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The Myth of the Low-Fat Diet
independent.co.uk ^ | 05/08/02 | independent.co.uk

Posted on 05/10/2002 1:47:25 PM PDT by Bobber58

Looking for something healthy and non-fattening for your evening meal? How about a nice porterhouse steak, which is 50-50 fat and protein? It's a suggestion that comes about as close to heresy as we get these days, but there is increasing evidence that a low-fat diet is not the panacea we have been promised. For the past 30 years such a diet has been officially promoted, on both sides of the Atlantic, as the route to plaque-free arteries and a slim figure. A message that has propelled 15,000 low-fat products on to American supermarket shelves.

However, the campaign has had no obvious effect on the incidence of heart disease, nor have the pounds been falling off the national waists and hips. In fact, according to a recent report, we are getting fatter. Not only is a low-fat diet largely irrelevant to reducing heart disease but it may be responsible for the worrying rise of diabetes.

Praise for the fat-laden porterhouse steak came in an award-winning investigative article, published last year, on just how little evidence there is supporting the low-fat dogma (Science, 30 March 2001). Virtually ignored in the UK at the time, it should be required reading for anyone interested in diet. The problem with the low-fat message is that it is far too simple.

For instance, we've all been told to avoid animal fats because they are saturated and that saturated fat raises cholesterol levels in the blood. But half the fat in a steak is actually "monounsaturated" – the same type as found in "good for the heart" olive oil. The other half is, indeed, saturated but about a third of it is a type called stearic acid, which, like olive oil, raises the "good" HDL cholesterol in the blood. So just 30 per cent of the fat in a steak is the sort of saturated fat that can raise "bad" LDL cholesterol. However, even this demonised fat will simultaneously raise the "good" HDL. "All of this suggests," writes science journalist Gary Taubes, author of the Science article, "that eating a porterhouse steak rather than carbohydrates might actually improve heart disease risk".

The recommendation that dietary fat be reduced to 30 per cent of the total calorie intake is contained in a 1976 Senate report. Written by a journalist, who had only previously reported on labour relations, it drew on just two days of testimony, most from an eccentric Harvard nutritionist Mark Hegstead, who regarded dietary fat as the nutritional equivalent of cigarettes.

That would not have mattered had the evidence come in to support his recommendation – but, beyond a certain point, it hasn't. Undoubtedly if you are at high risk of having a heart attack – overweight, high blood pressure, no exercise, etcetera – and you have very high levels of cholesterol, then reducing them with diet or drugs can significantly reduce your chance of a heart attack. What has not been shown convincingly, however, is that someone who is not at risk will have their life cut short as a result of regularly eating more than the recommended level of dietary fat. As Taubes reports in his article, at least four large trials between 1980 and 1984 comparing disease rates and diet "showed no evidence that men who ate less fat lived longer or had fewer heart attacks".

Since the early Seventies Americans' fat consumption has dropped from an average of 40 per cent of the diet to 34 per cent, but the incidence of heart disease hasn't fallen too. In fact, between 1979 and 1996, largely reflecting the range of new developments, the number of medical procedures for heart disease increased from 1.2 million to 5.4 million. At the same time the proportion of obese Americans has soared from 14 per cent to 22 per cent.

A low-fat diet may be actively harmful. In the late Eighties, David Jacobs, from the University of Minnesota, did a study in Japan on the effects of cholesterol and, interestingly, found a link between low blood cholesterol levels and an increase in non-heart disease related deaths. He reported to the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, which hosted the American Heart Association conference in 1990. At that conference the results of 19 studies from around the world on the links between cholesterol levels and disease were pooled. Taubes writes: "The data were consistent. When investigators tracked all deaths instead of just heart disease, the cholesterol curves were U-shaped for men (both high and low increased the risk) and flat for women." He adds: "As for women, if anything, the higher their cholesterol the longer they lived."

Meanwhile, the link between low-fat diets and weight loss hasn't fared well either. The ongoing Women's Health Initiative – a $100m study on women's health – enrolled 50,000 women in a randomised trial, putting half of them on a draconian diet that provided only 20 per cent of their calories from fat. After three years they had lost, on average, just one kilogram.

Critics of the low-fat hypothesis, such as Peter Ahrens of Rockerfeller University in New York City, have always been concerned that simply lowering fat intakes could have a range of unforeseen effects. Fat is a major component of cell membranes, the brain is 70 per cent fat, and changing fat ratios could affect all sorts of processes, from immune responses to hormone levels.

Just how much else is involved in determining the effect of fat levels in the diet was illustrated by the Lyons Diet Heart Study (16 February 1999). This involved two groups of heart attack survivors, one getting a typical low-fat diet and the other a Mediterranean diet with more bread, cereals, beans, vegetables, olive oil, fruit and fish. The total amount of fat and the type of fat type that each group ate were very different. Intriguingly, however, since high fat is supposed directly to affect cholesterol, the cholesterol levels in the blood of the two groups were very similar. After four years the Mediterranean group had had 14 heart attacks, compared with 44 for those on the "low-fat" diet. This suggests that reducing blood cholesterol is not simply a matter of reducing dietary fat. What is crucial, it turns out, is the type of fat and what you eat along with that fat.

A danger of the low-fat advice may be that it is encouraging us to eat too much of the wrong sort of food. Given the chance, people tend to eat about the same amount of calories, however varied their composition, and those who eat lots of meat and dairy products, like the Finns or Americans, tend not to eat lots of vegetables and fruits. So if you reduce fat, it is likely to be replaced with refined carbohydrates, and that seems to be the problem.

Troublingly, the evidence has been growing that diets high in carbohydrate can increase the blood level of dangerous fats called triglycerides and reduce the "good" or HDL cholesterol. Diets high in sugar and other carbohydrates may also lead to a condition called insulin resistance – the extra carbohydrates are turned into extra glucose, which makes the body produce extra insulin and after a while the body becomes less sensitive to insulin. This combination produces something that Stanford endocrinologist Gerald Reaven has called "syndrome X" (New Scientist, 1 September 2001).

In the United States an estimated 30 per cent of males and 10 per cent to 15 per cent of post-menopausal women have insulin resistance, which commonly leads to diabetes and is linked with a raised risk of heart disease. High-energy snacks are one way to expose the liver to damaging levels of insulin, although exercise can keep the level of harmful triglycerides down. Another element of the high-carbohydrate diet that has been linked with syndrome X is a high consumption of a type of sugar known as fructose. Fructose makes up half of ordinary sugar but corn syrup, now used to sweeten a vast range of foods – breakfast cereals, many low-fat snacks and fizzy drinks – is almost pure fructose. Rather than a high-fat diet, a major contributor to our creeping obesity epidemic could be increased consumption of carbohydrates, especially those coming from sugars.

What's very interesting is that researchers who are concerned about syndrome X come up with the same sort of dietary advice to avoid it as those who are studying fats and heart disease. One again, olive oil, fish oils, plenty of fruits and fresh vegetables and slow release carbohydrates like lentils, beans, brown rice and oats are recommended as a way of avoiding insulin resistance, as well as rendering saturated fats safe.

One reason for the survival of low fat as a recommended diet, which really only seems relevant to people at risk of a heart attack due to high cholesterol, is the difficulty of giving general dietary advice. Not only do fats and cholesterol levels interact in a variety of complicated ways but so also do the ways we lay down fat. The billions that a successful anti-fat pill would generate, means huge amounts of research effort are being put into research to uncover the multiple pathways controlling appetite and fat storage. The complexity of this emerging system suggests why the simple low-fat mantra has proved so unsuccessful as a weight loss programme, too.

A glimpse of just how complicated this system is came from a study by researchers at Rockerfeller University, using an extraordinary technique to trace the brain areas involved in appetite. A pseudo-rabies virus, which infects linked brain cells, genetically modified to produce green glowing jellyfish protein, was injected into rats' brains. Most hunger research concentrates on the appetite centre in the hypothalamus but tracing the green lines left by the virus revealed that brain centres that control the emotions, smell and the higher centres had all been infected. Our appetite seems very much part of who we are.

A similar programme to begin to tease out what is involved in the relationship between dietary fats and cholesterol should eventually yield more sophisticated and useful advice than the low-fat diet.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: diet; lowfat
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1 posted on 05/10/2002 1:47:25 PM PDT by Bobber58
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To: Bobber58
Got Moose?
2 posted on 05/10/2002 1:48:01 PM PDT by Bobber58
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To: Bobber58
The guy mentions steak a couple of times until I stopped reading.

I'm on a low-fat diet because it makes me look better and I have been exercising so I have more strength. The important thing is that I never did this to lose weight which is the biggest fallacy of diets. Less weight shouldn't be the goal. What should be the goal is how much you can do with the muscle you've gained.

Get into a sport that you like and the "weight problem" will take care of itself with proper eating.

3 posted on 05/10/2002 1:55:38 PM PDT by Shooter 2.5
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To: Bobber58
Everyone has to decide for themselves, but it is very hard to beat low saturated fat, moderate amounts of complex carbohydrate and plenty of aerobic exercise to burn the carbs. When you see anything that encourages you to smoke, to eat saturated fat or to try alternative sex, then you better find out more about who did the research and who paid for it.
4 posted on 05/10/2002 2:02:23 PM PDT by ghostrider
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To: Shooter 2.5
This is what Dr. Adkins has been advocating for years. If you eat a proper diet, with adequate levels of protein and fat, and exercise to a moderate degree, your weight will stabilize. Not only that, but your coat will stay glossy.
5 posted on 05/10/2002 2:04:24 PM PDT by 3AngelaD
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To: Bobber58
Atkins rules!

America's Fifth Column ... watch PBS documentary JIHAD! In America
Download 8 Mb zip file here (60 minute video)

6 posted on 05/10/2002 2:06:19 PM PDT by JCG
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To: Shooter 2.5
Low fat diets aren't really the health boon they are thought to be, but some people do well on them. The problem with "low fat" processed foods is that they take out the fat but add in a lot of sugar to make the food taste good. So you get carbohydrate calories instead of fat calories. There is a substantial body of evidence that for many people, controlled carbohydrate diets are the answer to weight gain, lack of energy, and high cholesterol. I'm a believer in lo-carb eating plans because they really do control weight without leaving one feeling hungry.
7 posted on 05/10/2002 2:07:24 PM PDT by Henrietta
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To: Shooter 2.5
The article is sort of a bait and switch. It starts out saying a diet low in fat may not be good for you. Then midway through it turns out this is only because people who can't handle a balanced diet low in fat end up eating more carbs, which, when not burned off, become fat. So really there is no "myth". What is happening is people think they can eat anything that is so-called "low fat" and get away with it. It still comes down to calories in the end. Hell, sour gummy worms are fat-free, but they will become fat if you eat too many of them.

If you take in more calories of any kind than you burn off, it will become FAT. Therefore, eat moderate portions, exercise daily, lift some weights to give your metabolism a boost, and go easy on the FATTY foods AND the starches. Salads, fresh veggies, fish, all good stuff. Duh.

And one more thing: Make mine a rib eye.

8 posted on 05/10/2002 2:07:49 PM PDT by Huck
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To: 3AngelaD
Atkins advocates no carbs. He's a loony tune who just had a heart attack.
9 posted on 05/10/2002 2:08:38 PM PDT by Huck
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To: ghostrider
I agree with you.
10 posted on 05/10/2002 2:10:47 PM PDT by Huck
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To: Bobber58
the brain is 70 per cent fat

Having followed politics for years I can vouch for this!

;-D

11 posted on 05/10/2002 2:10:58 PM PDT by Niagara
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To: Huck
Atkins advocates no carbs. He's a loony tune who just had a heart attack.

No, he does not advocate no carbs. He advocates controlling carb intake so that you don't gain weight. You really should inform yourself before you say silly things that show that you really have no idea what you are talking about!

As for the heart attack, I have no information about that.

12 posted on 05/10/2002 2:13:18 PM PDT by Henrietta
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To: Bobber58; Huck
Click here for REAL answer

...and Atkins is RIGHT: carbs are poison

13 posted on 05/10/2002 2:17:39 PM PDT by Pharmboy
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To: ghostrider
Take a look at "The Schwarzbein Principle: The Truth About Weight Loss, Health and Aging" by Diana Schwarzbein. She's an endocrinologist (doctor), and her explanations of many of the mechanisms described in this article make a lot of sense.
14 posted on 05/10/2002 2:18:56 PM PDT by The Electrician
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To: Henrietta
There's that thing about weight gain. The point of my writing was that too many people look at the scale for their success. That shouldn't be the goal. The goal should be how many times did you go around the park or how many push-ups were made?
15 posted on 05/10/2002 2:24:41 PM PDT by Shooter 2.5
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To: Huck
"Atkins advocates no carbs. He's a loony tune who just had a heart attack."

At least get it straight, the Atkins diet is a LOW carb diet, not NO carb.

16 posted on 05/10/2002 2:26:10 PM PDT by Gigantor
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To: 3AngelaD
This is nothing like what Atkins is advocating, which is in my opinion a "fad" diet that forces you to reduce or eliminate many carbohydrate foods that are good for you like rice, breads, pastas, vegetables, fruits, etc. In fact, a "diet" is not the answer at all for being overweight. What you need is a total change of lifestyle that includes more exercise and the removal of processed junk from your diet, while dramatically increasing the variety of foods eaten. The supermarkets are full of these "low-fat" processed foods that are disgusting. I see overweight housewives at the supermarket all the time with carts full of "low-fat" this and "reduced-fat" that. Yet we have more obesity than ever.

People get stuck with "comfort foods" and thus end up eating the same old crap over and over again. This is another reason why I hate the Atkins diet. Why would you want to go the rest of your life asking for a hamburger without the bun in restaurants? Ditto for the "meat-and-potatos" diet or the processed food diet of so many low-income families (Oreos, Doritos, Ding Dongs, Twinkies, cupcakes, cookies, etc.)

Here's what worked for me. Eat as large a variety of varied whole (unprocessed) foods as possible. I'm always trying that new vegetable or that exotic fish that I've never had before. My staple foods come from the "meditteranean" diet. Sardines, olive oil, garlic, nuts, soups, fish, vegetables, wine, beer. But I'm always experimenting, such as with Mexican or Asian cuisine. I like to mix it up. And it is far better to eat butter than margarine. Margarine is nothing but a block of chemicals that is high in trans-fatty acids - disgusting.

Lastly, there are a lot of people that are just going to have to come to terms with the fact that they are not ever going to have a sculptured and lean body unless they are willing to put an enormous amount of time into exercising. There are no "quick fixes" like a fad diet or one of those exercise machines advertised on late-night TV. I am one of those who have come to terms with my being overweight. Simply because I would rather spend my spare time pursuing my hobbies such as music, reading, or surfing the Internet than I would running 3 miles a day or working out at the gym. That's my decision. So if you are going to be overweight, why not eat healthy? I feel much better since I started eating right.

17 posted on 05/10/2002 2:27:34 PM PDT by SamAdams76
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To: Huck
I noticed that I get an energy boost from a nice big steak but only after I trim as much fat off of it as I can. I love going to Outback and even their salads are great.

Since I started on my diet, I can see the abs appearing and I feel much better. I have to get on the mountain bike in a half hour.

18 posted on 05/10/2002 2:28:49 PM PDT by Shooter 2.5
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To: Bobber58
Fat is a major component of cell membranes, the brain is 70 per cent fat...

I suppose calling someone a fathead can no longer be used as an effective insult.

19 posted on 05/10/2002 2:31:09 PM PDT by GatĂșn(CraigIsaMangoTreeLawyer)
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To: Bobber58
This sounds like the zone diet theory. If the "Zone" were true I'd be a total gastropad I eat hardly anything that doesn't have carbs( everything low carb taste horrible to me I'm quite serious) and I don't exercise very much( I sprint between locations at college and lift weights occasionally). Since I'm not a total fatass and have in fact lost wieght recently I must conclude "the zone" is BS.
20 posted on 05/10/2002 2:31:13 PM PDT by weikel
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