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This is the best type of alcohol to drink if you’re trying to lose weight

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What type of alcohol is best to drink if you're trying to lose weight?
What type of alcohol is best to drink if you're trying to lose weight?

What’s the best alcohol to drink when you’re trying to lose weight?

Any alcohol is the best alcohol, because people who drink weigh less than those who don’t.

Unbelievable? Maybe, but researchers at Texas Tech University Health Services Centre studied 8 000 regular drinkers and found that those who downed a daily drink were 54% less likely to have a weight problem than teetotallers, regardless of what type of alcohol they drank.

Read more: What drinking eight or more beers a week does to your brain

The scientists aren’t sure why alcohol has this effect, because, as evidenced by the etymology of the beer belly, alcohol is a kilojoule-dense substance.

One explanation might be that “the body doesn’t metabolise alcohol efficiently, so the kilojoules from a couple of drinks are less likely to pad your waist than an equal number of food kilojoules,” says endocrinologist Michael Lee.

What the researchers know for certain, however, is that consuming three or more drinks has the opposite effect.

That’s when the kilojoules start adding up, says the study’s lead author, Dr Ahmed Arif.

Read more: What alcohol does to your sperm

So, if you partake in round three, surrender your keys and remember this maxim: “The blander the drink, the better it is for your waistline,” says dietician Lona Sandon.

Opt for a clear spirit like vodka, gin or rum – all of which have about 380 kilojoules per jigger – mixed with a zero kilojoule mixer like soda water.

And think twice before ordering a light beer: “The kilojoule saving over regular beer isn’t significant – around 80 to 130 per bottle,” says Dr Lee.

Another reason to avoid that third drink: binge drinking lowers the body’s ability to burn fat by up to 33%, giving the accompanying meal all the more sticking power.

“It also suppresses the hormones that tell you to stop eating,” says Sandon, which means you’re more likely to eat a handful of chips and wolf ice cream when you get home.

This article was originally featured on www.mh.co.za 

Image credit: iStock

 
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