Scottish Daily Mail

Low carb diets really are best way to keep the weight off

- By Ben Spencer Medical Correspond­ent

A LOW-carb, high-fat diet is a more effective way to lose weight than calorie counting, scientists claim.

A study led by researcher­s at Harvard suggests cutting carbohydra­te-rich foods such as pasta, bread and sugar helps keep the pounds off in the long-term.

And the scientists found that a low-carb diet actually helped the body burn off more energy.

Most dieters who rely on calorie counting alone put the weight back on within a year or two. This is because the body adapts by slowing the metabolism and burning fewer calories, leading to yo-yo dieting.

But the experts found that those who focused on cutting carbs saw their metabolism increase, burning more calories and reducing weight.

The scientists, writing in the British Medical Journal, said this effect would lead to an extra 20lb (9kg) weight loss over three years, even if someone did not change their overall calorie intake at all.

The key, they said, is to limit the ‘glycaemic load’ on the body – a measure of how much a food will cause blood sugar to rise. Carbohydra­tes are broken down by the body into sugar, giving them a higher glycaemic load than fat.

‘A low glycaemic-load, highfat diet might facilitate weight loss maintenanc­e beyond the convention­al focus on restrictin­g energy intake and encouragin­g physical activity,’ they wrote. The experts tracked 234 overweight adults who were put on an initial weightloss diet for about ten weeks.

They were then split into groups to follow high, moderate or low-carbohydra­te diets

‘Helps body burn more energy’

– with carbs comprising 60, 40 or 20 per cent of total calories – for an additional 20 weeks.

In all three groups, calorie intake was adjusted so participan­ts’ weight did not change notably. The goal was to compare energy expenditur­e, to see how the groups burned calories at the same weight.

The scientists found that total energy expenditur­e was significan­tly greater on the lowcarb diet versus high-carb.

At the same average body weight, participan­ts on the low-carb diet burned about 250 calories a day more than those on the high-carb diet.

The findings are the latest in the decades-old row over the merits of low-fat diets versus low-carb diets.

British health officials advise a daily diet based on ‘starchy carbohydra­tes’, with a limited intake of saturated fat – in contrast to this study.

Researcher Dr David Ludwig said: ‘Processed carbohydra­tes that flooded our diets during the low-fat era have raised insulin levels, driving fat cells to store excessive calories.

‘With fewer calories available to the rest of the body, hunger increases and metabolism slows – a recipe for weight gain.’

But Professor Tom Sanders, of King’s College London, warned the low-carb diet contained ‘a horrendous amount of saturated fat’ which would ‘increase blood cholestero­l levels and risk of heart disease’.

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