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HOLD THE LARD!: The Atkins Diet still doesn't work
Reason.com ^ | Dec. 5 2002 | Michael Fumento

Posted on 12/05/2002 3:22:43 PM PST by Senator Pardek

Issue settled. The Atkins Diet—the famous high-fat, low-carb regime that lets dieters load up on pork rinds and Scrapple as long as they avoid potatoes and Wheaties—works. The American Heart Association has been wrong all along, as has essentially the entirely American medical establishment. Not only is gorging on fat the key to becoming thin, it's heart-healthy to boot. So say the headlines:

• "High Fat, Low Carb Diet May Finally Be Getting Its Due" (CNN)
• "Fats Win Latest Round in Diet War" (Chicago Tribune)
• "Low-carb Atkins Diet Beats Low-Fat American Heart Association Plan in Head-To-Head Comparison" (CNBC)
• "High-Fat Diet Shows Promise in Study" (AP)
• "Doctors Eat Crow on Banning Celebrity Diet" (The Australian)

The public responded predictably to the pro-Atkins results of an Atkins-funded study last month. Sales of Dr. Robert Atkins' diet book skyrocketed over 900 percent on Amazon.com the day the news broke. Dr. Atkins' New Diet Revolution has now sold over 10 million copies; according to one Atkins stooge, more than 20 million people have signed on for the diet. Celebrities ranging from callipygian lovelies Jennifer Lopez and Minnie Driver to formerly porky Spice Girl Geri Halliwell to one-man body mass rollercoaster Matthew Perry have reportedly taken the Atkins plan straight to the scales.

And they've all been sold one greasy fat bill of goods.

There are two issues here. One is the effect of the Atkins diet on weight loss. The other is its effect on cholesterol and triglycerides, a group of fatty compounds that circulate in the bloodstream and are stored in the fat tissue.

In the study in question, Dr. Eric Westman of the Duke University Medical Center looked at both. He followed two groups of 60 dieters each, one on a high carbohydrate diet and one on the high-fat, low-carbohydrate Atkins diet. He reported that the Atkins group lost twice as much weight during the six-month study period as did the high-carb group. But this is both unsurprising and meaningless.

Gary Foster of the University of Pennsylvania co-authored a study conducted in virtually the same manner as Westman's. Foster, whose work will soon appear in a major medical journal, provides a simple explanation for the Atkins weight loss. The regimen "gives people a framework to eat fewer calories, since most of the choices in this culture are carbohydrate driven," he says. "Over time people eat fewer calories."

Randy Seeley of the University of Cincinnati co-authored yet another "sister study" with similar results. His explanation is the same as Foster's. Ultimately, Atkins is nothing more than a low-calorie diet in disguise.

In any event, the main issue with any diet—be it Atkins, popcorn, or jelly bean—isn't whether people can lose weight in the short-term but rather whether they can stick to the regimen and keep the pounds off not for just half a year but essentially forever. Yet completely lost in the media mania was that among the 60 Atkins dieters in the Westman group analyzed for weight loss, the dropout rate was 43 percent.

Thus almost half the Atkins cohort couldn't stay with the steak and bacon routine for even six months. By comparison, only 25 percent of the high-carb eaters dropped out.

Moreover, it's generally accepted that drop-out rates anywhere near this level completely invalidate a study because you don't know how all those drop-outs would have affected the result. Maybe those Atkins dieters were quitting not only because of carbohydrate cravings but also because they weren't losing weight or losing it fast enough to satisfy them.

Why would Westman's interpretation be so different from those of Foster and Seeley? It may help to know not only that this particular study was paid for by the Atkins Center, but that it's part of a long-term funding arrangement.

Analyses such as one published in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) in May 2000 have shown that funding sources do in fact influence study results and the interpretations (or "spin" if you will) of those results. "When the boundaries between industry and academic medicine become as blurred as they are now, the business goals of industry influence the mission of medical schools in multiple ways," declared an accompanying NEJM editorial.

Westman's interpretation, based on his handful of subjects observed over a mere six months, also directly contradicts three decades of randomized controlled studies published in peer-reviewed journals. A review of over 200 of these published last year in a major medical journal concluded bluntly: "The BMIs [a surrogate measure of weight] were significantly lower for men and women on the high carbohydrate diet; the highest BMIs were noted for those on a low carbohydrate diet."

But what about the blood findings? Wasn't it a real shocker that Atkins dieters consuming heavy amounts of fat saw their HDL ("good cholesterol") levels increase by 11 percent while harmful triglycerides fell 49 percent? (LDL or "bad cholesterol" levels remained the same.)

No.

"Often just losing weight alone will cause improvement in triglyceride and cholesterol levels," the president of the American Heart Association Dr. Robert Bonow told me. Since the Atkins dieters did lose more weight than those on the high-carb diet, it only stands to reason that by comparison their blood levels would also improve more.

Says Seeley, Westman's "weight loss data look just like ours and my argument is that the weight loss accounts for the beneficial effects."

Westman told me that he doesn't believe this to be the case, because another study, in the July 2002 Journal of Nutrition, claims to have found a similar improvement on an Atkins-type diet regardless of weight loss. But the same researchers, using the same group of dieters, published another study at the same time reporting that the Atkins dieters lost an average of 7.5 pounds over a six-week period. So again, blood fat levels merely fell with body fat levels.

Ultimately this fat-fest over a single study shows nothing more than the media's amazing ability to pick out and flaunt a will o' the wisp—even to the point that one American network repeatedly used on-the-air interviews from a representative of the Atkins Institute to interpret a study paid for by the Atkins Institute!

Why? Our increasingly obese population is desperate for some magical formula to avoid the physiological law that body fat is determined by calories in and calories out. The media tried to fill the need, but ultimately failed the public. "It just makes people confused and frustrated," an exasperated Seeley said. Yes, and fatter by the day.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
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To: jlogajan
You haven't actually read the Atkins book, have you?
101 posted on 12/05/2002 7:31:30 PM PST by Mr. Mulliner
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To: Edward Watson
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/801586/posts?page=61#61

That was a great post.
102 posted on 12/05/2002 7:33:53 PM PST by Jael
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To: maxwell
It's not for everyone. I used to be an active runner before years of running 6 miles a day started doing longterm damage to my joints and ankles. Since my only reason for running was to keep my weight down while still maintaining a healthy appetite, I did the Atkins thing, figuring I could eat all the foods I wanted without burning it off through exercise.

It was good for about a month when I cheated, gained 10 pounds overnight. I've heard Internet accounts of people who feel "trapped" by the Atkins diet becuase the instant they go off it, they gain 10 lbs or more.

Now, walking's my thing and I've just learned to get by on salads with a special treat once or twice a week like donuts or omelets! If you like flexibility in your diet, Atkins ain't for you, try old fashioned calorie cutting. Atkins is a PERMANENT decision, no exceptions!
103 posted on 12/05/2002 7:33:59 PM PST by Nataku X
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To: Senator Pardek
Claiming that exercise is the only healthful, long-term way to lose weight is forbidden at this site.

Don't tell me you've already used your verboten quota for 2002.

104 posted on 12/05/2002 7:36:33 PM PST by LurkerNoMore!
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To: Jael
;)
105 posted on 12/05/2002 7:37:33 PM PST by patton
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To: Senator Pardek
"SSSHHHH!!! Claiming that exercise is the only healthful, long-term way to lose weight is forbidden at this site."

Actually, Dr. A recommends you exercise on a regular basis.

106 posted on 12/05/2002 7:40:31 PM PST by Crispy
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To: Crispy
Run 20 miles a week, and you can eat all the carbs you want....
107 posted on 12/05/2002 7:43:33 PM PST by LurkerNoMore!
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To: EternalVigilance
"Reading the article one might easily think that the idea is to eat 'fat' instead of carbs. "

The article is correct. Atkins is high fat, not high protein. It just happens that most fat comes with protein. Fat is what your body will burn instead of carbs.

108 posted on 12/05/2002 7:43:43 PM PST by Crispy
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To: Mr. Mulliner
Here's the only thing I've found so far:

http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/living/health/conditions_diseases/heart/4548787.htm

~After six months, the people on the Atkins diet had lost an average of 31 pounds, compared with 20 pounds on the AHA diet, and more people stuck with the Atkins regimen.~
109 posted on 12/05/2002 7:47:46 PM PST by Marie Antoinette
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To: 185JHP
I heard Jack in a radio interview a few months ago. He said that on his last birthday he did 10 benchrest reps with 140lb dumbells. You don't suppose he meant 2 140s at the same time? Maybe it was 2 70s for a 140lb total. I couldn't do 10X140 with a barbell and I'm 49.

Still I remember he said clear as anything "140 pound dumbells."

What a guy!
110 posted on 12/05/2002 7:49:09 PM PST by SBprone
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To: Senator Pardek
FR Atkins Cult) has already issued a fatwah against me

I have no dog in this fight, but I must admit it's amusing to see just how angry some Atkins advocates get when their dogma is challenged. I hope you survive your fatwa, and that the diet Jihadists find another outlet for their energies.

111 posted on 12/05/2002 7:51:26 PM PST by Mr. Mojo
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To: Senator Pardek

112 posted on 12/05/2002 7:53:35 PM PST by Howlin
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To: SBprone
Jack L. truly is amazing. I remember reading about him pulling some big ship with his teeth and swimming a few miles with it in Santa Monica Bay.
113 posted on 12/05/2002 8:01:19 PM PST by Mr. Mojo
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To: ChinaGotTheGoodsOnClinton
LOL!!!
114 posted on 12/05/2002 8:01:23 PM PST by RaceBannon
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To: Rye
I have no dog in this fight, but I must admit it's amusing to see just how angry some Atkins advocates get when their dogma is challenged

If that's the case, then your initial statement can't be true.

I would say this, these threads come down to 2 sides, real life experience vs internet know-it-alls and other assorted folks who mean well but never had a weight problem in their life (ie, don't know what in the 9 hells they are talking about), and I don't know about you but most internet know-it-alls I've encountered couldn't find their d!ck with 2 hands and a map. The amusement works both ways.

115 posted on 12/05/2002 8:03:40 PM PST by Citizen of the Savage Nation
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To: Jael
Well, Jael, the wife of Heber the Kenite, I did it on the Atkins Diet...and some plain old exercise, too! LOTS of it, however, as I lost weight more and more due to the diet, I was able to exercise mroe.

I have stress fractures in my feet now, been running too much, I have to back off onthe aerobic running, but otherwise, i feelgreat, and am down to 21% body fat, I was up and over 35%...as the picture shows!
116 posted on 12/05/2002 8:03:41 PM PST by RaceBannon
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To: LurkerNoMore!
"Run 20 miles a week, and you can eat all the carbs you want...."

You may be right, but I hate running and weight lifting. My exercise comes from Raquetteball, Tennis, Skiing, Golfing, Hiking, etc. Which is good if I could always find a partner to exercise with me. All of my activities are really boring or impossible by yourself. This time of year is bad for everything I listed except Raquetteball and Skiing. Unfortunately, the Ski resorts on Mt. Hood have not opened yet.

117 posted on 12/05/2002 8:05:25 PM PST by Crispy
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To: SBprone
Probably a 70lb. dumbell in each hand. He could probably do it, since he kept fit all his life. The good thing about dumbbells is each arm has to work equally hard. Also they're safer if your arms give out. We lose 1 heartbeat a year, that's why they say 220 - your age is your safe max heartbeat. Jack has credibility - a clean life, no scandals, and no scamming for bucks - work out and eat right!
118 posted on 12/05/2002 8:06:14 PM PST by 185JHP
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To: SBprone
He said that on his last birthday he did 10 benchrest reps with 140lb dumbells. You don't suppose he meant 2 140s at the same time? Maybe it was 2 70s for a 140lb total.

I wouldn't be surprised if he could bench a 280lbs barbell. That's not out of line for a bodybuilder by any means.

119 posted on 12/05/2002 8:10:20 PM PST by jlogajan
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To: Citizen of the Savage Nation
LOL ...you prove my point brilliantly!
120 posted on 12/05/2002 8:12:27 PM PST by Mr. Mojo
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