The reason low-carb dieters often lose weight and sometimes show improvements
in their cholesterol, blood sugars, and blood pressures is because they
are, in essence, sickened by the diet, writes a doctor in a science journal
published in March 2004.
John McDougall, an advisory board member of Physicians Committee for
Responsible Medicine (PCRM), explains in his letter to this month’s
Mayo Clinic Proceedings (vol 79, no 3, p431) that low-carb diets
can result in a metabolic state called ketosis that also occurs during
severe illness, resembling the common side effects of cancer chemotherapy
such as fatigue, nausea, and loss of appetite.
People on low-carb diets who become ill enough to experience loss of
appetite are taking in less fat and cholesterol, since they are consuming
less food overall. It is this same mechanism that results in cholesterol
levels falling in cancer patients, he suggests.
The low-carb Atkins diet has seen a strong following in the UK over recent
months, with an estimated 3 million people changing to the regime to lose
weight. Although some suspect it is merely a fad, the diet has stolen
sales from other weight management products in North America, including
the leading brand SlimFast.
There is rapid development of “low-carb” brands also in the
US, with some of these making recent entries to the UK. However nutritionists
and medical experts continue to debate the health aspects of the diet,
with many citing evidence to show that high-fat, low-carbohydrate dieters
risk clogged arteries, heart attack, colon cancer, and kidney failure.
Studies also show that even one fatty meal can increase the risk of a
cardiac event immediately following the meal, says Dr McDougall.
“A better approach is to encourage people to eat foods that promote
both ideal body weight and health—those from a “high complex
carbohydrate, low-fat diet,” he said. “For example, people
living mostly on high-carbohydrate rice and vegetable dishes in Asia are
trim throughout their lives with almost no risk of heart disease, diabetes
or our common cancers.”
As printed in the VHL Family Forum 12:1,
March/April 2004. For permission to reprint, please contact VHL
Family Alliance, editor@vhl.org. Further information is available from the VHL Family Alliance, info@vhl.org.