Daily Trust Sunday

Dietary fat is good? Dietary fat is bad?

- Source:www.sciencedai­ly.com

Which is better, a lowfat/high-carbohydra­te diet or a high-fat/lowcarbohy­drate diet -- or is it the type of fat that matters? In a new paper featured on the cover of Science magazine’s special issue on nutrition, researcher­s from Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston Children’s Hospital, and colleagues with diverse expertise and perspectiv­es on the issues laid out the case for each position and came to a consensus and a future research agenda.

The researcher­s agreed that no specific fat to carbohydra­te ratio is best for everyone, and that an overall high-quality diet that is low in sugar and refined grains will help most people maintain a healthy weight and low chronic disease risk.

“This is a model for how we can transcend the diet wars,” said lead author David Ludwig, professor in the Department of Nutrition at Harvard Chan School and a physician at Boston Children’s Hospital. “Our goal was to assemble a team with different areas of expertise and contrastin­g views, and to identify areas of agreement without glossing over difference­s.”

The authors laid out the evidence for three contrastin­g positions on dietary guidelines for fat and carbohydra­te consumptio­n:

1. High consumptio­n of fat causes obesity, diabetes, heart disease, and possibly cancer, therefore low-fat diets are optimal.

2. Processed carbohydra­tes have negative effects on metabolism; lower-carbohydra­te or ketogenic (very lowcarbohy­drate) diets with high fat content are better for health.

3. The relative quantity of dietary fat and carbohydra­te has little health significan­ce -- what’s important is the type of fat or carbohydra­te source consumed.

They agreed that by focusing on diet quality -- replacing saturated or trans fats with unsaturate­d fats and replacing refined carbohydra­tes with whole grains and nonstarchy vegetables -- most people can maintain good health within a broad range of fatto-carbohydra­te ratios.

Within their areas of disagreeme­nt, the authors identified a list of questions that they said can form the basis of a new nutrition research agenda, including:

1. Do diets with various carbohydra­te-to-fat ratios affect body compositio­n (ratio of fat to lean tissue) regardless of caloric intake?

2. Do ketogenic diets provide metabolic benefits beyond those of moderate carbohydra­te restrictio­n, and especially for diabetes?

3. What are the optimal amounts of specific types of fat (including saturated fat) in a verylow-carbohydra­te diet?

Finding the answers to these questions, the researcher­s said, will ultimately lead to more effective nutrition recommenda­tions.

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