Red Bull Diet Led to Heart Attack for Young Mom
Categories: Diet & Weight Loss
Red Bull diet? Bull-oney.Brooke Robertson, 23, from New Zealand, went about shedding pregnancy pounds in an unusual manner. Robertson felt that Red Bull energy drinks suppressed her appetite, so she started drinking 10 to 14 cans each day. For food, Robertson had an occasional handful of dry cereal.
The result? Robertson lost 98 pounds in eight months. And then she survived a heart attack.
This is a diet plan you can file in the severely bad idea category.
Crazy Diets
By Jennifer Fields and Mary Kearl
Fad diets are so alluring with their promises of fast weight loss and their skinny celebrity followers. The problem is that they're often unhealthy and make outrageous claims that are untrue. Here's a roundup of the some of the most strict and downright ridiculous diets around and the famous names that champion them.
Going Bananas
Eat bananas for breakfast and lose weight? That sounds easy enough. But the Morning Banana Diet -- such a craze in Japan that grocery stores there can't keep the fruit in stock -- involves a little bit more than just eating this favorite breakfast food. On this plan, which is supposed to boost metabolism, you'll eat one or more bananas with room-temperature water for breakfast and have an optional snack at 3 p.m. You can eat anything you want for lunch and dinner. There are no desserts, dinner has to be eaten by 8 p.m. and you have to go to bed by midnight. Does it work? Japanese opera singer Kumiko Mori announced on a TV show that she lost 15 pounds using the Morning Banana Diet. The creator's husband is also said to have lost 37 pounds. We're not sure those two instances count as solid proof of its effectiveness, but this diet certainly rates high on wackiness.
C is for Cookie
We like the sound of any diet that involves eating cookies and promises you'll lose 15 pounds in a month. Sanford Siegal, M.D., is the creator of the Cookie Diet in which followers eat six of his specially formulated cookies along with one meal a day. It's not surprising people lose weight on this diet, considering they're eating a mere 800 calories a day -- a calorie count so low that experts would classify this as a crash diet that is not sustainable. We classify it as just plain crazy.
Dubious Cure
Kevin Trudeau's book, 'The Weight Loss Cure,' made HCG a household name. HCG, a hormone extracted from the urine of pregnant women, is used to treat reproductive problems, but injections of the hormone are also thought to curb appetite. We suspect any weight loss might be the result of the 500-calorie-a-day diet you're supposed to follow on the plan, not necessarily the self- or doctor-adminstered shots. The FDA denies weight loss claims about HCG, but the hard-to-find shots are still widely sought after. Aside from the obvious ick factor, there are some intense side effects including water retention, mood alterations, headaches, and high blood pressure. Men who receive the injections may get positive results on pregnancy tests.
Part-Time Diet
Who wouldn't go for a diet that promises you can eat whatever you want and as much as you want? But the s have more than one third of your daily sodium allowance. 'Alternate-Day Diet' by James B. Johnson, M.D., has a pretty big catch: You can only indulge every other day; on alternate days you'll be eating a mere 200 to 1000 calories total. Switching between overeating and starving sounds like torture, but does it work? A review published in a 2005 issue of the 'American Journal of Clinical Nutrition' found that non-obese followers of the plan did lose weight on the diet, but they reported high levels of hunger and irritability that would likely prevent this from becoming a long-term plan.
Pain in the Rear
Sure, the Martha's Vineyard Diet calls for mud treatments, but following it is no day at the spa. You'll also be drinking most of your meals and enduring weekly colonics and enemas. Robin Quivers does look great since she tried the detox, but with all those trips to the spa, this diet is heavy on the pocketbook and light on lasting results.
Diet in Vein
Any diet that requires a test of your blood type raises our eyebrows. And depending on the results, you could be stuck shopping for an all-veggie diet or one where the main component is veal. Why? the Blood Type Diet claims certain foods react differently with various blood types. A better idea than eating politically incorrect meat? Cut back on your portions.
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Cuckoo for Coconuts
Another contender in the realm of the single-food eating plan is the Coconut Diet. Jennifer Aniston swore by this plan where you load up on coconut oil (Almond Joy doesn't count), which is supposed to boost metabolism and help you lose weight quickly. Most experts agree you should limit coconut in your diet because it's rich in saturated fat which can raise cholesterol, so it's best to avoid this one.
Funny Face
Voluptuous Kate Winslet swears the Facial Analysis Diet helped her drop baby weight. On this wacky plan, a so-called facial analyst proposes a special diet based on food intolerances revealed in the texture of your skin, eyes and hair. But the only reason this diet ever works is because people tend to drink more water, get more sleep and eat more fruits and vegetables while on it.
Tart Diet
Beyoncé revived interest in the Master Cleanse when she used the juice fast to slim down for 'Dream Girls.' Drinking a mix of maple syrup, lemon juice, water and cayenne pepper for days is hardly a healthy approach to weight loss. Even Beyoncé said she wouldn't advise anyone follow her diet lead.
Clearly, going overboard on a highly caffeinated drink is a bad move. But trying to lose weight through severe restriction of any form isn't wise.
Take the original Beverly Hills Diet as an example. The diet plan, circa 1981, recommended eating only fruit for the first 10 days. After that, other foods were slowly added. Not only was the diet based on shaky, inaccurate or non-existent science, many weight loss experts felt the plan was potentially harmful.
When you deprive your body of the nutrients and energy it needs, you likely will lose weight. But you may be harming your body much more than you are doing it a favor. And once you loosen the reins on your stringent plan, your body will gain weight back.
For weight loss to really stick, you need to follow a plan that can last for a lifetime. Eating healthfully by selecting a variety of nutrient-dense foods (such as fruits, vegetables, whole grains and lean protein), keeping your total calories in an appropriate range and exercising regularly are the foundation of a healthy lifestyle -- and a healthy weight.
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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
matt 5-28-2009 @ 6:40PM
wow... thats an expensive diet
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ken G 5-28-2009 @ 6:37PM
Ha ha! I ate a bad curry yesterday 'cdub'. How do I go about blaming our President?
It's unfortunate that this lady suffered a heart attack after her diet binge with Red Bull. If a case has to be made about regulating energy drinks, this case among others would be tangible evidence of the harm such drinks can cause.
As a fitness trainer, I have discouraged my clients from using any kind of energy drinks. However, what is even more startling is the FDA finally banning Hydroxycut - a danger that was already touted in the fitness arena for nearly a decade. That ephedra and other such by-products have been banned by Canada and that that FDA took this long to ban Hydroxycut, is testimony to the kind of influence these companies have with the FDA.
I hope this lady realizes that she is lucky to have survived this obsessive need to lose weight by any means possible.
Lose weight by eating smart and maintain your 'eating smart' regimen is the only sure way to healthy living.
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cavernvision 5-29-2009 @ 9:49AM
One of the reasons the FDA takes so long to ban things is because they receive money from the products. If they ban something that people are buying,then their money stops pouring in. One of the reasons they won't approve a box of ginger tea. A person can go to the store and buy the ginger and make their own tea. Where's the profit on that?
Also,when will people stop blaming everything on Obama being president? I mean,are you angry because he's black or just because not a Republican? Because,where I'm standing,he's doing so much better and working so much harder than ex president Bush did at this time in him presidency. If you can recall,Bush was on vacation more than any other president during the first part of his 8 years. Let's see what President Obama can do before you blame everything that happens in the world on him.
barbyk 5-29-2009 @ 7:35PM
did someone force her
when do people learn to take action for their own decisions?
it is tiring
mandalinlady54" 5-28-2009 @ 6:44PM
Living healthy with challenges. Eat a healthy diet, and exercise more. There is no easy solution. You didn't put it on slowly and you won't take if off slowly, and still do it safely. It's a challenge to take the weight off, but you can do it, if you work on what you eat and exercise at the same time.
'http://susan-livinghealthywithchallenges.blogspot.com
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Jimmie 5-28-2009 @ 6:55PM
How stupid. Red Bull should sue her for misusing their product.
People are dying to get skinny, why? Do they want to look good in their coffins?
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Sunshine 5-29-2009 @ 12:05AM
Hey Jimmy, you hit righ on the "Bull" that was good!
Daniel 5-29-2009 @ 12:53AM
You say it all Jimmie. I sell the red bull in my workplace and in no way does it say that it is for a diet. This lady is purely stupid and doesn't have a pound of sense in her. lol. What a dummy.
Betty Boop 5-28-2009 @ 7:02PM
In a somewhat desperate attempt to lose weight AGAIN, I started to take some kind of diet "aid" called "Carni-Slim" Within about 3 weeks I was in the hospital, very sick with pancreatitis. I had NO known causes or risk factors for it and I will never know for sure if the supplements caused it, but I can't help but think it was a contributing factor. Thankfully, I am fully recovered and not taking any more mystery aids.
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carol 5-28-2009 @ 7:06PM
These drinks may or may not be harmful as ken G alleges but anything in excess can be harmful. This was pure stupidity on the woman's part; no one to blame but herself.
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dee 5-28-2009 @ 7:09PM
i used to use diet pills all the time as a teen and in my early twentys and i stopped but a few years ago i decided to try the diet pills stacker 2...well i did not read the box correctly and took 2 pills thinking like i was taking tylenol it wouldnt be a big deal....about an hour later i felt like i was gonna pass out or die of a heart attack my heart was pounding and i threw up everywhere...my husband called the company and all they said was to induce vomiting...after that i will nevr take anything for diets, the truth is there is no easy fix for weight loss, you have to eat right and exersize........its a new way of life not a diet!!!
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carol 5-28-2009 @ 7:26PM
Well Helllooo isnt that stuff like 900 percent caffeine?
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Alan 5-28-2009 @ 7:30PM
I'm drinking a Rockstar right now! Yummmmmmmm
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ladielayell 5-29-2009 @ 5:12AM
No Fear Baby
Teressa 5-28-2009 @ 7:36PM
she drank 10 - 14 cans a day? what the hell did she expect? those energy drinks are about the worse thing a person could drink. Just one a day would be really bad let alone what this dumbass drank.
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obabystar 5-28-2009 @ 7:47PM
Geez, If she was breast feeding her poor kid was getting all that caffeine too!!!!
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ScrappyPeanut 5-29-2009 @ 7:37PM
I doubt that she was breastfeeding her kid. There's a link that takes you to a full article and it states in there that he son is now 4 years old. So basically she was trying to lose weight for 4 years and decided to be an idiot and only consume energy drinks and a handful of cereal. Read into it, she practically starved herself to death.
Sammy 5-28-2009 @ 7:49PM
Stupid is as stupid does.
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Mister D 5-28-2009 @ 7:58PM
Dee has it right,,,, it's a permanent change of lifestyle that always works. Diets never work,,,thats why it's a multi million dollar industry.
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Lauren 5-28-2009 @ 8:18PM
Didn't they just find out theres cocaine in Red Bull ?!?! No wonder why she had a heart attack... 10-14 cans a day ???? Thats just asking for it !!
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