Calories are calories. If you consume fewer calories than you burn, you will lose weight. If you consume alcohol calories instead of food calories but still burn more than you consume, you will lose weight. Seriously SERIOUSLY would not recommend it though, the other health risks surrounding consuming only alcohol are profound and in many cases irreversible.
Weight loss drinks aren't always effective. If you don't exercise, you can't loose wait.
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NO!I think those things are foolish!Who needs weight loss drinks!They do next to nothing for your body-nevermind help you lose weight!
Not at all
There are many nutrition weight loss drinks. The most popular drink is Slim fast. It has been around a long time and they now have many flavors to choose from.
Weight loss drinks are an effective method of cleansing the body and giving essential nutrients without excess fat, sugar, or sodium. Drinks often include either bottled juice blends, protein concentrated drinks, or powdered drink mixes.
Alcohol itself has no dietary substance whatsoever, so eliminating it will get you no benefit. It is the mixers, and the other stuff in beer and mixed drinks that have calories, also the behavior that goes with drinking such as bar food, munchies, partying that will put the weight on. So to answer your question will reducing alcohol intake result in weight loss, yes. as long as the unhealthy behaviors are replaced with healthy ones such as exercising and eating healthy food.
Surprisingly, alcohol has little effect on weight loss.
Alcohol is part of a person's diet. Surprisingly, drinking in alcohol does not interfere with a program of weight loss or management.
Scientific medical research has long demonstrated that consuming alcohol in modertion is associated with better health and longer life than is either abstaining or abusing alcohol. Alcoholic drinks are full of 'empty calories'. They are high in calories with relatively little nutritional value. However, drinking alcohol is not associated with weight gain and is sometimes associated with slight weight loss among women.
"Hard" drinks contain alcohol. Anything without alcohol is a soft drink.
It depends on the strength of the drinks, the experience, size, weight and sex of the drinker, and how rapidly they are consumed. The LD50 for alcohol (the blood alcohol level at which 50% of people will die) is 0.40% by volume. However, many alcoholics have a tolerance for levels higher than that.