To test the effects of cutting fat or carbs head-to-head,
researchers put 19 obese adults in the hospital twice, each time
reducing their calorie intake by about 30 percent and putting them
all on identical exercise routines.
During one stay, they reduced calories by reducing the proportion of
carbs, and for the other one they cut a similar number of calories
by reducing fats.
Eliminating fat calories for six days during the experiment led to
about 89 grams (3.1 ounces) a day of body fat loss, compared with 53
grams (1.9 ounces) a day of fat loss from restricting carbs, the
study found.
“Our data and our model suggest that the body doesn’t care that fat
calories were cut,” Kevin Hall, a researcher at the National
Institutes of Health, said by email. “It just kept burning the same
amount of fat as it did before which led to a substantial imbalance
between the fat eaten and burned and therefore body fat loss.”
But when researchers calculated the long-term impact of the two
approaches, they estimated that differences in fat loss would
diminish over time.
Globally, 1.9 billion adults are overweight or obese, according to
the World Health Organization. Obesity increases the risk of heart
disease, diabetes, joint disorders and certain cancers.
Previous research has found obese people often struggle to shed
excess pounds or keep weight off when they do lose it. Lifestyle
changes such as following a healthy diet and getting regular
exercise can often help in the short-term but fail to produce
lasting results, particularly among people who have more than 100
pounds to lose before reaching a healthy weight.
For the current study, Hall and colleagues set out to test a popular
belief that drives many people to try low-carb diets – that reducing
foods like pasta, white bread and sugary treats can curb supplies of
the hormone insulin, which in turn limits the body’s ability to
accumulate fat. With less insulin, the body may also burn existing
fat stores for energy and lose weight.
Ten men and nine women were hospitalized twice for two-week stays,
which included five days to establish a baseline diet before
starting the experiment restricting calories through fat or
carbohydrate reduction. In addition to prepared meals, they all
exercised on a treadmill for one hour a day at a set pace and
incline.
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In one respect, the study lent credence to popular beliefs about
low-carb eating. Cutting carbs did indeed decrease insulin
production in the study. It also led to an increased breakdown in
stored fats that can be used for energy, a process known as fat
oxidation.
By contrast, the low-fat diet didn’t significantly change insulin
production or fat oxidation.
It’s hard to say how these results might translate into weight loss
in the real world, given how tightly controlled the food intake and
energy output was for study participants during their hospitalized
diet test, the authors point out in the journal Cell Metabolism.
But the results do offer solid evidence that low-carb diets aren’t
superior for fat loss, Susan Roberts, a nutrition researcher at
Tufts University, notes in an editorial accompanying the study.
“Basically what the results say is that overall energy balance is
the biggest factor – how do you cut calories in what you eat,”
Roberts said by email.
To help answer this question, more research is needed that explores
how consumption of fat, carbohydrates and protein influences how
many calories people eat, she said.
“Moderation is not a cool word these days, but if it actually works
better we should be working out how to make that the case,” Roberts
said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1J4ZTuv Cell Metabolism, online August 13,
2015.
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