
Getting past the stalls on Atkins

For those on Atkins who have plateued or stalled.....


http://atkins.com/Archive/2001/12/21-237659.printable.html


The Fat Fast
Counterintuitive as it may sound, if you can't budge the scale on Induction, a few days on this regimen may well allow you to break through metabolic resistance.

Certain individuals are so metabolically resistant that only more intense dietary restrictions prove successful. Once medications, thyroid problems and candida are brought under control, almost all overweight people who diligently adhere to the Atkins Nutritional Approach™ will lose and keep off weight. But for the small group of people for whom it does not work, more extreme measures are necessary.

To help these metabolically resistant people, Dr. Atkins has modified what he calls "the most effective weight-loss eating pattern ever described." British researchers Alan Kekwick and Gaston Pawan developed it, and Frederick Benoit and his team confirmed its superiority in burning off fat, compared to an absolute total fast. This extreme diet consists of 1,000 calories daily, comprised of 90 percent fat. No other weight-loss regimen has matched its ability to burn off stored fat. Dr. Atkins modified the Kekwick diet to make it as enjoyable as possible and dubbed it the "Fat Fast." He tried it on scores of patients and found it often worked for those who were unable to lose weight in any other safe, drug-free way.

The Kekwick diet forces the body into lipolysis so it burns its stores of fat. Lipolysis cannot take place if there is a significant source of glucose. Since all carbohydrates and some protein convert to energy by way of glucose, eliminating almost everything but fat from the diet forces even the most resistant body into lipolysis. That explains the 90 percent dietary-fat component. Lowering the caloric intake accelerates the need to burn up body fat—thus the 1,000-calorie limit.

The Fat Fast is one controlled carb program where you do have to count calories. You'll eat 1,000 calories a day, with 75 percent to 90 percent comprised of fat. Frequent feedings prevent hunger better than three meals a day, so you consume five feedings, perhaps one every four hours, comprising 200 calories each. Because of the high fat content and frequent feedings, very few people experience much hunger. The stumbling block for some people is the absence of conventional meals. But most are willing to stick with it for a few days, even if the food selections are unfulfilling.

Caution: The Fat Fast is actually dangerous for anyone who is not metabolically resistant. For people who lose weight fairly easily, the rate of weight loss is too rapid to be safe. But it carries very little risk for people who can barely lose on any other regimen.

Step One: Eat Mostly Fat
Begin with five 200-calorie feedings per day and follow for four or five days. Each item equals approximately 200 calories:

one ounce of macadamia nuts or macadamia nut butter
two ounces of cream cheese or Brie
one ounce of tuna or chicken salad with two teaspoons of mayonnaise served in one-quarter of an avocado
two deviled eggs made with two teaspoons of mayonnaise
two ounces of sour cream and two tablespoons black or red caviar
two and a half ounces whipped heavy cream topped with sucralose zero-calorie syrup
two ounces of pâté (check label for fat content)
two egg yolks (hard-boiled) with one tablespoon of mayonnaise

Step Two: Modify the Fat Fast
If increasing the fat-to-carbohydrate ratio and cutting calories work, any dietary change in that direction might get the job done. Next, you can try four meals a day of roughly 300 calories for a total of 1,200 calories. That should work, too, and what it allows is definitely more appealing to the taste buds:

two ounces of beef chuck (do not drain fat) cooked in two tablespoons of olive oil
two scrambled eggs with two strips of nitrate-free bacon
two tablespoons of full-fat sour cream with a tablespoon of sugar-free syrup
one-quarter cup chicken or tuna salad made with two tablespoons of mayonnaise
three ounces of pâté (check label for fat content)
one-and-a-half ounces of macadamia nuts

Step Three: Return to Induction
Try the 1,200-calorie regimen for a week, then go back to Induction. Or simply follow the concept of increasing the ratio of fat to protein. No one should have to feel that losing weight is hopeless. Sometimes the key to achieving your goal weight permanently is quite difficult to adhere to, but rarely is it simply impossible.

The information on this Website is not intended to diagnose or treat any medical condition.


You can find this article at:
http://www.atkins.com/Archive/2001/12/21-237659.html
 
350DRIVER said:
I think the Atkin's diet may work for some with regards to "weight loss" but I just wonder/question what it is doing to your heart and other organs by taking in all the fats/calories that one can while on this diet. It cannot be doing wonders for the body other than loosing weight.

I started Atkins not to lose weight but to eat healthier. If you read the results of the latest long term studies, you'll see that people on a low carb, high protein diet not only lose weight (or maintain a healthy weight) but their cholesterol and triglicerides improve. Dr. Atkins was being vindicated on a regular basis for the last two years of his life. That's one reason the low-carb lifestyle has become more mainstream. I read Men's Health and for years they have blasted the Atkin's diet. Over the past few years they have been publishing stories and study results about how the high carbohydrate lifestyle is harmful to your health. And finally last fall they had a big article on the carbohydrate problem and had to admit they were wrong about Atkin's. That story plus some internet research spurred my switch from a low-fat/high carb diet to the Atkins For Life diet.

It's tough to stay low-carb on the road. Since I've started on the low carb lifestyle I have started to bring a soft cooler along on the trips with snacks to hold me off in between the less available meals. EAS chocolate brownie protein bars are the best tasting low-carb snack bars I have tried. I also bring along hard boiled eggs and some fruits to snack on. Canned Tuna packed in olive oil works well and the Pure Delight low carb chocolate bars are good too. I also bring along Xlitol to sweeten my coffee. Its expensive but it tastes just like sugar without any nasty aftertaste.

I've had good luck with this website for low-carb foods.
http://www.synergydiet.com
 
Once again, what is so hard about eating several, WELL-BALANCED meals at regular intervals? Combine this with regular exercise, and you will get and remain HEALTHY.

Any other way, and you are only fooling yourself. See my first post in this thread for additional information.

The offer to see my scars still stands.
 
I tried the Atkins diet and had a pretty bad reaction. I'm not really overweight, just wanted to lose about 10 pounds. After about a week my gastro system was completly screwed up, I spent the day puking, my legs were totally cramped and I almost went to the hospital. (I did lose 8lb's that week, but I got so sick I couldn't eat anything, carbs or not!)

This happen to anyone else? I did it pretty hardcore, tried to stay as close to zero carbs as possible.
 

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