What You Need to Know Before
Starting a Low Carb Diet
In the last 12 months or so, low carbohydrate
diets have captured the hearts and weight loss hopes
of the American public. And why not? These diets promise
quick weight loss and the ability to keep eating fatty
foods. If you love your steak and eggs, this seems
like the ultimate diet. However, before signing up,
the low carb diet bears a review. Is it really the
right diet for you?
The premise of the Atkins or any low carbohydrate
diet is that carbohydrates are the source of all our
weight loss woes. There is some real substance to
the argument in that we Americans have been eating
excessive amounts of refined carbohydrates which have
caused many of us to become insulin resistant as the
body continues to wage war against repeated blood
sugar spikes brought on by our poor eating habits.
The Atkins diet and other very low carbohydrate diets
take your body out of a sugar burning state by practically
eliminating all carbs for an induction period that
can last two weeks or more. The body will continue
to burn sugar as it primary energy source until it
essentially runs dry and then converts to burning
fat. During the conversion, the dieter can feel tired,
irritable, have headaches or get dizzy. Once you get
past this incredibly tough period, you are allowed
to eat a few carbs, but generally not more than 60
grams a day. That’s like eating one bagel a
day and then stopping. This is a difficult road to
follow for a liftetime.
In fact, a recent study showed that most adults who
start a low carbohydrate diet quit the diet within
a year. Admittedly, there is great progress by Atkins
and other food manufacturers to dramatically reduce
the amount of effective carbs in some food offerings
that could be classified as comfort foods (e.g., muffins,
brownies, yogurt and more). This helps but you cannot
have much if you want to stay within the diet guidelines.
In addition to the loss of almost all traditional
comfort foods, by cutting out carbohydrates, the diet
is also cutting out a lot of foods that are good for
us. Fruits and vegetables have fiber, vitamins and
phytonutrients that help keep us healthy. Limiting
fiber while consuming a lot of saturated fat, is not
the most heart healthy diet.
The low carb diet does take a person out of a primary
sugar burning state into a fat burning state. However,
some literature makes it sound as though you cannot
burn fat any other way. The fact is that we are all
burning some fat, we may just be adding more fat faster
than we burn it. Modifying the diet to eliminate refined
carbohydrates and focusing on high quality protein
and good fats will gradually train the body to burn
more fat and less sugar.
To their credit, the Atkins group have refined their
diet guidelines from their original ‘eat all
the fat you want’ stance to ‘eat moderate
amounts of good fats’. This is not only a heart
healthy step forward but is also likely to help your
weight loss efforts as essential fatty acids (the
good fats) can help you actually burn more fat. However,
when you consider that carbs are already limited on
this diet, I’m not sure what you eat except
grilled chicken breast, fat free cottage cheese and
egg-white omelets. This effectively transforms the
diet into a high-protein, low-calorie diet which,
if it becomes low calorie, will induce the body to
lower its metabolism.
But the one thing you need to know about why the
Atkins diet brings about significant weight loss in
the first week is that it sends the body into ketosis.
Without getting technical, this is a body imbalance
that causes your body to flush out toxins (ketones)
through your urine like crazy! What you are losing
then is primarily water – not fat. Over the
long term, restricting carbohydrate consumption to
the levels recommended in Atkins and other similar
diets is that they overlook the fact that your body
needs carbohydrates to utilize the protein you consume.
Thus, just like the low calorie diet, this diet cannot
help you increase or even maintain muscle mass if
carbohydrates are not consumed at a higher level than
they recommend.
Finally, if you go off of the low carb diet, your
body will immediately stop burning fat as it’s
primary fuel source. Adding carbs back into the diet
will usually cause weight gain as the water weight
loss comes back within days.
If you are committed to fat loss success, then you
cannot overlook the body’s need for sufficient
calorie levels to prevent the body from lowering its
metabolism. You also need sufficient protein that
the body can utilize to have a shapely figure (this
goes for guys and gals), youthful skin and great hair.
Keep the fruits and vegetables, permit yourself a
serving or two of a whole grain bread or pasta, focus
on high quality proteins and good fats, get calcium
from low fat dairy products such as yogurt and your
body will respond with a slow, steady and healthy
weight loss.
Here’s to your health as well as your weight
loss success!
About the Author
After four years of a near twenty-year Finance career
as VP Finance at a global software company, I wanted
a fresh challenge. I re-focused my career to pursue
my long term personal interest, Health and Fitness,
and founded Accelerate Nutrition, Inc. of which I
am President. Our website, http://www.accelerate-weight-loss.com,
is focused at increasing health awareness on diet
and fitness issues.