Montreal Gazette

Low-carb diets take years off life, study says

- SARAH KNAPTON

Eating a diet that is low in carbohydra­tes could mean you die younger, a 25-year study has suggested.

Food plans which replace carbs with protein and fat, such as Atkins and ketogenic diets, have gained popularity and been endorsed by celebritie­s such as Gwyneth Paltrow and Kim Kardashian.

But research found those with low-carb diets died an average of four years earlier than those with moderate intakes. Even people with high intakes fared better than those who cut out carbohydra­tes.

“Low-carb diets that replace carbohydra­tes with protein or fat are gaining widespread popularity as a health and weight loss strategy,” said study leader Sara Seidelmann, from Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. “However, our data suggests that animal-based low carbohydra­te diets might be associated with shorter overall lifespan and should be discourage­d.

“If one chooses to follow a lowcarbohy­drate diet, then exchanging carbohydra­tes for more plantbased fats and proteins might actually promote healthy aging in the long term.”

For the study, which was published in Lancet Public Health, researcher­s followed 15,428 adults aged 45 to 64 over two decades from 1987. The researcher­s found that, from age 50, average life expectancy was 83 years for those with moderate carbohydra­te intake (50 to 55 per cent of daily calories), which was four years longer than those with very low carbohydra­te consumptio­n (less than 40 per cent of calories) who lived an average of 79 years. Those with a high-carb intake (greater than 70 per cent of daily calories) lived until an average age of 82.

Researcher­s also found that replacing carbohydra­tes with protein and fat from animal sources was associated with a higher risk of mortality than moderate carbohydra­te intake whereas replacing with plant-based foods was linked to a lower risk of mortality. London Daily Telegraph

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