Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 In the mid 1940s, Ancel Keys did his famous starvation experiments. It is reported that he fed his ~35 subjects around 1500-1600 calories during the " starvation " period which lasted around 6 months. In additon, he insisited that they walked 22 miles a week. (which based on averages is about the equivalent of burning 2200 calories a week). Pictures of the experiment showed highly emaciated subjects. They lost about 25% of their intial weight. In the 1990s, Rena Wing published data on the NWCR. It is reported that the ~ 5000 subjects in the NWCR averaged around 1306 calories for men and 1685 for men. They reported on average burning around 2800 calories per week in exercise. The average BMI was around 25-27 and 35 at the start. They lost a significant amount of weight. Pictures of the registry members do not look anywhere near emaciated. In the registry over 90% reported improved physical health, quality of life, energy level, physical mobility, general mood, self esteem, relatioships, .etc etc and one of the studies concluded .... " There was no evidence that long-term suppression of body weight is associated with psychological distress. " In the starvation studies, most reported severe psychological problems and physical problems that lasted long after the experiement ended. Quoting... " Volunteers exhibited many physical changes, including gastrointestinal discomfort; decreased need for sleep; dizziness; headaches; hypersensitivity to noise and light; reduced strength; poor motor control; edema (an excess of fluid causing swelling); hair loss; decreased tolerance for cold temperatures (cold hands and feet); visual disturbances (i.e., inability to focus, eye aches, " spots " in the visual fields); auditory disturbances (i.e., ringing noise in the ears); and paresthesias (i.e., abnormal tingling or prickling sensations, especially in the hands or feet). Almost 20% experienced extreme emotional deterioration that markedly interfered with their functioning. Depression became more severe during the course of the experiment. Elation was observed occasionally, but this was inevitably followed by " low periods. " Mood swings were extreme for some of the volunteers:Irritability and frequent outbursts of anger were common, anxiety became more evident. As the experiment progressed, many of the formerly even-tempered men began biting their nails or smoking because they felt nervous. Apathy also became common, and some men who had been quite fastidious neglected various aspects of personal hygiene. During semistarvation, two subjects developed disturbances of " psychotic " proportions. " Anyone know why the dramatic differences in these two experiments when the calorie levels were similar yet they subjects in the NWCR didnt report the same psychological or physical problems reported in the starvation studies? There is a fairly good review of the Ancel Keys experiments here... http://www.river-centre.org/StarvSympt.html <http://www.river-centre.org/StarvSympt.html> http://gunpowder.quaker.org/documents/starvation-kalm.pdf <http://gunpowder.quaker.org/documents/starvation-kalm.pdf> and of the NWCR studies here... http://www.nwcr.ws/Research/default.htm <http://www.nwcr.ws/Research/default.htm> Thanks jeff Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 Unfortunately, I've never gotten access to Key's book, but I can guess the diff is the subjects. I'm guessing Keys subjects might have started with less excess weight, less body fat. Also guessing that 19 of 36 alive at age ~80 is pretty good. Regards. [ ] Interesting Question In the mid 1940s, Ancel Keys did his famous starvation experiments. It is reported that he fed his ~35 subjects around 1500-1600 calories during the "starvation" period which lasted around 6 months. In additon, he insisited that they walked 22 miles a week. (which based on averages is about the equivalent of burning 2200 calories a week). Pictures of the experiment showed highly emaciated subjects. They lost about 25% of their intial weight.In the 1990s, Rena Wing published data on the NWCR. It is reported that the ~ 5000 subjects in the NWCR averaged around 1306 calories for men and 1685 for men. They reported on average burning around 2800 calories per week in exercise. The average BMI was around 25-27 and 35 at the start. They lost a significant amount of weight. Pictures of the registry members do not look anywhere near emaciated.In the registry over 90% reported improved physical health, quality of life, energy level, physical mobility, general mood, self esteem, relatioships, .etc etc and one of the studies concluded .... "There was no evidence that long-term suppression of body weight is associated with psychological distress."In the starvation studies, most reported severe psychological problems and physical problems that lasted long after the experiement ended. Quoting... " Volunteers exhibited many physical changes, including gastrointestinal discomfort; decreased need for sleep; dizziness; headaches; hypersensitivity to noise and light; reduced strength; poor motor control; edema (an excess of fluid causing swelling); hair loss; decreased tolerance for cold temperatures (cold hands and feet); visual disturbances (i.e., inability to focus, eye aches, "spots" in the visual fields); auditory disturbances (i.e., ringing noise in the ears); and paresthesias (i.e., abnormal tingling or prickling sensations, especially in the hands or feet). Almost 20% experienced extreme emotional deterioration that markedly interfered with their functioning. Depression became more severe during the course of the experiment. Elation was observed occasionally, but this was inevitably followed by "low periods." Mood swings were extreme for some of the volunteers:Irritability and frequent outbursts of anger were common, anxiety became more evident. As the experiment progressed, many of the formerly even-tempered men began biting their nails or smoking because they felt nervous. Apathy also became common, and some men who had been quite fastidious neglected various aspects of personal hygiene. During semistarvation, two subjects developed disturbances of "psychotic" proportions."Anyone know why the dramatic differences in these two experiments when the calorie levels were similar yet they subjects in the NWCR didnt report the same psychological or physical problems reported in the starvation studies?There is a fairly good review of the Ancel Keys experiments here...http://www.river-centre.org/StarvSympt.html <http://www.river-centre.org/StarvSympt.html> http://gunpowder.quaker.org/documents/starvation-kalm.pdf <http://gunpowder.quaker.org/documents/starvation-kalm.pdf> and of the NWCR studies here...http://www.nwcr.ws/Research/default.htm <http://www.nwcr.ws/Research/default.htm> Thanksjeff Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 Unfortunately, I've never gotten access to Key's book, but I can guess the diff is the subjects. I'm guessing Keys subjects might have started with less excess weight, less body fat. Also guessing that 19 of 36 alive at age ~80 is pretty good. Regards. [ ] Interesting Question In the mid 1940s, Ancel Keys did his famous starvation experiments. It is reported that he fed his ~35 subjects around 1500-1600 calories during the "starvation" period which lasted around 6 months. In additon, he insisited that they walked 22 miles a week. (which based on averages is about the equivalent of burning 2200 calories a week). Pictures of the experiment showed highly emaciated subjects. They lost about 25% of their intial weight.In the 1990s, Rena Wing published data on the NWCR. It is reported that the ~ 5000 subjects in the NWCR averaged around 1306 calories for men and 1685 for men. They reported on average burning around 2800 calories per week in exercise. The average BMI was around 25-27 and 35 at the start. They lost a significant amount of weight. Pictures of the registry members do not look anywhere near emaciated.In the registry over 90% reported improved physical health, quality of life, energy level, physical mobility, general mood, self esteem, relatioships, .etc etc and one of the studies concluded .... "There was no evidence that long-term suppression of body weight is associated with psychological distress."In the starvation studies, most reported severe psychological problems and physical problems that lasted long after the experiement ended. Quoting... " Volunteers exhibited many physical changes, including gastrointestinal discomfort; decreased need for sleep; dizziness; headaches; hypersensitivity to noise and light; reduced strength; poor motor control; edema (an excess of fluid causing swelling); hair loss; decreased tolerance for cold temperatures (cold hands and feet); visual disturbances (i.e., inability to focus, eye aches, "spots" in the visual fields); auditory disturbances (i.e., ringing noise in the ears); and paresthesias (i.e., abnormal tingling or prickling sensations, especially in the hands or feet). Almost 20% experienced extreme emotional deterioration that markedly interfered with their functioning. Depression became more severe during the course of the experiment. Elation was observed occasionally, but this was inevitably followed by "low periods." Mood swings were extreme for some of the volunteers:Irritability and frequent outbursts of anger were common, anxiety became more evident. As the experiment progressed, many of the formerly even-tempered men began biting their nails or smoking because they felt nervous. Apathy also became common, and some men who had been quite fastidious neglected various aspects of personal hygiene. During semistarvation, two subjects developed disturbances of "psychotic" proportions."Anyone know why the dramatic differences in these two experiments when the calorie levels were similar yet they subjects in the NWCR didnt report the same psychological or physical problems reported in the starvation studies?There is a fairly good review of the Ancel Keys experiments here...http://www.river-centre.org/StarvSympt.html <http://www.river-centre.org/StarvSympt.html> http://gunpowder.quaker.org/documents/starvation-kalm.pdf <http://gunpowder.quaker.org/documents/starvation-kalm.pdf> and of the NWCR studies here...http://www.nwcr.ws/Research/default.htm <http://www.nwcr.ws/Research/default.htm> Thanksjeff Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 Hi JW: Agree. My understanding from long ago is that once there are no fat reserves left and lean mass starts to be used to satisfy energy requirments, people go off the rails. But down to 6% BF they feel great. In 's disastrous antarctic expedition the first man to succumb was the strongest. At the end they were eating next to nothing and trudging through blizzards and snow towing a sledge weighed down by hundreds of pounds of rocks for ten miles a day. They were all eating the same, tiny, amount of food, but he was much bigger and stronger so no doubt was pulling harder than the rest. So he was expending many more calories and got to zero body fat before the others. He was going insane for a number of days before he died. The others were still apparently sane at that time, presumably because they still had some fat reserves. But they were suffering all kinds of other problems in addition, one of the more important being scurvy. So in the experiments outlined by Jeff those who had a much improved quality of life had reduced their BMIs from obese to normal or CR'ed - so they felt great. Had they gone a little further and started burning lean body mass they would have gone off the rails too, IMO. Rodney. --- In , " jwwright " <jwwright@e...> wrote: > > Unfortunately, I've never gotten access to Key's book, but I can guess the diff is the subjects. I'm guessing Keys subjects might have started with less excess weight, less body fat. > Also guessing that 19 of 36 alive at age ~80 is pretty good. > > Regards. > > > [ ] Interesting Question > > > In the mid 1940s, Ancel Keys did his famous starvation experiments. It is reported that he fed his ~35 subjects around 1500- 1600 calories during the " starvation " period which lasted around 6 months. In additon, he insisited that they walked 22 miles a week. (which based on averages is about the equivalent of burning 2200 calories a week). Pictures of the experiment showed highly emaciated subjects. They lost about 25% of their intial weight. > > In the 1990s, Rena Wing published data on the NWCR. It is reported that the ~ 5000 subjects in the NWCR averaged around 1306 calories for men and 1685 for men. They reported on average burning around 2800 calories per week in exercise. The average BMI was around 25-27 and 35 at the start. They lost a significant amount of weight. Pictures of the registry members do not look anywhere near emaciated. > > In the registry over 90% reported improved physical health, quality of life, energy level, physical mobility, general mood, self esteem, relatioships, .etc etc and one of the studies concluded .... " There was no evidence that long-term suppression of body weight is associated with psychological distress. " > > In the starvation studies, most reported severe psychological problems and physical problems that lasted long after the experiement ended. Quoting... " Volunteers exhibited many physical changes, including gastrointestinal discomfort; decreased need for sleep; dizziness; headaches; hypersensitivity to noise and light; reduced strength; poor motor control; edema (an excess of fluid causing swelling); hair loss; decreased tolerance for cold temperatures (cold hands and feet); visual disturbances (i.e., inability to focus, eye aches, " spots " in the visual fields); auditory disturbances (i.e., ringing noise in the ears); and paresthesias (i.e., abnormal tingling or prickling sensations, especially in the hands or feet). Almost 20% experienced extreme emotional deterioration that markedly interfered with their functioning. Depression became more severe during the course of the experiment. Elation was observed occasionally, but this was inevitably followed by " low periods. " Mood swings were extreme for some of the volunteers:Irritability and frequent outbursts of anger were common, anxiety became more evident. As the experiment progressed, many of the formerly even-tempered men began biting their nails or smoking because they felt nervous. Apathy also became common, and some men who had been quite fastidious neglected various aspects of personal hygiene. During semistarvation, two subjects developed disturbances of " psychotic " proportions. " > > Anyone know why the dramatic differences in these two experiments when the calorie levels were similar yet they subjects in the NWCR didnt report the same psychological or physical problems reported in the starvation studies? > > There is a fairly good review of the Ancel Keys experiments here... > > http://www.river-centre.org/StarvSympt.html <http://www.river- centre.org/StarvSympt.html> > > http://gunpowder.quaker.org/documents/starvation-kalm.pdf <http://gunpowder.quaker.org/documents/starvation-kalm.pdf> > > and of the NWCR studies here... > > http://www.nwcr.ws/Research/default.htm <http://www.nwcr.ws/Research/default.htm> > > Thanks > jeff > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 Hi JW: Agree. My understanding from long ago is that once there are no fat reserves left and lean mass starts to be used to satisfy energy requirments, people go off the rails. But down to 6% BF they feel great. In 's disastrous antarctic expedition the first man to succumb was the strongest. At the end they were eating next to nothing and trudging through blizzards and snow towing a sledge weighed down by hundreds of pounds of rocks for ten miles a day. They were all eating the same, tiny, amount of food, but he was much bigger and stronger so no doubt was pulling harder than the rest. So he was expending many more calories and got to zero body fat before the others. He was going insane for a number of days before he died. The others were still apparently sane at that time, presumably because they still had some fat reserves. But they were suffering all kinds of other problems in addition, one of the more important being scurvy. So in the experiments outlined by Jeff those who had a much improved quality of life had reduced their BMIs from obese to normal or CR'ed - so they felt great. Had they gone a little further and started burning lean body mass they would have gone off the rails too, IMO. Rodney. --- In , " jwwright " <jwwright@e...> wrote: > > Unfortunately, I've never gotten access to Key's book, but I can guess the diff is the subjects. I'm guessing Keys subjects might have started with less excess weight, less body fat. > Also guessing that 19 of 36 alive at age ~80 is pretty good. > > Regards. > > > [ ] Interesting Question > > > In the mid 1940s, Ancel Keys did his famous starvation experiments. It is reported that he fed his ~35 subjects around 1500- 1600 calories during the " starvation " period which lasted around 6 months. In additon, he insisited that they walked 22 miles a week. (which based on averages is about the equivalent of burning 2200 calories a week). Pictures of the experiment showed highly emaciated subjects. They lost about 25% of their intial weight. > > In the 1990s, Rena Wing published data on the NWCR. It is reported that the ~ 5000 subjects in the NWCR averaged around 1306 calories for men and 1685 for men. They reported on average burning around 2800 calories per week in exercise. The average BMI was around 25-27 and 35 at the start. They lost a significant amount of weight. Pictures of the registry members do not look anywhere near emaciated. > > In the registry over 90% reported improved physical health, quality of life, energy level, physical mobility, general mood, self esteem, relatioships, .etc etc and one of the studies concluded .... " There was no evidence that long-term suppression of body weight is associated with psychological distress. " > > In the starvation studies, most reported severe psychological problems and physical problems that lasted long after the experiement ended. Quoting... " Volunteers exhibited many physical changes, including gastrointestinal discomfort; decreased need for sleep; dizziness; headaches; hypersensitivity to noise and light; reduced strength; poor motor control; edema (an excess of fluid causing swelling); hair loss; decreased tolerance for cold temperatures (cold hands and feet); visual disturbances (i.e., inability to focus, eye aches, " spots " in the visual fields); auditory disturbances (i.e., ringing noise in the ears); and paresthesias (i.e., abnormal tingling or prickling sensations, especially in the hands or feet). Almost 20% experienced extreme emotional deterioration that markedly interfered with their functioning. Depression became more severe during the course of the experiment. Elation was observed occasionally, but this was inevitably followed by " low periods. " Mood swings were extreme for some of the volunteers:Irritability and frequent outbursts of anger were common, anxiety became more evident. As the experiment progressed, many of the formerly even-tempered men began biting their nails or smoking because they felt nervous. Apathy also became common, and some men who had been quite fastidious neglected various aspects of personal hygiene. During semistarvation, two subjects developed disturbances of " psychotic " proportions. " > > Anyone know why the dramatic differences in these two experiments when the calorie levels were similar yet they subjects in the NWCR didnt report the same psychological or physical problems reported in the starvation studies? > > There is a fairly good review of the Ancel Keys experiments here... > > http://www.river-centre.org/StarvSympt.html <http://www.river- centre.org/StarvSympt.html> > > http://gunpowder.quaker.org/documents/starvation-kalm.pdf <http://gunpowder.quaker.org/documents/starvation-kalm.pdf> > > and of the NWCR studies here... > > http://www.nwcr.ws/Research/default.htm <http://www.nwcr.ws/Research/default.htm> > > Thanks > jeff > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 Hi Rod, > In 's disastrous antarctic expedition the first man to succumb > was the strongest. At the end they were eating next to nothing and > trudging through blizzards and snow towing a sledge weighed down by > hundreds of pounds of rocks for ten miles a day. They were all > eating the same, tiny, amount of food, but he was much bigger and > stronger so no doubt was pulling harder than the rest. So he was > expending many more calories and got to zero body fat before the > others. He was going insane for a number of days before he died. > The others were still apparently sane at that time, presumably > because they still had some fat reserves. But they were suffering > all kinds of other problems in addition, one of the more important > being scurvy. It's speculated that lead poisoning (from lead-sealed canned food) may have figured into the group's illnesses, especially the insanity. Al Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2006 Report Share Posted January 4, 2006 Hi Rod, > In 's disastrous antarctic expedition the first man to succumb > was the strongest. At the end they were eating next to nothing and > trudging through blizzards and snow towing a sledge weighed down by > hundreds of pounds of rocks for ten miles a day. They were all > eating the same, tiny, amount of food, but he was much bigger and > stronger so no doubt was pulling harder than the rest. So he was > expending many more calories and got to zero body fat before the > others. He was going insane for a number of days before he died. > The others were still apparently sane at that time, presumably > because they still had some fat reserves. But they were suffering > all kinds of other problems in addition, one of the more important > being scurvy. It's speculated that lead poisoning (from lead-sealed canned food) may have figured into the group's illnesses, especially the insanity. Al Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 5, 2006 Report Share Posted January 5, 2006 Worsee. go here and scroll down and you will see some of the pics.. http://gunpowder.quaker.org/documents/starvation-kalm.pdf Jeff Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 5, 2006 Report Share Posted January 5, 2006 Worsee. go here and scroll down and you will see some of the pics.. http://gunpowder.quaker.org/documents/starvation-kalm.pdf Jeff Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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