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PostPosted: Mon Mar 21, 2005 7:45 pm 
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Limiting Carbs Results in Greater Weight Loss

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Obese women who follow low-carbohydrate diets, such as the Atkins diet, may lose more weight in a four-month period than those who go on low-fat diets, new study findings show. The reason for the greater weight loss, however, is not clear.

"The differential weight loss is not explained by differences in resting energy expenditure, thermic effect of food or physical activity," write study author Dr. Bonnie J. Brehm, of the University of Cincinnati, Ohio and her team.

In a previously published study, Brehm and her colleagues compared the effects of a low-carbohydrate diet versus a low-fat diet among obese women. They found that the women on the low-carbohydrate diet lost more than twice as much weight as those in the comparison group during a six-month study period.

The researchers hypothesized that the greater weight loss among those on the low-carbohydrate diet was due to the women's greater energy expenditure. "If it's not calories in, it must be calories out," Brehm told Reuters Health.

Some advocates of low-carbohydrate diets say that such diets promote increased energy expenditure, but this claim has not been formally tested, until now.

To investigate, Brehm and her team randomly assigned 50 moderately obese women to a low-carbohydrate diet group or a low-fat diet group. Only the low-fat group was told to restrict their caloric intake. Forty women completed the study.

By the end of the four-month study, women in both groups had lost weight and body fat, the researchers report in this month's issue of the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism. However, the low-carbohydrate group lost more than 10 percent of their body weight, while the low-fat group lost about 7 percent.

Specifically, the low-carbohydrate group lost 9.8 kilograms (21.6 pounds) of weight and 6.2 kilograms (13.7 pounds) of body fat, while the low-fat group lost about 6.1 kilograms (13 pounds) of weight and 3.2 kilograms (7 pounds) of body fat, the report indicates.

To estimate their level of physical activity, women in both groups were fitted with pedometers, which recorded the number of steps they took daily. At the start of the study, both groups of women had similar pedometer readings, and by the end of the study, there were no significant changes, according to Brehm and her team.

Resting energy expenditure was also similar between the two groups at the start of the study and remained comparable four months later.

The thermic effect of food (TEF), which comprises up to 10 percent of the amount of energy consumed daily, includes the energy expended during digestion. When the investigators obtained TEF measurements after the women ate breakfasts containing a similar number of calories, they found that those on the low-fat diet expended more energy in a five-hour period.

This suggests that the low-fat meal was absorbed more quickly than the low-carbohydrate meal, the report indicates. Yet, even if the TEF of the low-carbohydrate meal had been underestimated, the researchers "would not have approached the amount of energy needed to account for the greater weight loss in this group," they write.

"These results confirm that short-term weight loss is greater in obese women on a low-carbohydrate diet than in those on a low-fat diet even when reported food intake is similar," according to Brehm and her team.

SOURCE: Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, March 2005

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PostPosted: Wed Mar 23, 2005 10:18 pm 
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I am reading a book my Dana Carpender, and there are a lot of studies out here that show people lose more weight on low carb. For some reason, people still don't get it!

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 9:36 am 
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:roll: I don't understand this whole thing. Actually people on a low fat diet are starving themselves so when they get "off" the "diet" they pile on more weight because of starvation and deprivation. This article states the opposite in the last paragraph.

Big mistake: low carbing is a lifestyle. It's NOT A DIET. If you gain after eating low carb then that means your bod does not tolerate tons of carbs so you have to do phase 3 in order to find your magic number that works for your body where you eat a number of carbs and you neither gain nor lose weight. You can find it. It's just a bit tricky. Time consuming. But WORTH IT in every way.

Low fat is a diet that is to be tolerated and when the person starts adding back fat and still eating a gazillion carbs then what happens? Balloon central. So the best policy is to adopt this eating regime for life. That doesn't mean you can't have ice cream but it should occasionally not an every day hog fest woofing down tons of breyers or Haagen daz while watching tv. That will make ANYONE FAT as long as they do not have a hyper thyroid problem.


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