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Weight Cycling and the Yo-Yo Effect: A Modern Pattern Difficult to Break

The overweight and obesity issue is worldwide considered an epidemic and, consequently, a public
health problem. Defined as a person whose body mass index (BMI) >30 kg m2, the population with
obesity has grown exponentially since 1980, where in 2014 at least 13% worldwide experienced this
issue [15].

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Weight is a difficult issue to understand—more so to intervene. Weight is a result of a myriad of genetic
and environmental factors [15]. In today’s western society, weight loss or maintenance can seem
countercultural due to positive energy
balance being the norm and the prevalence of high caloric foods
(high energy intake) [6], and the commonality of a sedentary lifestyle (low energy expenditure) [15].
Successful weight loss is defined as a person who decreases >10% of their total weight and maintains it
for >1 year [6].

Most who try to, or successfully do, lose some weight, are typically condemned to regain the same amount or even more [4].

The person who loses and regains weight can do so one or several times in their lifetime: This repetitive pattern is known as weight cycling, or, more commonly, the yo-yo effect.

Weight Cycling and the Yo-Yo Effect


Weight cycling, firstly coined by Kelly D. Brownell (Yale University) as the “yo-yo effect” [15], refers to
“the cyclical loss and gain of weight, resembling the up-down motion of a yo-yo” [12].

Weight cycling implies more than only the frustration of not being able to sustain the weight just lost,
but frequently it also entails health deterioration.

Those who experience a constant yo-yo effect have been shown to suffer from cardiovascular risk factors, such as blood pressure, heart rate, sympathetic activity, and circulating levels of glucose, lipids and insulin” [12]. Likewise, metabolic detriment has been registered in the form of indirect impact, since weight cycling has been correlated with weight regain and this, in its effect, with metabolic syndrome symptoms [13]. Even immunological detriments have been registered, by the alteration of the intestinal barrier after long periods of yo-yo effect, increasing thus the permeability and allowing toxins to leak into extraintestinal tissues and circulations [14].




Successful effort of avoiding weight cycling in the first year after weight loss is crucial for long-term
weight maintenance [6]
. Specifically, those who maintained their weight loss in the first two years were
50% less vulnerable to experience a yo-yo effect [7].

Intrinsic to weight cycling are the following traits, which have been observed to provoke a yo-yo effect in individuals:

Long Standing Weight Loss and Maintenance


Restricting one’s diet by periods of fasting has gained popularity in the last decades [1], and although
caloric restriction has been shown to contribute to weight loss [2], the risk of weight regain is high [3].
Moreover, as if weight cycling weren’t enough, this yo-yo effect caused by strict hypocaloric and posterior hypercaloric intake may also reinforce unhealthy eating patterns.




It has been shown that those who practice fasting periodically usually follow-up with unvoluntary weight
regain [3]. Simply speaking, this is due to a decrease followed by an increase in caloric intake. The
following have been shown to effectively prevent weight cycling and yo-yo effect:

Weight Loss Surgery in Tijuana, Mexico


At LIMARP, International Center of Excellence for Obesity, we offer an integrative bariatric program,
with a multidisciplinary approach, for the treatment of obesity. Our program includes a surgical
intervention
—like a gastric sleeve, a gastric bypass or a duodenal switch—, or a non-surgical
intervention —like an intragastric balloon—, along with psychological counselling, nutritional guidance,
personalized fitness routines, and long-term follow-up.



For our patients traveling from abroad, we also offer accommodation in our next-door hotel, the
luxurious Grand Hotel Tijuana,
and transportation to and fro the airport and the hotel.
Our clinic is one of the only centers in Mexico that have been certified as a Center of Excellence by the
Surgical Review Corporation
. Our lead surgeon, Dr. Liza María Pompa González is certified as a Master
Surgeon and Surgeon of Excellence
by the same organization, and she is the first female surgeon to be
awarded with this recognition.

Contact Us Today


Our team is ready to help you. At LIMARP, patients will always receive warm, sincere and professional
answers. For a free evaluation please call us at (619) 270 8823, fill out a contact form at
our website,
or message through any of our social media pages.

References

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LIMARP

INTERNATIONAL CENTER OF EXCELLENCE FOR OBESITY


Dr. Pompa is a member of several distinguished organizations, where she attends meetings regularly and serves as faculty at:

  • Mexican Association of General Surgery
  • Mexican College of Obesity and Metabolic Surgery
  • Fellow of the American College of Surgeons
  • American Association of Surgery for Obesity and Metabolic diseases as an international member
  • International Bariatric Club
  • Federation for the Surgery of Obesity and Metabolic Disorders (IFSO)
  • French Society for Digestive Surgery
  • American Diabetes Association
  • Harvard Alumnin Association

To schedule your consultation, contact our Tijuana practice online or call us at: USA (619) 270-8823