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How to Make Sense of the Low Carb Diet Craze
by Steven Rosenblatt, M.D., Ph.D.

Low carbing, the latest diet craze of the new millennium, has certainly swept America. With nearly two-thirds of all Americans overweight and with increasingly dire warnings from every medical expert who can get on CNN, we Americans are finally beginning to pay closer attention to what we eat.

More than half of all Americans have tried a low carb diet. The most popular (Atkins, South Beach and The Zone) have inspired millions and have also helped people lose weight. Unfortunately, for many of these people, the weight loss is temporary.

Americans seem to be quicker on the uptake about the problems related to low carb diets than they were about the hazards of the low fat diet. There are several excellent scientific reasons why low carb diets will help you lose weight, but they won't help you keep it off—and they can harm your health in the long-term.

Before your brain shuts down and you say to yourself, "I've heard this before and it's all bunk," take a few minutes to consider the following:

The simplest reason why low carb diets don't work in the long run is that they're like every other diet: They're boring. After a while, people get tired of them and quit the diet. Unfortunately, after they fall off the diet, former Atkins followers are likely to start eating lots of carbs, yet they keep eating the high levels of protein they've become accustomed to. When they add the buns and fries to those bacon double cheeseburgers, you know what happens: rapid regain of weight.

Many doctors are reporting increasing instances of this startling phenomenon. "It seems like they start binging on both protein and carbs, perhaps in response to some primal need to fuel their bodies," one colleague told me.

What happens when you're low carbing?
I think my colleague is right on the mark. There's also a complex physiological chain of events that is triggered when someone begins an extreme low carbohydrate diet like the Atkins diet.

In the induction phase of this diet, when fewer than 20 grams of carbohydrates are consumed per day, the body is forced to use stored carbohydrates (known as glycogen) as fuel. This glycogen is located mainly in the liver and the muscles.

When those stored carbs have been used up, the body enters a starvation mode called ketosis, in which protein, instead of carbs, is used for energy.

Ketosis causes loss of muscle mass. Since metabolism (the rate at which calories are burned) is directly related to the amount of muscle mass, in simple terms the more muscle mass you have, the more efficiently your body burns calories. So with an extremely low carbohydrate diet, as you lose weight, your body burns calories more slowly and weight loss slows.

In addition, an ancient self preservation mechanism sets in and, in response to your body's perceived semi-starvation, does every thing it can to conserve its use of calories, primarily by slowing metabolism even further.

Returning to eating carbohydrates, even in modest amounts of 100 to 150 grams a day, will cause weight regain because the slowed metabolism can't handle the incoming calories. So, like all excess calories, they're stored as fat.

Negative effects of ketosis
What's more, intentionally placing your body in a state of ketosis has other physiological effects that can be harmful in the short and long term.

Among the harmful effects of ketosis:
  • Insufficient glucose to fuel the brain;
  • Your body's attempts to eliminate ketones (by-products of ketosis) puts a strain on the kidneys;
  • Diets high in protein can increase calcium loss from the body, increasing the risk of osteoporosis;
  • Diets high in animal protein are usually high in saturated fats, which increase the risk of heart diseases;
  • Diets low in carbohydrates are usually extremely low in fiber, since carbohydrates from fruits, vegetables and grains provide most of the fiber in our diets. Low fiber diets have been associated with increased risk of type II diabetes, heart disease and certain types of cancer.
We love carbs
All of us need and want carbs. They are essential for energy. High quality carbohydrates, like whole grains, legumes, and fruits and vegetables, have been part of the human diet since the beginning of time. They give us a feeling of satisfaction and fullness, probably because they are linked to increased levels of the feel good brain chemical serotonin.

Eating complex carbs is also intertwined with hormonal function in women, which is probably why low carb diets are much harder for women and less successful for them in the long term.

Fortunately, there is an answer for those who want to eat their carbs and lose weight, too. Phase 2, a starch neutralizer extracted from white kidney beans, has been proven in clinical trials to block the absorption of carbohydrates. This is accomplished by Phase 2's unique ability to inhibit amylase, the enzyme that digests complex carbohydrates. In simple terms, this means that a portion of the complex carbohydrates you eat (up to 66 percent, according to a University of Scranton study) passes harmlessly through your digestive tract. These carbohydrates are not broken down into simple sugars, and they actually act as a quasidietary fiber as they pass through the digestive tract, providing all the benefits of fiber.

In research involving 50 obese adults, we found that subjects who took Phase 2 (available in capsule, sprinkle or chewable form) before meals rich in carbohydrates, lost an average of 3.79 pounds in eight weeks without other adjustments to their diet or exercise regimens. As a pleasant side effect, we found that triglyceride levels decreased 17.2 percent in those eight weeks, which may be attributable to the fiber-like action of the undigested carbohydrates.

I recommend the use of Phase 2, which is an ingredient in numerous brands of supplements and will soon be available in specially formulated breads and other bakery products. In my experience, it's a sensible means of cutting the calories from complex carbohydrates without the risk of the serious long-term consequences of extreme low carb diets.

Steven Rosenblatt, M.D., Ph.D., is a physician with additional degrees in psychology and oriental medicine.

Board-certified in Family Practice, he is a leading authority on complementary medicine and has served as director of the complementary medicine program at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.

 
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