Atkins Diet Weight Loss Doesn't
Last
More than 45 million copies of the books
have been sold and everyone seems to be on it, but researchers
said that Atkins and other low-carbohydrate diets do not help
people stay slim.
Clinical trials of low-carbohydrate
diets show a greater weight loss at six months than low-fat and
reduced calorie approaches in obese patients. But by 12 months
there was no difference in the two groups.
"There is no clear evidence that
Atkins-style diets are better than any others for helping people
stay slim, despite the popularity and apparent success of the
Atkins diet," said Professor Arne Astrup of RVA University in
Copenhagen, Denmark.
Low-carb diets have been around
since the 1860s according to Astrup and his colleagues but the
Atkins approach, which includes a restricted intake of carbohydrates
and high fat foods, has made it popular with millions of people
trying to lose weight.
"In the short-term (6 months) there
is good evidence that the Atkins diet is producing weight loss.
It is not just fluid loss, it is actually loss of body fat," Astrup
said in an interview.
"Along with the weight loss there
are also beneficial changes in all the risk factors ... for cardiovascular
disease and type 2 diabetes," he added.
But in a review in The Lancet medical
journal, Astrup and his team who studied three trials that looked
at the longer-term effects found that after six months, people
started to regain weight.
Those on the Atkins diet for a
year also started to complain of headaches, muscle weakness, cramps
and diarrhea, which Astrup said could be explained by the reduced
levels of fruits, vegetables and whole-grain cereals and bread
that are consumed.
"These symptoms are clearly consistent
with a kind of carbohydrate deficiency," he said. "People simply
do not get the 150 grams of carbohydrates a day which is the minimal
requirement for supplying your brain and muscles with the glucose
from carbohydrates that are necessary for the organs' normal function."
He added that low-carb diets are
good for short-term weight loss but after several months normal
food recommendations, such as five or six portions of fruits and
vegetables a day, low fat consumption and whole grain rice, bread
and pasta products, should be followed and coupled with exercise.
"There are indications that if
you change your lifestyle you can maintain the weight loss," he
added.
Reference
Source 89
September 3, 2004
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|