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Low-Fat
Vegan Diet May Help Weight Loss
A diet free of animal products and low in fat may
help trim the waistline without the task of strict calorie watching,
a new study suggests.
Researchers found that of 64 postmenopausal, overweight women,
those assigned to follow a low-fat vegan diet for 14 weeks lost
an average of 13 pounds, compared with a weight loss of about
8 pounds among women who followed a standard low-cholesterol diet.
The weight loss came despite the fact that the women were given
no limits on their portion sizes or daily calories -- and despite
the fact that the vegan diet boosted their carbohydrate intake.
"People imagine carbohydrates to be fattening, but they are not,"
said lead study author Dr. Neal D. Barnard, an adjunct associate
professor of medicine at George Washington University in Washington,
D.C.
He is also president of Physicians Committee for Responsible
Medicine, a nonprofit group that advocates vegetarianism as part
of preventive medicine. The greater weight loss among women on
the vegan diet may stem from specific metabolic effects, Barnard
told Reuters Health.
He pointed out that the diet improved the women's sensitivity
to insulin, a hormone that ushers sugar from the blood and into
cells to be used for energy. This was also accompanied by an increase
in what's known as the thermic effect of food -- the amount of
calories the body expends to process and store food.
The vegan diet improved women's insulin sensitivity to a greater
a degree than the comparison diet did -- though the difference
was not statistically significant, meaning the finding could be
due to chance. Barnard and his colleagues at George Washington
and Georgetown universities report the findings in the American
Journal of Medicine.
Vegan diets eschew all animal products, including dairy and eggs,
in favor of fruits and vegetables, grains, nuts and beans. Although
high-protein weight-loss regimens have painted carbohydrates as
the enemy, a number of studies have found that vegetarians and
vegans, who tend to eat a lot of fiber- and vitamin-rich carbohydrates,
are much less likely to be overweight than meat-eaters.
Women in the current study found the vegan diet easy to follow,
according to Barnard, because they were not asked to count calories
or keep tabs on portion sizes. They were, however, told to avoid
added oils, nuts and seeds to keep their fat intake down.
Women in the comparison group followed a diet based on National
Cholesterol Education Program guidelines, which meant restricting
fat to less than 30 percent of calories and protein to about 15
percent of calories. Participants, who ranged in age from 44 to
73, also attended weekly meetings that included nutrition and
cooking lessons.
Based on dietary records the women kept, both groups ended up
reducing their calorie intake by almost 400 calories per day,
on average. But those on the vegan diet lost more weight. Despite
the restrictions of going vegan, Barnard maintained that it's
easy to take on the lifestyle. "Just eat fruits, vegetables, beans
and whole grains," he said. "Everything you're eating is good
for you."
It is wise, he noted, to take a multivitamin, particularly to
get enough vitamin B12, which is found naturally only in animal
products.
SOURCE: American Journal of Medicine, September 2005.
Reference
Source 101
September
26, 2005
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