Reduce Glycemic Load Rather than Dietary Fat
From Family Practice News, Juy 2012, Mary Ann Moon, author
Three different diets designed to maintain a recent weight loss were found to exert markedly different metabolic effects independently of their energy content in obese and overweight young adults, a study has shown.
"The results of our study challenge the notion that a calorie is a calorie from a metabolic perspective," said Cara B. Ebbeling, Ph.D., of the New Balance Foundation Obesity Prevention Center, Children's Hospital Boston, and her associates.
The three regimens were:
- a low-fat diet with a high glycemic load and 20% of energy from protein, which reflected conventional recommendations to reduce fat, increase whole grains, and include a variety of vegetables and fruits;
- a low-glycemic-index diet with moderate glycemic load and 20% of energy from protein, which replaced some grain products and starchy vegetables with other vegetables, legumes, and fruits; and
- a very-low carbohydrate diet with a low glycemic load and 30% of energy from protein, modeled on the Atkins diet.
Resting energy expenditure and total energy expenditure decreased with all the diets, but the decrease was significantly greater with the low-fat diet. These two findings suggest that people following the low-fat diet would be more likely to regain weight than those following the other diets.
These findings suggest that a strategy to reduce glycemic load rather than dietary fat may be advantageous for weight-loss maintenance and CVD (cardio vascular disease) prevention.
http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=1199154
http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-299536170.html