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If you’re healthy, chances are you can follow an egg diet for a limited time, lose a few pounds and not worry about side effects. But you will face a few challenges. For one thing, the specifics of the egg diet are hard to pin down, with several versions and few specific instructions to follow.
Depending on the menu you plan, this diet may leave you low in carbs, fiber and essential nutrients, while supplying more cholesterol than is healthy.
Related: How Many Eggs Can You Eat Per Day on an Egg Diet?
Egg Diet Variations
One version of the egg diet calls for eating nothing but eggs, yet doesn’t suggest how many eggs to consume or how many days to stick with the diet. Another plan follows low-carbohydrate diet guidelines that allow veggies, but uses eggs as the primary source of protein. The 14-day grapefruit and egg diet offers a menu in which lunch and dinner consist of grapefruit and one or two eggs. The two-eggs-a-day diet apparently started after media reports about a study published in the “International Journal of Obesity” in August 2008. Volunteers in this study followed a low-calorie diet, but half ate two eggs for breakfast, while the others ate bagels. After eight weeks, the egg-eating group lost more weight.Number of Eggs and Calories
The number of eggs you could eat ranges from two to six or more daily, depending on which version of the egg diet you follow. One large hard-boiled egg has 78 calories, so you’ll get 156 calories from two eggs and 468 calories from six eggs. If you eat fried eggs, the calories go up to 90 per egg, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. All of the calories come from protein and fats. Your body needs about 1,200 to 1,400 calories daily just to meet your basal metabolic needs, which is the minimum required to sustain your heart and essential organs, according to Columbia Health. If you work out or have an active job, you'll need significantly more calories to meet your needs.Related: 10 Easy Tips For Sticking To A Healthy Diet