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Cutting Calories Via Any
Diet Regulates Hormones
Excerpt
By Alison McCook, Reuters Health
NEW YORK (Reuters
Health) - Women with a hormonal problem
that can lead to irregular periods and infertility experience
an improvement in their symptoms after a few months of dieting,
regardless of whether they opt for a low or high protein diet,
researchers reported Thursday.
These findings suggest that for
these women, what you eat is less important than how much you
eat.
"The diet type is much less important
than the actual restriction in calories," noted Dr. Sarah Berga
of the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania. Berga did not
contribute to the current study, but she discussed the findings
Thursday during a meeting of the American Medical Association
here.
For years, some experts have recommended
that people seeking to slim down opt for a low-fat diet, which
is usually high in carbohydrates, since foods that are low in
fat tend to be rich in carbohydrates.
However, accumulating evidence
suggests that patients may also be able to shed pounds on a high
protein diet, such as the Atkins Diet, which first gained popularity
during the 1970s. Limited evidence suggests it may help people
lose weight, but many experts remain concerned about the long-term
health effects of the diet, since protein-rich foods often contains
high levels of fat and cholesterol.
All of the women in the current
study were overweight and had polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS).
This disorder, which can affect between 5% and 10% of menstruating
women, is characterized by fertility problems, obesity, increased
facial and body hair and a high risk of diabetes.
Researchers suspect that polycystic
ovary syndrome is caused by an excess of male hormones in the
body and by insulin resistance, a condition in which the body
becomes less sensitive to insulin, and, in response, produces
an excess of the key blood-sugar regulating hormone.
Just as the cause of the syndrome
eludes experts, so do effective means of treating it. Doctors
can treat the condition with drugs or surgery, but patients often
prefer to manage their disorder through weight loss, a healthy
diet and exercise.
In the current study, a group of
Australian researchers led by L.J. Moran at the University of
Adelaide and CSIRO Health Sciences and Nutrition assigned 45 overweight
women with polycystic ovary syndrome to either high or low protein
diets.
The researchers report their findings
in the February issue of the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology
& Metabolism.
The high protein and low carbohydrate
diet consisted of 30% protein and 40% carbohydrates, while the
low-fat, high carbohydrate diet included only 15% protein. The
women were expected to eat a calorie-restricted diet--approximately
1,400 calories per day--for 12 weeks, then to spend another four
weeks consuming enough calories to maintain, but not change, their
body weight.
Study participants were also asked
to exercise at least three times a week.
Only 14 women assigned to each
diet were able to complete the entire program. Comparing the two
groups, the authors discovered that both diets resulted in roughly
the same amount of weight loss, and the same decrease in body
fat and insulin levels.
Almost half of all participants
improved the regularity of their periods, the authors note, and
three out of 20 women trying to conceive did so during the study
period.
None of the women reported any
side effects from following the two diets.
"There were really very few differences"
between the results from the two diets, Berga said. "It's nice
to know that a little bit of dietary restriction can help," she
added.
SOURCE: Journal of Clinical Endocrinology
& Metabolism 2003;88:812-819.
Reference
Source 89
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