» Low-Carb
Diet News from Rueters:
Low-carbohydrate diets help people lose weight in the short
term but work no better than other diets after a year, researchers
reported on Monday.
Two studies of the popular diets that limit sugar and processed
starches show they can work faster than some low-fat diets.
Both studies published in the Annals of Internal Medicine showed
that after six months, the low-carb dieters lost more weight
than the low-fat group.
But one of the studies showed that after 12 months, both groups
had lost about the same amount of weight.
In one study, a team at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center
in Philadelphia followed 132 obese adults who were assigned randomly
either to a low-carbohydrate diet with intake of less than 30
grams of carbs a day, or a low-calorie diet that kept fat intake
at a moderate 30 percent of calories from fat.
Volunteers with diabetes had better control of blood sugar on
the low-carb diet, the researchers reported.
The
low-carb group lost weight faster, but the low-fat dieters caught
up.
A year later, both groups had lost about the same amount of
weight — 11 to 19 pounds (5 to 9 kg) for the low-carb group
and 7 to 19 pounds (3 to 9 kg) for the low-fat group.
Dr. Linda Stern, who led the study, said it confirmed that any
diet that cuts calories will work.
“Americans are overweight because we’re eating too much
food and ingesting too many calories,” she said in a statement.
But most people tend to overindulge in high-carbohydrate foods.
“I think a low-carbohydrate diet is a good choice because much
of
our overeating has to do with consumption of too many carbohydrates,”
she added.
In the second study, a team from Duke University followed 120
overweight people and found those on the low-carb diet who also
took a variety of vitamins and supplements lost an average of
26 pounds (12 kg), compared to an average of 14 pounds (6 kg)
on a low-fat diet after six months.
However, the low-fat dieters lowered their cholesterol levels
more, reducing their risk of heart disease.
“We can no longer dismiss very-low-carbohydrate diets,”
Dr. Walter Willett of the Harvard School of Public Health wrote
in
a commentary. But researchers said more study was needed to show
whether low-carb diets are safe in the long term.
“Patients should focus on finding ways to eat that they
can maintain indefinitely rather than seeking diets that promote
rapid weight loss,” Willet added.
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