http://www.macleans.ca/topstories/health/article.jsp?content=20050422_101349_4828
Carbs encourage over-eating
Diabetes patients on low-carbohydrate diet eat less and lose weight
Which would you eat after a three-course meal -- a slice of apple pie
or a pork chop? Probably the apple pie, according to the author of a
recent study claiming carbohydrate-rich foods induce people to push the
boundaries of their optimal eating habits.
"Most people, by the time they get to dessert, don't need anything.
They are satisfied," says Dr. Guenther Boden of Temple University in
Philadelphia. "But then comes dessert and you eat another 500 to 600
calories."
Boden and his colleagues investigated the eating habits of 10 obese
people with diabetes. When participants went on a two-week
ultra-low-carbohydrate diet, they spontaneously ate less.
"Taking away the carbohydrates eliminated their excess appetite," Boden
says. "Or, if you want to turn it around, you could say it's the
carbohydrates that induce you -- and seduce you -- to eat more than you
really need."
During a one-week period when participants were allowed to eat whatever
they wanted, the group consumed an average of 300 grams of
carbohydrates and 3,100 calories each day. In the following two-week
period -- when daily carbohydrate intake was reduced to 21 grams (about
two-thirds of a cup of cooked pasta) -- the same patients consumed an
average of 2,100 calories each day.
"It turned out that for their height, 2,100 calories was exactly what
they were supposed to eat," Boden says. "You cut out the carbohydrates
and your body reverts back to the fuel intake it really needs."
Patients were allowed to eat as much as they wanted from any other food
group, but they didn't appear to compensate for the carb loss by
substituting fats or protein.
Study patients lost an average of 1.65 kilograms over the course of the
low-carb portion of the study, which could be completely accounted for
by the reduction in calorie intake.
The case for cutting carbs is bolstered by an absence of evidence that
the drastic diet has negative side-effects, Boden says. Despite
concerns that a diet high in fat and protein would lead to increased
risks of heart disease and stroke, long-term data on the subject hasn't
materialized. "So far, no adverse effects have shown up."
But that doesn't mean they won't, says Sharon Zeiler, senior manager of
nutrition initiatives and strategies at the Canadian Diabetes
Association. "A lot of the foods with high carbohydrates are the most
nutrient dense. It's really a concern that (dieters) could become
depleted of nutrients."
With files from The Medical Post.
--
TC
mark - 23 Apr 2005 00:18 GMT
>http://www.macleans.ca/topstories/health/article.jsp?content=20050422_101349_4828
>
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>With files from The Medical Post.
Gee if you consume 2,100 calories instead of 3,100 calories you lose
weight. Even better if you do it on a high carb low arterie clogging
fat diet.
TC - 25 Apr 2005 17:41 GMT
> Gee if you consume 2,100 calories instead of 3,100 calories you lose
> weight. Even better if you do it on a high carb low arterie clogging
> fat diet.
You are so observant. Yet you missed the part where the low carb
approach basically made the lower calorie intake possible.... and easy.
And BTW, clogged arteries are not caused dietary fat. The artery walls
become thinned out and develop a spongy texture due to a lack of
collagen and collagen precursors in the diet. The body responds by
trying to patch the damaged with plaque which has a fatty texture to
it.
TC
Cubit - 25 Apr 2005 22:21 GMT
Assuming, for the moment, that you are right, which foods have collagen or
are collagen precursors?
> > Gee if you consume 2,100 calories instead of 3,100 calories you lose
> > weight. Even better if you do it on a high carb low arterie clogging
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>
> TC
TC - 25 Apr 2005 22:26 GMT
Collagenic foods - Soups made from fresh healthy bones or fresh healthy
chicken. Chickens feet soup. Oxtail soup. Beef soup.
Precursor - Vitamin C.
TC
> Assuming, for the moment, that you are right, which foods have collagen or
> are collagen precursors?
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> >
> > TC
Alf Christophersen - 26 Apr 2005 12:59 GMT
>Gee if you consume 2,100 calories instead of 3,100 calories you lose
>weight. Even better if you do it on a high carb low arterie clogging
>fat diet.
Only if energy expenditure is above 2100 kcalories a day :-) If you
have an RMR of let's say 900 kcal (small body, eg. child or dwarf) and
eat 2100 calories, you will increase in weight.
If your RMR on the other side is around 3200 kcal, then either RMR
will be hormonically depressed or you will slim down.
MMu - 25 Apr 2005 12:44 GMT
this "study" was done on
*10*
*obese*
people *with diabetes*.
... I hope you won't call this representative.
> http://www.macleans.ca/topstories/health/article.jsp?content=20050422_101349_4828
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> TC
TC - 26 Apr 2005 19:28 GMT
It's not representative, it's indicative.
TC
> this "study" was done on
> *10*
> *obese*
> people *with diabetes*.
>
> ... I hope you won't call this representative.
http://www.macleans.ca/topstories/health/article.jsp?content=20050422_101349_4828
> > Carbs encourage over-eating
> >
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> >
> > TC