Skip to content
WebMD: Better Information. Better Health.
Other search tools:Symptoms|Doctors|Videos
Font Size
A
A
A

Detox Diets: Purging the Myths

'Cleansing' diets may be worthless or even dangerous, experts warn.
By Richard Sine
WebMD Feature
Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD

Molly Davis lives a healthy lifestyle, but she decided recently that she wanted to help her body "perform optimally." What she needed, she thought, was a flush of her system. So the Atlanta-based advertising director chose what might be the most popular "detox" regimen, the Master Cleanse.

For 10 days, she ate no solid food. Instead, she drank at least eight glasses a day of a concoction combining lemon juice, water, maple syrup, and cayenne pepper. In the mornings, she drank two full quarts of salt water. In the evenings, she drank a laxative tea.

The Latest Diets

Feet on a Scale
New diets and weight loss tricks pop up every month. Get the facts on how the new diets work and what's right.

The results were as dramatic as would be expected: "I felt like hell," Davis tells WebMD. She suffered from headaches, acne, and irritability. A strange whitish film covered her tongue.

She also lost 10 pounds. "My mom said I looked like skin and bones," says Davis, 25. "She was really mad at me."

Davis quickly regained the weight, but nonetheless decided to try the diet again a few months later. This time she felt none of the adverse effects and a boost of energy -- though she didn't lose as much weight and didn't follow the diet as strictly. She remains a detox fan. "I think it's important we let our body heal itself once in awhile," Davis says.

Dozens of books and hundreds of web sites promote "detox" regimens. Spas invite dieters to spend thousands of dollars to starve themselves in exotic locations. But many dietitians and medical experts say these diets are pointless at best and dangerous at worst.

Like other fad diets, detox regimens promise quick weight losses that are ultimately unsustainable, critics say. They're based on "junk science" rather than a true understanding of how the body works. Worst of all, extreme diets like the Master Cleanse can cause serious side effects in vulnerable groups.

"These diets can give people a false sense of security, a feeling that they've been protective of their health," Dawn Jackson-Blatner, a dietitian at the Northwestern Memorial Hospital Wellness Institute and American Dietetic Association spokeswoman, tells WebMD. "Then, when the diet's over, they go back to their normal way of eating."

Toxins, Toxins Everywhere?

Detox proponents say the body is under constant assault from toxins such as smog, pesticides, artificial sweeteners, sugar, and alcohol. Without a periodic cleansing, these poisons accumulate in the body and cause headaches, fatigue, and a variety of chronic diseases.

But the science behind the detox theory is deeply flawed, says Peter Pressman, MD, an internal medicine specialist at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. The body already has multiple systems in place -- including the liver, kidneys, and gastrointestinal tract -- that do a perfectly good job of eliminating toxins from the body within hours of consumption.

"There's no evidence at all that any of these approaches augment the body's own mechanisms," Pressman tells WebMD.

Eat, Sleep, Eat ...

Best foods for your cat or dog.

webMD Video

Show or hide information about video: When Are Extra Pounds a Danger?   When Are Extra Pounds a Danger?

Bernstein Video Thumbnail

Jonathan Sackner Bernstein, MD, talks about when being overweight becomes a health problem.

Watch Video: When Are Extra Pounds a Danger? (opens in a new window)

Show or hide information about video: Drink Your Way To Weight Loss   Drink Your Way To Weight Loss

Show or hide information about video: Lose Weight By Surfing the Web   Lose Weight By Surfing the Web

Show or hide information about video: Fast-Food Survival   Fast-Food Survival

Show or hide information about video: Protein Diet Done Right

  Protein Diet Done Right