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Atkins-like
Diet Shows Promise
for Heavy Heart Patients
When researchers in Delaware saw diabetic
patients shed pounds on a high-fat, carbohydrate-restricted diet,
they decided to try it on a group of obese patients with heart
disease.
The regime -- very similar to the
controversial Atkins Diet -- yielded some encouraging results.
By filling up on high-fat foods and cutting out starches entirely,
the heart patients lost an average of 5 percent of their body
weight over the six-week study, according to findings published
Nov. 11 in the Mayo Clinic Proceedings.
What's more, the patients did not
see measurable increases in their blood-fat levels.
Although the researchers say further
study is needed, they believe the results help substantiate the
high-fat, low-carb diet made popular by the late Dr. Robert Atkins.
"Low and behold, we ended up with
something very close to what Dr. Atkins had been saying for years,"
says Dr. James H. Hays, the endocrinologist and researcher who
led the study at Christiana Care Health Services in Wilmington,
Del.
Recent studies show the Atkins
approach is effective for short-term weight loss. A key question
is whether the diet will achieve results over a longer period
of time while avoiding a harmful buildup of artery-clogging fat
that could boost patients' risk for cardiovascular disease.
Hays is heartened by the diet's
positive results with two other groups of patients who were tracked
for longer periods of time. They included women with polycystic
ovary syndrome, a hormonal condition, and people with reactive
hypoglycemia, whose blood sugar drops after a meal.
Those with polycystic ovary syndrome
lost 14.3 percent of their total body weight over 24 weeks. Reactive
hypoglycemia patients dropped 19.9 percent of total body weight
over a year. Neither group showed any significant change in blood-fat
levels, Hays says.
In an editorial published in the
same issue, Dr. Gerald Gau of the Mayo Clinic's Division of Cardiovascular
Diseases expresses concern about the long-term cardiovascular
risk of the diet. Still, he recommends researchers "keep an open
mind regarding the role of the Atkins diet and continue to study
its metabolic effects."
Hays' study focused on a relatively
small sample of patients -- just 17 men and six women with atherosclerotic
heart disease. All were obese and had been treated with cholesterol-lowering
medications before entering the trial. Patients with diabetes
were excluded.
Participants were asked to get
half their daily calories from saturated fat, primarily red meat
and cheese. Fresh fruit and non-starchy vegetables were allowed
in restricted amounts, but starches were strictly forbidden.
The researchers don't know exactly
how many calories patients consumed because participants were
not required to precisely record their fruit and vegetable intake.
The scientists estimate each meal contained at least 600 calories
for a total daily intake of 1,800 calories. Almost all of the
weight loss resulted from reduced caloric consumption, they believe.
Overall, the diet resulted in decreases
in weight and body fat and participants kept blood-fat levels
in check, the study found.
Not everyone will be persuaded
by the results of the study, Hays says. "It's very small, it's
very short and it's uncontrolled," he concedes.
Amy Joy Lanou, nutrition director
at the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, is among
the skeptics. "I'd be very interested to see what happens with
these individuals if the study was taken out over a year," she
says.
The committee recently called on
a U.S. advisory panel to warn the public about the dangers of
high-protein, low-carb diets -- including the risk for cardiovascular
disease -- in its next update of federal dietary guidelines.
Lanou advises people concerned
about their weight to consider a diet proven to be safe and effective
over a longer period of time. "We do know that choosing a plant-based
diet will result in better health as well as weight loss," she
says.
More information
To learn more about the Atkins
Diet, visit the University
of Arizona's Sarver Heart Center and the Healthy
Weight Forum.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
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