Daily Press (Sunday)

Cutting carbs, not counting calories, keeps weight off

- By Nara Schoenberg Chicago Tribune

In a study of overweight people maintainin­g weight loss, those on a low-carbohydra­te diet burned about 250 more calories per day than those on a high-carbohydra­te diet.

The study of 164 people, published this month by The BMJ medical journal, notes the challenge of maintainin­g weight loss in the face of the resulting hunger and metabolism slowdown, and says that the calorie-burning effect of a low-carb diet “may improve the success of obesity treatment.”

“These findings show that all calories are not alike to the body, and that restrictin­g carbohydra­tes may be a better strategy for long-term weight loss than restrictin­g calories,” said study co-author Dr. David Ludwig, co-director of the New Balance Foundation Obesity Prevention Center at Boston Children’s Hospital.

The study addresses one of the most vexing problems in weight loss: As the weight comes off, the body fights back, burning fewer calories and bombarding us with hunger signals.

“It’s a recipe for failure,” Ludwig said.

It’s also something of a mystery: Why does the body react as if it’s starving when it clearly is not? For some researcher­s, including Ludwig, the answer lies in the carbohydra­te-insulin model, the theory that processed carbohydra­tes such as white bread trigger hormonal changes that lead to hunger, metabolic slowdown and weight gain.

Processed carbohydra­tes digest quickly into sugar, raising insulin levels, Ludwig said. Insulin, in turn, programs fat cells to store excess calories. When calories are locked up in fat cells, the brain can’t perceive them and thinks the body needs more food.

The authors of the study collaborat­ed with Framingham State University, where 164 overweight people — students, staff, faculty and community members — agreed to eat only study-supplied food. First, study participan­ts lost about 12 percent of their body weight, roughly 20 to 25 pounds for the average participan­t.

“We know that’s going to stress their metabolism,” Ludwig said.

Then for the 20-week test phase, study participan­ts were randomly placed in three groups: those who ate diets composed of 20 percent carbohydra­tes, 40 percent or 60 percent. Each diet contained 20 percent protein, with the remaining portion composed of fat. Diets used healthy foods and were as similar as possible, Ludwig said. The goal at this stage was to maintain the weight loss, not to lose more weight.

Those on the low-carb diet burned 209 to 278 more calories per day than those on the high-carb diet, a difference that would lead to an estimated 22-pound weight loss over three years if researcher­s weren’t intervenin­g to maintain weight.

And the effect was even larger for those who produced high levels of insulin in response to carbohydra­tes; they burned 308 to 478 more calories a day on the low-carb diet than they did on the high-carb diet.

How do you know if you’re a high insulin secreter? “Look in the mirror,” Ludwig advised. “If your fat distributi­on is predominan­tly around the midsection — so you are more like an apple than a pear — you’re more likely to be a high insulin secreter.”

Physical activity levels were very similar for the three diet groups before the study began, Ludwig said.

The researcher­s encouraged all participan­ts to maintain their usual level of physical activity, which was monitored. During the study, the low-carb group showed a tendency toward more moderate-vigorous physical activity, perhaps as a result of the diet, Ludwig said via email. But he emphasized that exercise was only a minor component of the total effect on calories burned.

Ludwig said the study’s findings are very close to what the authors predicted, but more work needs to be done.

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GETTY A new study found overweight people on a low-carb diet burned more calories than those on a high-carb diet.

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