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REVIEW GEORGE L. BLACKBURN,MD,PhD JUDY C.C. PHILLIPS, MS, RD SUSAN MORREALE,CHES Associate Professor of Surgery and Nutrition, S. Daniel Program Manager, Center for Nutritional Research Project Manager, Center for Nutritional Research Abraham Chair in Nutrition Medicine,Associate Director Charitable Trust; Content Manager, Centers for Obesity Charitable Trust; Program Coordinator, Centers for Obesity of Nutrition, Division of Nutrition, Harvard Medical Research and Education,Wellesley, MA Research and Education,Wellesley, MA School; Director, Nutrition Support Service, Director, Center for the Study of Nutrition Medicine; Program Director, Surgical Therapy for Severe Obesity; Chief, Nutrition Metabolism Laboratory, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston Physician’s guide to popular low-carbohydrate weight-loss diets ■ABSTRACT P OPULAR LOW-CARBOHYDRATE diets such as those described in such best-selling Low-carbohydrate weight-loss diets are very popular, but The Zone and Dr. Atkins’ New Diet books as the recommendations of many of these diets are Revolution can turn weight loss into a double- diametrically opposed to those put forth by the US edged sword. These plans produce fast results Department of Agriculture, the American Heart Association, relatively easily, without restricting intake of and other national organizations.Their focus on foods high proteins and fats, but they can jeopardize in protein, fat, and cholesterol has potentially serious health health in a variety of ways. implications. Physicians need to be knowledgeable about Physicians treating patients for obesity- the efficacy of these programs and to talk to overweight related conditions have a unique opportunity patients about weight loss. to influence patients’ food choices by provid- ing reliable, objective information about the ■KEY POINTS safety and efficacy of low-carbohydrate diets. Low-carbohydrate diets fail because, like all fad diets, they See related commentary, pages 777-781. do not deal with the underlying issues of being overweight, This paper addresses common claims made nor do they teach better lifelong eating habits. by proponents of low-carbohydrate diets and discusses what to tell patients who are already An important first step in advising patients who are already on such a diet or may be thinking of trying one. on a low-carbohydrate diet is to assess their readiness to ■ THE ’SUPER-SIZING’ OF AMERICA question the merits of such diets. Questions remain about the possible association of low- In 1980, 46% of US adults age 20 and older carbohydrate diets with the risk of colon cancer, heart were overweight or obese; by 1999, the num- 1 This dramatic disease, diabetes, and hypertriglyceridemia. ber had increased to 60%. increase has coincided with several trends: Each pound of body fat contains 3,500 kcal; therefore, a • Higher energy intake from larger portions person who consumes 500 kcal less than he or she expends at home and at restaurants (“super-sizing”) per day can lose only 1 lb of fat in 1 week.Any higher • Greater consumption of high-fat foods • Widespread availability of low-cost, good- initial weight loss with ketogenic diets is therefore due to tasting, energy-dense foods more severe caloric restriction or water loss rather than to • Decreased physical activity at work, at fat loss. home, and during leisure time. A growing national preoccupation with weight loss has accompanied these trends. At any given time, 44% of women and 29% of 2 and Americans spend $33 men are dieting, PATIENT INFORMATION billion a year on weight-loss products, pro- What you should know about low-carbohydrate diets,page 775 3 grams, and pills. CLEVELAND CLINIC JOURNAL OF MEDICINE VOLUME 68 • NUMBER 9 SEPTEMBER 2001 761 Downloaded from www.ccjm.org on January 4, 2023. For personal use only. All other uses require permission. LOW-CARBOHYDRATE DIETS BLACKBURN AND COLLEAGUES Not available for online publication. See print version of the Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine Books on low-carbohydrate diets far out- Atkins Induction Diet to 170 g/day in the 3 Zone diet ( sell others books on weight loss. The two TABLE 1). This is in stark contrast to 60% of adult books already mentioned seem to be the most the American Heart Association’s recommen- popular; others include Sugar Busters, Protein dation that carbohydrates should account for Americans are Power, Suzanne Somers’ Get Skinny on Fabulous 55% to 60% of total daily caloric intake: 275 overweight Food, The Doctor’s Quick Weight Loss Diet (aka g/day for a diet of 2,000 kcal and 300 g/day for 5 the “Stillman diet”), and The Carbohydrate a diet of 2,500 kcal. or obese 3 Addict’s Diet. CLAIM 2 ■ FALSE CLAIMS A state of perpetual ketosis causes weight OF LOW-CARBOHYDRATE DIETS loss, regardless of calories consumed CLAIM 1 Low-carbohydrate, high-protein diets are The main cause of obesity called “ketogenic” because they cause the is the shift from foods that contain fat to body to eventually burn fat for energy. Ketosis processed foods that replace fat with sugar is the accumulation in the blood of ketones, byproducts of fat oxidation, and it represents Proponents of low-carbohydrate diets claim the body’s adaptation to fasting or starvation. that the main cause of accelerated weight gain The theory behind low-carbohydrate diets is in the United States is the shift from foods that that inducing perpetual ketosis causes the per- contain fat to foods that replace fat with sugar son to lose weight (fat) regardless of how many (ie, processed foods), a substitution they say calories from protein and fat are consumed. leads to high insulin levels and fat accumula- However, weight loss can occur only if 3 Not so: excessive energy intake—not tion. caloric expenditure exceeds caloric intake. 4 diet composition—is the cause of weight gain. Furthermore, the level of carbohydrates need- Low-carbohydrate diets restrict carbohy- ed to maintain ketosis is much less than either drate intake to anywhere from 20 g/day in the the 275 g/day consumed by Americans on CLEVELAND CLINIC JOURNAL OF MEDICINE VOLUME 68 • NUMBER 9 SEPTEMBER 2001 765 Downloaded from www.ccjm.org on January 4, 2023. For personal use only. All other uses require permission. LOW-CARBOHYDRATE DIETS BLACKBURN AND COLLEAGUES 4 average or the American Heart Association’s gerated hyperinsulinemia and glucose recommended 220 g/day (TABLE 1). The intolerance. Ongoing Weight Loss Stage of the Atkins The glycemic index—a measure of the diet, for instance, limits carbohydrate intake rise in blood glucose over a specified period of to 20 to 40 g/day while allowing unlimited time (usually 2 hours) vs the response to an amounts of meat, cheese, poultry, fish, eggs, equal amount of carbohydrate in a standard salt, and fats, a recommendation that over- food (often white bread)—is a more pertinent looks the total (or almost total) inability of way to assess how much insulin the body the human body to convert fatty acids to glu- 10–12 secretes in response to various foods. cose, the primary source of energy for the 6 CLAIM 6 human brain. Low-carbohydrate diets CLAIM 3 have specific cardiovascular benefits Low-carbohydrate diets are new Dr. Atkins claims that those who follow his Most low-carbohydrate diets are touted as regimen appear to have lower cardiovascular new, but they are not. English surgeon risk, lower blood pressure, and significantly William Harvey prescribed such diets for the 13,14 No long-term lower triglyceride levels. 7 studies substantiate this claim. In fact, any treatment of obesity in 1872. clinically significant weight loss (5% to 10% CLAIM 4 of initial body weight) can have these Ketogenic diets are safe effects. Furthermore, animal and dairy products, Ketosis from prolonged fasting in healthy peo- the main sources of protein in low-carbohy- ple increases insulin resistance and glucose drate diets, usually contain fat. Even though 8 Insulin resistance—a state in intolerance. some of the fat can be removed, as with skim Key sources of which a given concentration of insulin is less milk, low-carbohydrate diets tend to be high effective both at stimulating glucose uptake by in fat overall. The intake of fat with low-car- protein in low- skeletal muscle and at restraining hepatic glu- bohydrate diets, particularly saturated fat, carbohydrate cose production—plays a central role in many increases to 56% to 66% of total calories— disease states (eg, insulin resistance/metabolic twice the 30% or less recommended in current diets usually syndrome, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, car- national dietary guidelines. Excessive intake of contain fat diovascular disease, atherosclerotic cardiovas- dietary cholesterol and, to a greater extent, sat- cular disease) and is a major risk factor for the urated fat increases levels of low-density development of coronary artery disease, the lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol and the risk of chief cause of morbidity and mortality in 15 heart disease and some types of cancer. patients with type 2 diabetes. Glucose intoler- Consumption of large amounts of meat may 16 ance has been linked to hypertension and dys- also contribute to cardiovascular disease. 5,9 lipidemia. CLAIM 7 CLAIM 5 Low-carbohydrate diets are high Eating carbohydrates leads to overeating in protein and therefore are healthier Promoters of low-carbohydrate diets main- Low-carbohydrate diets are not necessarily tain that carbohydrates raise insulin levels high in protein, as claimed. A comparison of more than other foods do, thereby causing dietary intake among persons who consumed the overeating that leads to obesity. In fact, a low-carbohydrate diet vs those who con- 4 found scant insulin is secreted in reaction to all foods, sumed a typical American diet not only those containing carbohydrates. difference in protein intake (91 g/day vs 83 However, some responses are physiologic g/day). The low-carbohydrate group, however, while others are pathologic; overeating consumed only about two thirds as many calo- contributes to the latter by causing exag- ries as the group eating a typical American 766 CLEVELAND CLINIC JOURNAL OF MEDICINE VOLUME 68 • NUMBER 9 SEPTEMBER 2001 Downloaded from www.ccjm.org on January 4, 2023. For personal use only. All other uses require permission. LOW-CARBOHYDRATE DIETS BLACKBURN AND COLLEAGUES diet (1,450 kcal vs 2,200 kcal), indicating that 19 and fiber, for acid, indoles, isothiocyanates) weight loss was due to reduced caloric intake, example, can only be obtained from foods. 4 not to high protein consumption. Due to poor intake of high-fiber breads, cere- On the other hand, no direct link has yet als, and vegetables, dieters need to take fiber been found between consumption of animal supplements or eat fiber-fortified foods to protein and chronic disease. Though critics of avoid constipation and concentration of bile high-protein ketogenic diets claim that the salts and chemicals that cause colon and diets increase the risk of gout, osteoporosis, breast cancer. and renal disease, they have no evidence to Complex carbohydrates. Carbohydrates 17 In fact, obese persons back those claims. are generally classified as simple (sugars) or with diabetes may benefit from high-protein, complex (starches). Simple carbohydrates low-calorie diets. In a study that compared either occur naturally or are refined and added the effects of high-carbohydrate (low-pro- to foods during or after processing. Foods high tein) vs high-protein (low-carbohydrate) low- in complex carbohydrates (whole grains, veg- calorie diets for hyperinsulinemic obese etables, beans, fruits) are rich in fiber and patients, high-protein diets proved more other nutrients and are relatively low in calo- effective at lowering insulin levels and body ries. Processed foods based on refined starch 18 weight. and simple sugars (sugar, soft drinks, cookies, donuts, cakes, sweetened cereals, white bread, ■ COMPOSITION OF STANDARD pretzels) are generally high in calories and low VS LOW-CARBOHYDRATE DIETS in fiber and other nutrients. Diets deficient in complex carbohy- Compared with national guidelines for drates are likely to be nutrient-poor. Weight- healthy eating and weight loss, low-carbohy- loss plans that restrict high-carbohydrate drate diets contain excessive amounts of cho- foods can lead to cravings for foods that are lesterol, saturated fat, and animal protein. The high in sugar and fat.13 Diets high in simple Atkins and Protein Power diets are particular- carbohydrates can lead to hypertriglyc- Obesity-related TABLE 1 shows how the macronu- 20 ly high in fat. eridemia. conditions trient composition of the leading low-carbo- improve with hydrate diets differs from the American ■ POTENTIAL ADVERSE EFFECTS Diabetes Association recommendations and OF KETOGENIC DIETS a weight the American Heart Association’s dietary 5 loss of guidelines for the year 2000. Ketogenesis may cause the following condi- tions: only 5% to 10% Nutrients missing • Mild dehydration, which can cause dizzi- from low-carbohydrate diets ness, headaches, confusion, nausea, fatigue, Micronutrients. Cutting back on entire sleep problems, irritability, bad breath, and food groups or restricting variety can lead to worsening of gout symptoms and existing kid- deficiencies in vitamins, minerals, and other ney problems 3 Carbohydrate-rich essential micronutrients. • Poor athletic performance from the foods can be excellent sources of fiber, vita- depletion of stored glycogen: insulin is mins (B, C, and E), carotenoids, and other required for protein synthesis, and without beneficial phytochemicals. They also provide insulin, muscle protein synthesis after exercise calcium, potassium, and the majority of trace 7 is impaired minerals. Supplements can replace some but • Increased risk of osteoporosis from calci- not all of these. um loss if protein intake remains high and cal- 21 Fiber. Low intake of fiber can cause con- cium intake is low ; a high ratio of animal to stipation and may contribute to the develop- vegetable protein intake may increase bone ment of hemorrhoids, diverticulosis, polyps, loss and the risk of hip fracture in elderly 22 colon cancer, heart disease, diabetes, and obe- women sity. The health benefits of phytochemicals • Nauseamay at first suppress the appetite, 23 (eg, carotenoids, lycopenes, flavonoids, phytic but the effect might not be long-term 768 CLEVELAND CLINIC JOURNAL OF MEDICINE VOLUME 68 • NUMBER 9 SEPTEMBER 2001 Downloaded from www.ccjm.org on January 4, 2023. For personal use only. All other uses require permission.
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