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Low-Carb
Diets Are Working, Study Says
The dietary establishment has long argued
it's impossible, but a new study offers intriguing evidence for
the idea that people on low-carbohydrate diets can actually eat
more than folks on standard lowfat plans and still lose weight.
Perhaps no idea is more controversial
in the diet world than the contention long espoused by
the late Dr. Robert Atkins that people on low-carbohydrate
diets can consume more calories without paying a price on the
scales.
Over the past year, several small
studies have shown, to many experts' surprise, that the Atkins
approach actually does work better, at least in the short run.
Dieters lose more than those on a standard American Heart Association
plan without driving up their cholesterol levels, as many feared
would happen.
Skeptics contend, however, that
these dieters simply must be eating less. Maybe the low-carb diets
are more satisfying, so they do not get so hungry. Or perhaps
the food choices are just so limited that low-carb dieters are
too bored to eat a lot.
Now, a small but carefully controlled
study offers a strong hint that maybe Atkins was right: People
on low-carb, high-fat diets actually can eat more.
The study, directed by Penelope
Greene of the Harvard School of Public Health and presented at
a meeting here this week of the American Association for the Study
of Obesity, found that people eating an extra 300 calories a day
on a very low-carb regimen lost just as much during a 12-week
study as those on a standard lowfat diet.
Over the course of the study, they
consumed an extra 25,000 calories. That should have added up to
about seven pounds. But for some reason, it did not.
"There does indeed seem to be something
about a low-carb diet that says you can eat more calories and
lose a similar amount of weight," Greene said.
That strikes at one of the most
revered beliefs in nutrition: A calorie is a calorie is a calorie.
It does not matter whether they come from bacon or mashed potatoes;
they all go on the waistline in just the same way.
Not even Greene says this settles
the case, but some at the meeting found her report fascinating.
"A lot of our assumptions about
a calorie is a calorie are being challenged," said Marlene Schwartz
of Yale. "As scientists, we need to be open-minded."
Others, though, found the data
hard to swallow.
"It doesn't make sense, does it?"
said Barbara Rolls of Pennsylvania State University. "It violates
the laws of thermodynamics. No one has ever found any miraculous
metabolic effects."
In the study, 21 overweight volunteers
were divided into three categories: Two groups were randomly assigned
to either lowfat or low-carb diets with 1,500 calories for women
and 1,800 for men; a third group was also low-carb but got an
extra 300 calories a day.
The study was unique because all
the food was prepared at an upscale Italian restaurant in Cambridge,
Mass., so researchers knew exactly what they ate. Most earlier
studies simply sent people home with diet plans to follow as best
they could.
Each afternoon, the volunteers
picked up that evening's dinner, a bedtime snack and the next
day's breakfast and lunch. Instead of lots of red meat and saturated
fat, which many find disturbing about low-carb diets, these people
ate mostly fish, chicken, salads, vegetables and unsaturated oils.
"This is not what people think
of when they think about an Atkins diet," Greene said. Nevertheless,
the Atkins organization agreed to pay for the research, though
it had no input into the study's design, conduct or analysis.
Everyone's food looked similar
but was cooked to different recipes. The low-carb meals were 5
percent carbohydrate, 15 percent protein and 65 percent fat. The
rest got 55 percent carbohydrate, 15 percent protein and 30 percent
fat.
In the end, everyone lost weight.
Those on the lower-cal, low-carb regimen took off 23 pounds, while
people who got the same calories on the lowfat approach lost 17
pounds. The big surprise, though, was that volunteers getting
the extra 300 calories a day of low-carb food lost 20 pounds.
"It's very intriguing, but it raises
more questions than it answers," said Gary Foster of the University
of Pennsylvania. "There is lots of data to suggest this shouldn't
be true."
Greene said she can only guess
why the people getting the extra calories did so well. Maybe they
burned up more calories digesting their food.
Dr. Samuel Klein of Washington
University, the obesity organization's president, called the results
"hard to believe" and said perhaps the people eating more calories
also got more exercise or they were less apt to cheat because
they were less hungry.
___
EDITOR'S NOTE: Medical Editor Daniel
Q. Haney is a special correspondent for The Associated Press.
___
On the Net:
http://www.naaso.org
Reference
Source 102
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