De echte reden van gewichtsverlies met een Atkins dieet.*
Niet
de redenen die Atkins zelf aangaf doch een heel andere veroorzaakt het
gewichtsverlies.
Dus
niet dat proteïnes meer energie verbranden dan koolhydraten en niet omdat de
ketose meer calorieën afvoert. Deze zaken werden al eerder uit de doeken gedaan
in een TV programma van vorig jaar doch worden nu door een wetenschappelijk
onderzoek bevestigd. De ware reden is dat het eten van proteïnes de eetlust
afremt waardoor minder calorieën, wel 1.000 per dag, gegeten worden. Het
logische gevolg is dan afvallen maar of die veel meer proteïnes wel zo gezond
zijn is zeer twijfelachtig.
The
real reason for Atkins diet weight loss
The
high-protein diet works not for the reasons its inventor claimed, but simply
because people eat less, a new study suggests
THE
high-protein Atkins diet works not for the reasons its inventor claimed, but
simply because people eat less.
Several
studies have shown that a high-protein, low-carbohydrate diet does result in
weight loss, though there are worries about the long-term health effects. Robert
Atkins, who invented the diet in the 1970s, claimed it works because digesting
protein burns more energy than digesting carbohydrates and because calories are
lost in urine through a process called ketosis.
A
series of unpublished studies highlighted last year in the BBC TV programme Horizon
suggest that neither of these reasons is correct, and that instead people
actually choose to eat fewer calories when deprived of carbohydrates. Now
Guenther Boden at Temple University School of Medicine in Philadelphia has
provided further evidence.
"Take
the carbohydrates away, and I expected the participants would just eat more of
the other stuff," said researcher Dr. Guenther Boden, a professor of
biochemistry at Temple University, in Philadelphia.
"But
they didn't. In fact, it turned out they ate 1,000 calories less every
day," he said.
The
findings, published in the March 15 issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine,
may help allay concerns these diets raise heart risks linked to increased fat
consumption.
According
to Boden, numerous theories have been floated as to how low-carbohydrate diets
trigger weight loss.
"The
possibilities were: People eat less, they expend more calories, they don't
really lose body mass but instead they lose water, and a fourth possibility --
very popularly expressed -- that carbohydrate calories are somehow different
from other calories," he said.
To
help determine the correct answer, his team sequestered 10 obese patients, all
diagnosed with type 2 diabetes,
in a controlled, clinical environment where diets were strictly monitored for
three weeks. Boden's team also used the very latest technology to assess
weight-related outcomes such as body mass loss, water loss, and total calories
expended.
For
the first week, participants ate their usual mixed diet. But during the last two
weeks the researchers restricted their intake of carbohydrates from an average
of 300 grams per day to just 20 grams a day.
At
the same time, a tempting array of fatty, sugary and other foods was readily
available to all.
"We
told them 'Look, you can eat as much of anything else as you want, whenever you
want,' " Boden said.
The
result: By the end of the two-week low-carb regimen, patients lost an average of
1.65 kilograms (3.6 pounds) and reduced their daily caloric intake by nearly
1,000 calories -- from an average of 3,111 calories before they began the diet,
to just 2,164 calories while on the low-carb regimen.
"In
other words, they self-corrected their previously excessive appetites down to
normal," Boden said.
And
that magic number of around 2,100 calories per day "turned out to be
exactly the amount of energy they should've been consuming to start with"
to avoid weight gain, he added.
As
happens naturally with weight loss, diabetes
risk factors
such as Insulin
and blood-glucose levels began to noticeably improve. So did levels of unhealthy
blood fats called triglycerides -- a finding noted in previous studies that
looked at the effects of low-carb diets on cardiovascular
health.
The
study, which was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the
American Diabetes Association, still leaves unanswered the question of why
carb-deprived individuals don't reach for sugars, proteins or fats.
"The
only thing that makes sense to me is a drop in insulin," Boden said.
"I've been treating diabetics for decades, and every time I start them on
insulin they gain weight. So I am sure insulin has something to do with
appetite."
"I
can't prove it, of course," he added, "Because we still know so very
little about appetite. Everyone's on thin ice there."
Dietitian
Cathy Nonas is director of the obesity
and diabetes program at North General Hospital, in New York City, and a
spokeswoman for the American Dietetic Association. She said the study doesn't
tell scientists much they didn't already know about low-carb diets.
"If
you look at all of the Atkins data that's ever been done, including USDA White
Papers and so forth, people lose weight on the Atkins diet because they eat
lower amounts of calories," she said. "And that's true of most
diets."
And
Nonas said previous studies have suggested that cutting back on one type of food
doesn't necessarily mean people are going to gorge on another.
She's
also concerned that the Temple study didn't include a control group --
participants the researchers could have used for comparison purposes.
"The
problem here," she said, "is that we don't have a study where you also
looked at taking away meat, for example -- would we have seen similar, greater,
or less change in weight?"
But
another expert believes the new study "adds to the literature suggesting
that low-carbohydrate diets may have a place in the treatment of obesity."
In
his editorial comment, Dr. George A. Bray, of the Pennington Biomedical Research
Center, in Baton Rouge, La., called the Temple research "nicely done."
Long-term
studies focused on the Atkins diet have found short-term weight loss that often
exceeds that seen in other diets, Bray writes, "but the differences
vanished after 12 months." He believes low-carb regimens should be simply
added to a growing list of relatively safe weight-loss options for America's
overweight and obese.
Nonas
remains skeptical that any diet that excludes a whole food group can be healthy
-- or sustainable -- over the very long term, however. And she believes
Americans need only look abroad to find an ideal dietary model for life.
"All
of the societies with low levels of the kinds of diseases [that plague
us] have diets with lots of vegetables and fruits, a small amount of whole
grains, portion-control, and a much higher fiber
intake," she said. "And fiber isn't something that's been high on the
list in any of these studies." (April 2005)