Houston Chronicle

Subtle signs of a thyroid disorder

- By Gary Taubes

I’ve been eating a high-fat, car b-restricted diet for almost 20 years, since I started as an experiment when investigat­ing nutrition research for the journal Science. I find it’s easy for me to maintain a healthy weight when I eat this way. But even after two decades, the sensation of being on the edge of a slippery slope is everpresen­t.

The holidays and family vacations are a particular problem. Desserts and sweets, it seems, appear after every lunch and dinner, and I’m not particular­ly good at saying no when everyone else is par taking. The more sweets I eat, the more we eat as a family, the longer it takes upon returning home before that expectatio­n of a daily treat fa des away.

What I’ve realized is that eating a little of a tasty dessert or a little pasta or bread fails to satisfy me. Rather, it ignites a fierce craving for more, to eat it all and then some. I find it easier to avoid sugar, grains and starches entirely, rather than to try to eat them in moderation. The question is why.

To begin to answer that question requires understand­ing that researcher­s are generally divided not only on what causes obesity, but also why we have cravings and often fail to stay on diets.

The convention­al thinking, held by many of the researcher­s and clinicians I’ ve interviewe­d over the years, is that obesity is caused by caloric excess. They call it an “energy balance” disorder, and the treatment is to consume less energy( fewer calories) and exp end more. When we fail to maintain this prescripti­on, the implicatio­n is that we simply lack self-discipline. “It’ s viewed as a psychologi­cal issue or even a question of character ,” said Dr. David Ludwig, who treats obesity at Harvard Medical School.

The minority position in this field—one that Ludwig holds, as do I — is that obesity is actually a hormonal regulatory disorder, and the hormone that dominates this process is insulin. It directly links what we eat to the accumulati­on of excess fat and that, in turn, is tied to the foods we cr ave and the hunger we experience. It’ s been known since the 1960 st hat insulin signals fat cells to accumulate fat, while telling the other cells in our body toburncarb­ohydratesf­orfuel.By this thinking these carbohydra­tes are uniquely fattening.

Since insulin levels after meals are determined largely by the carbohydra­tes we eat—particular­lyeasily digestible grain sand starches, known as high glycemic index carbohydra­tes, as well as sugars like sucrose and highfructo­se corn syrup — diets based on this approach specifical­ly target these carbohydra­tes. If we don’ t want to stay fat or get fatter, we don’t eat them.

This effect of insulin on fat and carbohydra­te metabolism offers an explanatio­n for why these same carbohydra­tes are typically the foods we cr ave most; why a little “slip ,” as addiction specialist­s would call it, could so easily lead to a binge.

Elevate insulin levels even a little, said Dr. Robert Lustig, a pediatric endocrinol­ogist at the University of California, San Francisco, and the body switches over from burning fat to burning carbohydra­tes.

“The more insulin you release, the more you crave carbs ,” he said .“Once you’ re exposed to a little carbohydra­te, and you get an insulin rise from it, that forces energy into fat cells and that deprives your other cells of the energy they would otherwise have utilized — in essence, starvation. So you compensate by getting hungry, more carbohydra­te. High insulin drives car b-craving .”

The result is that even a bite or a taste of carbohydra­te-rich foods can stimulate insulin and create a hunger—acraving—foreven more carbohydra­tes .“There’ s no question in my mind ,” L us tig said ,“that once people who are ‘carboholic­s’ get their insulin levels down, they become less car b oh olic. And if they go off the wagon and start eating carbs, they go right back to where they were before. I’ ve seen that in numerous patients.”

Sugar and sweets area particular­problem because of several physiologi­cal responses that may be unique to sugar. Sugar cravings appear to be mediated through the brain reward center that is triggered by other addictive substances. Both sugar and addictive substances stimulate the release of dopamine, producing an intensely pleasurabl­e sensation.

Researcher­s like Ludwig and L us ti ga nd others who promote car b-restrictio­n, believe a person can minimize ca rb cravings by eating lots of healthful fats instead. Fat is satiating, Ludwig said, and it’s the one macronutri­ent that doesn’ t stimulate insulin secretion. Eating fat-rich foods ,“helps extinguish bin ge behavior ,” Ludwig said ,“as opposed to high-ca rb foods which exacerbate it .”

Whatever the mechanism involved, if the goal is to avoid the kind of slip that leads from a single forkful of rice to a dough nut bin ge or falling off your diet for good, then the same techniques that have helped drug addicts avoid relapses should also work in this scenario as well. These basic principles have been developed over decades, said Laura Schmidt, an addiction specialist at the University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine who now studies sugar as well. They can“work for anyone who’s gotten clean and sober and wants to stay that way.”

Ultimately, any successful diet is along-term commitment. We tend to think of diets as something we go on and off. And if we fall off, we think the diet failed. But if we buy into the logic of car b-restricted diets, it implies acceptance of a lifetime of abstention.

“It’s a very powerful system that has tobe undo ne, whether it’ s addictiono­r metabolic disease ,” said Schmidt.

 ?? Juliette Borda/New York Times ??
Juliette Borda/New York Times

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