Low-Fat Diet Safe for
Weight Loss by Diabetics
A low-fat diet promotes weight loss
in people with type 2 diabetes without unfavorable alterations
in blood lipids or glucose control, according to a new report.
Although a low-fat, high-complex
carb diet has become accepted for helping type 2 diabetics lose
weight, the researchers explain in the American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition, recent controversy has focused on whether a high-monounsaturated
fat diet might avoid the possible effects of a high-carbohydrate
diet in raising blood fats and glucose.
Dr. William E. Connor and colleagues
from Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon investigated
the pros and cons of a 6-week, low-fat diet or a high-monounsaturated
fat (high-mono) diet in 11 patients with type 2 diabetes.
The low-fat diet led to a significant
weight loss, the team found, whereas the high-mono diet did not.
Subjects assigned to the low-fat diet consumed 212 fewer kilocalories
daily than did those assigned to the high-mono diet.
"I would think the differences
would become more pronounced with longer adherence to the low
fat diet," Connor told Reuters Health.
Both diets similarly reduced total,
LDL-, and HDL-cholesterol concentrations, and glucose control
did not differ between the two, the researchers found. Also, the
low-fat diet did not cause the blood levels of triglycerides to
increase.
The results are in line with "older
studies and current studies showing the benefit of a low-fat,
high-fiber, high-carbohydrate diet in diabetics," Connor concluded.
SOURCE: American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition, September 2004.
Reference
Source 89
September 10, 2004
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