"Cookie Cutter" Low Carb
Diet Plans Explained
Most diet
plans, including low carb diet
plans are best taken with a grain of
salt, because although one may work for your best
friend, it may not work for you.
For those with serious weight problems
and have co-existing issues such as hyperglycaemia
(high blood sugar levels) or like some of us hypoglycaemia
(low blood sugar levels) etc., the popular diet plans
usually will not be able to cater to individual needs.
We are all individuals and as such we
need to feed ourselves as individuals, having said
this some diet plans will be more beneficial for the
general population that others.
To assess which particular diet
plan will be beneficial, you can follow
these guidelines.
They are very much common sense points,
and provide a good framework which many nutrition
professionals would broadly follow, and within which
you can divide the scammy diet plans from those that
can offer you safe and healthy diet ideas.
Diet offers sufficient balance and
a variety of carbohydrates, protein and fats.
Diet does not exclude one particular
food group, and encourage excessive consumption of
another.
Diet encourages exercise to complement
sensible eating habits.
Diet encourages awareness of portion
sizes.
Diet does not encourage unrealistic
quick weight loss.
Diet is backed up with medical research
data.
In addition to these points, I've broadly
outlined the low carb diet plans, which seem to be
occupying the minds of dieters and researchers alike,
as well as the research for and against pertinent
to the low carb diet plans.
Low Carb Diets
A lot of the diet
plans these days center around the low
carb diet plans. These low carb diet plans are considered
by some diet fads, others consider it the new wave
in healthy eating.
Diets such as The New Atkins Diet Revolution
maintain that obese people are insulin sensitive and
carbohydrates make them gain weight.
Low carb diet plans such as The Zone
lay down specific proportion of carbohydrates, protein
and fats that should be consumed in order to lose
weight and while fats are reduced, the main source
of energy comes from the consumption of protein.
Low carb diet plans such as Sugar Busters,
believe that sugar is your body’s most heinous
weight loss enemy and since carbohydrates are the
foods that are processed into sugars – carbohydrates
should be limited.
The Scarsdale Diet also is a low carb,
high protein diet and offers a 2 week crash dieting
plan. Popular diets such as the South Beach Diet and
the Carbohydrate Addicts Diet are also low carb diet
plans that have become popular with dieters who have
tried and failed at the Atkins diet. All these diets
see themselves as the worlds answer to the obesity
problem.
To be fair, there are significant and
many research papers that support and argue against
the low carb revolution, as yet the wider medical
community has not fully made it’s mind up as
to whether the diets are something that is favourable
in the long term.
Recent research by Layman et. al., and
Saris have found that the low carb and high protein
diets provide little benefit to dieters. Researchers
found that when protein was moderately increased and
carbohydrates proportionately decreased, insulin levels
stabilised but no significant weight was lost.
Saris in his review concluded that it
is probable that a low carb, high fat diet will increase
the likelihood of weight gain. While there is a lot
of evidence against the low carb philosophy, there
is also a lot of evidence to support it. Research
published in May, 2004, found that when patients on
a low carb diet were compared with patients on a low
fat diet, those patients who had consumed a low carb
diet had a greater weight loss, decreased triglyceride
levels and increased levels of HDL's - in other words
their cholesterol levels had improved.
To put the icing on the cake research
has just been published to support the long term efficacy
of eating a low carb diet.
Despite the evidence to support low
carb diet plans, mainstream medicine still does not
recommend them. The main points of contention with
the low carb, high protein diets is that they don’t
offer balance and variety and could prove dangerous
for people at risk of heart disease.
Particularly with low carb diet plans
such as the scarsdale diet, they are not realistic
and cannot be maintained in the long term causing
yo-yo dieting and no one wants that !
References: Wim HM Saris Sugars, energy
metabolism, and body weight control Am J Clin Nutr
78: 850S-857S Donald K. Layman, Harn Shiue, Carl Sather,
Donna J. Erickson and Jamie Baum Increased Dietary
Protein Modifies Glucose and Insulin Homeostasis in
Adult Women during Weight Loss Nutrition.org Yamashita
T, Sasahara T, Pomeroy SE, Collier G, Nestel PJ. Arterial
compliance, blood pressure, plasma leptin, and plasma
lipids in women are improved with weight reduction
equally with a meat-based diet and a plant-based diet.
Metabolism. 1998 Nov;47(11):1308-14. Yancy WS Jr,
Olsen MK, Guyton JR, Bakst RP, Westman EC. A low-carbohydrate,
ketogenic diet versus a low-fat diet to treat obesity
and hyperlipidemia: a randomized, controlled trial.
Ann Intern Med. 2004 May 18;140(10):769-77.
About the Author
Want more great ideas about which foods
to eat and which to avoid ? Research fat burning foods
at Savvy
Fat Burning Foods