Weight loss, in the context of medicine or health or physical fitness, is a reduction of the total body weight, due to a mean loss of fluid, body fat or adipose tissue and/or lean mass, namely bone mineral deposits, muscle, tendon and other connective tissue.
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Diet food
Diet food (or dietetic food) refers to any food or drink whose
recipe has been altered in some way to make it part of a body
modification diet. Although the usual intention is weight loss
and change in body type, sometimes the intention is to aid in
gaining weight or muscle as in bodybuilding supplements.
Terminology
In addition to diet other words or phrases are used to identify
and describe these foods including light or lite, low calorie,
low fat, no fat, fat free, no sugar, sugar free, and zero
calorie. In some areas use of these terms may be regulated by
law. For example in the U.S. a product labeled low fat must not
contain more than 3 grams of fat per serving; and to be labeled
fat free it must contain less than 0.5 grams of fat per serving.
Process
The process of making a diet version of a food usually requires
finding an acceptable low calorie substitute for some high
calorie ingredient. This can be as simple as replacing some or
all of the food's sugar with a sugar substitute as is common
with diet soft drinks such as Coca-Cola. In some snacks, the
food may be baked instead of fried thus reducing the calories.
In other cases, low fat ingredients may be used as replacements.
In whole grain foods, the higher fiber content effectively
displaces some of the starch component of the flour. Since fiber
has no calories, this results in a modest caloric reduction.
Another technique relies on the intentional addition of other
reduced-calorie ingredients, such as resistant starch or dietary
fiber, to replace part of the flour and achieve a more
significant caloric reduction.
Controversy
In diet foods which replace the sugar with lower-calorie
substitutes, there is some controversy based around the
possibility that the sugar substitutes used to replace sugar are
themselves harmful. Even if this question is satisfactorily
resolved (which remains unlikely at this time[citation needed]),
the question still remains as to whether the benefits of caloric
reduction would outweigh the potential loss.
In many low-fat and fat-free foods the fat is replaced with
sugar, flour, or other full-calorie ingredients, and the
reduction in caloric value is small, if any.
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