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Diet Fads - Use Them to Advantage!
Summarized
by Robert W. Griffith, MD April 15, 2005
Introduction
The 'father' of the low-carb craze was Dr William
Banting, writing in his pamphlet "A Letter on Corpulence, Addressed
to the Public", which was published in 1864. Banting described a
low-carbohydrate diet that enabled him to lose 46 pounds in a year.
Dr Atkins diet came much later.
There have been several reports recently about the
individual effectiveness of different fad diets. (One is summarized
in the first link below.) It seems that there isn't much to choose
between low-carb, low-fat, balanced fat-carb ratio diet, and calorie
restriction. All are effective in the short term, but there are high
drop-out rates and 'lapses'.
An editorial by Dr George Bray in the Annals of
Internal Medicine has reviewed some of the reports concerning
studies on the Dr Atkins diet - i.e. low carb diets. Here's a
summary of his views.
How a low-carb diet works
A 2-week study has shown that with a low-carb diet
(with unlimited protein and fat), calorie intake decreased by a
third (from over 3,000 calories to just over 2,000 calories a
day).1
What's important is that drastically reducing the amount of
carbohydrates was not immediately accompanied by replacement of the
calories by increased intake of protein and fat. Several months are
required before this sort of compensation occurs.
What's common to all diets
A common feature of all fad diets is a reduction
in food choices. It's been shown that once people have eaten
their fill at a buffet of one type of food, they still have room for
other types of food. This explains why we always seem to have room
for dessert, even after we've stuffed ourselves with the appetizers
and the entrée. Limiting one type of food will not automatically
lead to an increase in intake of other food types. Scientists call
this "sensory-specific satiety".
There's another common feature - any diet
that reduces energy intake (calories) relative to energy expenditure
will decrease body weight, as energy must be withdrawn from body fat
stores. The level of adherence to the diet is the best predictor of
weight loss.
How having different diet plans can help
With all diets, body weight plateaus after the initial
weight loss; indeed, it becomes difficult for the patient to
maintain their weight loss. This leads to considerable frustration.
But remember the sensory-specific satiety effect, described above.
This limits food intake by lowering the desire to eat more of the
type of food just eaten. As all diets limit one or more food
choices, they will all have an initial weight loss effect, until the
body overcomes their particular sensory-specific satiety effects.
Switching between different diets with different targets for
restricted intake may, in fact, be a solution to long-term
management of overweight problems.
This means we shouldn't mock people following fad
diets as being irresolute butterflies; such people may have found a
way to keep the pounds off while still enjoying a variety of
different food types - which change every 2-3 months.
Source
- Is there something special about low-carbohydrate
diets? GA. Bray, Editorial. Ann Intern Med, 2005,
vol. 142, pp. 469--470
Footnotes 1. Effect
of low carbohydrate diet on appetite, blood glucose levels, and
insulin resistance in obese patients with type 2 diabetes.
G. Boden, K. Sargrad, C. Homko, et al., Ann
Intern Med, 2005, vol. 142, pp. 403--411
Related Links
It's Not Which Diet, It's How You Diet
Rating Your Food Behaviors
Overweight Baby Boomers at Risk of a Poor Quality
of Life, Later
In the Battle Against Weight, It's All About
Maintenance
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