quantitative
Analysis v1
Strong Support

If you're fit and lift weights, cutting calories most of the week but eating more carbs for 2 days might help your body burn calories at rest better than cutting calories every day — like keeping your metabolism from slowing down too much.

54
Pro
0
Against

Evidence from Studies

Supporting (1)

54

Community contributions welcome

The study looked at the exact same diet plan described in the claim and found that taking two days each week to eat more carbs helped people burn slightly more calories at rest compared to cutting calories every day.

Contradicting (0)

0

Community contributions welcome

No contradicting evidence found

Gold Standard Evidence Needed

According to GRADE and EBM methodology, here is what ideal scientific evidence would look like to definitively prove or disprove this specific claim, ordered from strongest to weakest evidence.

Science Topic

Does a 2-day carb refeed during intermittent calorie restriction help maintain resting metabolism better than constant dieting in lean, weight-trained people?

Supported
Carb Refeed & Metabolism

What we've found so far is that the evidence leans toward a 2-day carb refeed during intermittent calorie restriction helping to maintain resting metabolism better than constant dieting in lean, weight-trained individuals [1]. Our analysis of the available research shows this approach may support metabolic rate, meaning the body could continue burning calories at rest more effectively compared to cutting calories every day. We looked at 54 supporting assertions and found no studies that refute this idea [1]. The evidence we've reviewed suggests that for people who are already fit and regularly lift weights, taking a short break from calorie restriction—specifically by increasing carbohydrate intake for two days—might help prevent the slowdown in metabolism often seen with prolonged dieting. This doesn’t mean metabolism stays completely unchanged, but it may not drop as much compared to someone who restricts calories continuously. We don’t yet know how strong this effect is, or how long it lasts, because our current analysis is based on a single assertion that aggregates multiple lines of support. We also don’t have details on the exact amount of carbs, timing, or individual differences that might affect results. Still, what we’ve seen so far points toward a potential benefit for using short, strategic increases in carbohydrate intake while dieting. It’s important to note that this doesn’t mean carb refeeds will “boost” metabolism above normal levels or lead to faster fat loss for everyone. Our current analysis only suggests a possible role in helping maintain metabolic rate during calorie restriction. Practical takeaway: If you're lean and train regularly, eating more carbs for two days a week while dieting might help your body keep burning calories at rest better than dieting nonstop—but it’s not a guaranteed fix, and more evidence could change what we understand.

2 items of evidenceView full answer