2 MIN. READ

Identical Twins: One turned Vegan for 16 Weeks, The Other Didn’t. What Did They Find Out?

© the turner twins

Two brothers, Hugo and Ross Turner, identical twins, who are both into fitness and “adventuring” decided to try an experiment where one twin went vegan for 16 weeks and the other continued eating meat. The results were pretty interesting.

The question they wanted answered was “Could your food choices alone be the key to shaping not only your physical health but your mental clarity and gut health, too?”

They both performed the same endurance training regimen during the time period.

 

Physical Health

Over the 4 months, Hugo, the twin on the vegan diet, lost 8.8 lbs. He also became leaner and more defined. In his words “shredded”.

Ross, the twin that maintained the meat-based diet, saw his weight remain stable, but his muscle mass and strength increased. He noticed an increase in his weightlifting capacity and overall strength.

 

Energy Levels

Hugo initially had lower energy levels as his body tried to adjust while he maintained his demanding exercise regimen. As a result, he had to increase the amount plant-based protein in his diet to compensate. Eventually, however, he felt lighter and more agile.

Ross reported feeling heavier and slower during cardio sessions compared to Hugo.

 

Unanticipated Findings

“On a vegan diet my mental focus was much better, I didn’t have the mid-afternoon energy dips, and felt a bit more charged,” Hugo said in an interview. Additionally, his Hemoglobin A1C (HbA1c) reduced significantly from 5.9 to 4.9. However, he noticed his libido decreased dramatically.

The other significant difference was the diversity of gut microbiome — the populations of beneficial bacteria that live in the human digestive system. When Hugo swapped his animal-based protein for tofu, tempeh, and jackfruit, his gut microbiome diversity increased, thereby improving his resilience to some forms of chronic illness (such as Crohn’s disease) and lowering his risk of obesity and type 2 diabetes.

 

Takeaway

On average vegans are healthier than meat eaters, but within that there’s a huge range and there are some very unhealthy vegans and vegan diets.

It depends on the quality of the food. “It’s not about whether you have meat on your plate or not” says Tim Spector,  Professor of Genetic Epidemiology at King’s College London. “Many vegans often find themselves eating ultra processes food, because of reformulating standard foods, particularly dairy substitutes and meat substitutes – that are probably as unhealthy as eating processed meats.”

A balanced diet is the key.

 

Source:

The Turner Twins

Identical twins compared a vegan diet with meat-eating and found the vegan diet led to fat loss and more energy

Share the Post:

Active Aging News

Weekly Newsletter

RELATED NEWS

Side view of mature female with short hair standing in front of opened refrigerator at home with puzzled pensive facial expression, thinking of cooking breakfast, looking for ingredients

The Fridge-Stare Syndrome: What to Eat When Your Appetite Goes on Strike

senior couple cooking dinner at home in Latin America

What You Eat in Your 40s-60s Impacts Health at Age 70

Cut Back On Your Meat Consumption With This Unique Diet

The man replaces his meals with water. Intermittent fasting concept, top view

Intermittent Fasting: Worth a Try?

Pouring Tea Into Glass on a wooden table during sunset

Sip Your Way to Better Health: The Remarkable Benefits of Tea

OTHER STORIES

Muscular older bald Caucasian man working out in gym doing exercises with barbell at biceps.

Staying Fit as You Age: What Happens to Your Body When You Hit 50?

Woman, group and lunge with dumbbell in gym for fitness, coach or muscle development in class. Mature people, men and exercise for legs, health and balance for weightlifting workout at wellness club

Stop Overthinking the Gym: The ACSM’s Simplified Guide to Power and Health

Happy fit mature man in gym working out to stay healthy

Is Strength Training the Fountain of Youth?

Xray profile view of the hypothalamus 3D rendering illustration. Human brain and body anatomy, medical, biology, science, neuroscience, neurology concepts.

The Secret Manager of Your Stamina: Why Your Brain, Not Your Legs, Holds the Keys to Fitness

Senior beautiful couple hugging and looking at camera in city street

The Unexpected Upside of Aging: Why Life Gets Better After 50

gym woman sport treadmill mature couple exercise active running exercising fitness female senior indoor training healthy vitality

Is Walking Enough Exercise For Longevity?

[chatbot style="floating"]

Please enter your email to access your profile