A Call for a Low-Carb Diet
By ANAHAD O’CONNORSEPT. 1, 2014
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People
who avoid carbohydrates and eat more fat, even saturated fat, lose more body fat and have fewer cardiovascular risks than
people who follow the low-fat diet that health authorities have favored for
decades, a major new study shows.
The
findings are unlikely to be the final salvo in what has been a long and often
contentious debate about what foods are best to eat for weight loss and overall
health. The notion that dietary fat is harmful, particularly saturated fat,
arose decades ago from comparisons of disease rates among large national
populations.
But
more recent clinical studies in which individuals and their diets were assessed
over time have produced a more complex picture. Some have provided strong
evidence that people can sharply reduce their heart disease risk by eating
fewer carbohydrates and more dietary fat, with the exception of trans fats. The
new findings suggest that this strategy more effectively reduces body fat and
also lowers overall weight.
The new
study was financed by the National Institutes of Health and
published in the Annals of Internal Medicine. It included a racially diverse
group of 150 men and women — a rarity in clinical nutrition studies — who were
assigned to follow diets for one year that limited either the amount of carbs
or fat that they could eat, but not overall calories.
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“To my
knowledge, this is one of the first long-term trials that’s given these diets
without calorie restrictions,” said Dariush Mozaffarian, the dean of the
Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University, who was
not involved in the new study. “It shows that in a free-living setting, cutting
your carbs helps you lose weight without focusing on calories. And that’s
really important because someone can change what they eat more easily than
trying to cut down on their calories.”
Diets
low in carbohydrates and higher in fat and protein have been commonly used for
weight loss since Dr. Robert Atkins popularized the approach in
the 1970s. Among the longstanding criticisms is that these diets cause people
to lose weight in the form of water instead of body fat, and thatcholesterol and other heart disease risk
factors climb because dieters invariably raise their intake of saturated fat by
eating more meat and dairy.
Many
nutritionists and health authorities have “actively advised against”
low-carbohydrate diets, said the lead author of the new study, Dr. Lydia A. Bazzano of
the Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine. “It’s been
thought that your saturated fat is, of course, going to increase, and then your
cholesterol is going to go up,” she said. “And then bad things will happen in
general.”
The new
study showed that was not the case.
By the
end of the yearlong trial, people in the low-carbohydrate group had lost about
eight pounds more on average than those in the low-fat group. They had
significantly greater reductions in body fat than the low-fat group, and
improvements in lean muscle mass — even though neither group changed their
levels of physical activity.
While
the low-fat group did lose weight, they appeared to lose more muscle than fat.
“They
actually lost lean muscle mass, which is a bad thing,” Dr. Mozaffarian said.
“Your balance of lean mass versus fat mass is much more important than weight.
And that’s a very important finding that shows why the low-carb, high-fat group
did so metabolically well.”
The
high-fat group followed something of a modified Atkins diet. They were told to
eat mostly protein and fat, and to choose foods with primarily unsaturated
fats, like fish, olive oil and nuts. But they were allowed to eat foods higher
in saturated fat as well, including cheese and red meat.
A
typical day’s diet was not onerous: It might consist of eggs for breakfast,
tuna salad for lunch, and some kind of protein for dinner — like red meat,
chicken, fish, pork or tofu — along with vegetables. Low-carb participants were
encouraged to cook with olive and canola oils, but butter was allowed, too.
Over
all, they took in a little more than 13 percent of their daily calories from
saturated fat, more than double the 5 to 6 percent limit recommended by the
American Heart Association. The majority of their fat intake, however, was
unsaturated fats.
The
low-fat group included more grains, cereals and starches in their diet. They
reduced their total fat intake to less than 30 percent of their daily calories,
which is in line with the federal government’s dietary guidelines. The other
group increased their total fat intake to more than 40 percent of daily
calories.
Both
groups were encouraged to eat vegetables, and the low-carbohydrate group was
told that eating some beans and fresh fruit was fine as well.
In the
end, people in the low-carbohydrate group saw markers of inflammation and triglycerides — a type of fat that
circulates in the blood — plunge. Their HDL, the so-called good cholesterol, rose more sharply than
it did for people in the low-fat group.
Blood pressure, total cholesterol and LDL, the so-called
bad cholesterol, stayed about the same for people in each group.
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Nonetheless,
those on the low-carbohydrate diet ultimately did so well that they managed to
lower their Framingham risk scores, which calculate the
likelihood of a heart attack within the next 10 years. The low-fat group on
average had no improvement in their scores.
The
decrease in risk on the low-carbohydrate diet “should translate into a
substantial benefit,” said Dr. Allan Sniderman, a professor of cardiology at
McGill University in Montreal.
One
important predictor of heart disease that the study did not assess, Dr.
Sniderman said, was the relative size and number of LDL particles in the
bloodstream. Two people can have the same overall LDL concentration, but very
different levels of risk depending on whether they have a lot of small, dense
LDL particles or a small number of large and fluffy particles.
Eating
refined carbohydrates tends to raise the overall number of LDL particles and
shift them toward the small, dense variety, which contributes to atherosclerosis. Saturated fat tends to make
LDL particles larger, more buoyant and less likely to clog arteries, at least
when carbohydrate intake is not high, said Dr. Ronald M. Krauss,
the former chairman of the American Heart Association’s dietary guidelines
committee.
Small,
dense LDL is the kind typically found in heart patients and in people who have
high triglycerides, central obesity and other aspects of the
so-called metabolic syndrome,
said Dr. Krauss, who is also the director of atherosclerosis research at
Children’s Hospital Oakland Research Institute.
“I’ve
been a strong advocate of moving saturated fat down the list of priorities in
dietary recommendations for one reason: because of the increasing importance of
metabolic syndrome and the role that carbohydrates play,” Dr. Krauss said.
Dr.
Mozaffarian said the research suggested that health authorities should pivot
away from fat restrictions and encourage people to eat fewer processed foods,
particularly those with refined carbohydrates.
The
average person may not pay much attention to the federal dietary guidelines,
but their influence can be seen, for example, in school lunch programs, which
is why many schools forbid whole milk but serve their students fat-free
chocolate milk loaded with sugar, Dr. Mozaffarian said.
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