Sign in

or Register now

MyDiabetesCentral.com

See all of our health sites at www.HealthCentral.com
Sunday, October, 12, 2008

The Diet Myth is Dead...

by  HeartDoc
Saturday, November 24, 2007
HeartDoc

HeartDoc

Recent Posts:
View All
Subscribe

... type-2 diabetes has not been caused by what we have been eating but by how much we have been overeating.

 

http://www.nature.com/ijo/journal/vaop/ncurrent/abs/0803717a.html

 

The free abstract from this citation...

 

Objective:

To investigate whether a diet with a reduced glycaemic index (GI) has effects on appetite, energy intake, body weight and composition in overweight and obese female subjects.

Design:

Randomized crossover intervention study including two consecutive 12-week periods. Lower or higher GI versions of key carbohydrate-rich foods (breads, breakfast cereals, rice and pasta/potatoes) were provided to subjects to be incorporated into habitual diets in ad libitum quantities. Foods intended as equivalents to each other were balanced in macronutrient composition, fibre content and energy density.

Subjects:

Nineteen overweight and obese women, weight-stable, with moderate hyperinsulinaemia (age: 34-65 years, body mass index: 25-47 kg m-2, fasting insulin: 49-156 pmol l-1).

Measurements:

Dietary intake, body weight and composition after each 12-week intervention. Subjectively rated appetite and short-term ad libitum energy intake at a snack and lunch meal following fixed lower and higher GI test breakfasts (GI 52 vs 64) in a laboratory setting.

Results:

Free-living diets differed in GI by 8.4 units (55.5 vs 63.9), with key foods providing 48% of carbohydrate intake during both periods. There were no differences in energy intake, body weight or body composition between treatments. On laboratory investigation days, there were no differences in subjective ratings of hunger or fullness, or in energy intake at the snack or lunch meal.

Conclusion:

This study provides no evidence to support an effect of a reduced GI diet on satiety, energy intake or body weight in overweight/obese women. Claims that the GI of the diet per se may have specific effects on body weight may therefore be misleading.

 

******* End Abstract *******

 

Indeed, we continue to witness folks in our cardiology clinic being cured of their type-2 diabetes as they lose their harmful visceral adipose tissue (VAT) by eating less, down to the empirically determined optimal amount:

 

http://HeartMDPhD.com/EatLess

 

Be hungry... be healthy... be hungrier... be blessed:

 

http://TheWellnessFoundation.com/BeHealthy

 

Andrew (HeartDoc)

--

Andrew B. Chung, MD/PhD

http://EmoryCardiology.com

 

Ask a Question

Get answers from our experts and community members.

Answer a Question

67 yr old female sometimes weak & Shaky for no apparent reason is diabetes a possibility

Answer This View all questions >
Free Newsletter
Get weekly updates, news alerts and more on Diabetes and related health conditions.