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 Information-packed FREE Weight Loss Articles
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Top 15 Reasons to Avoid Low Carb, High Protein Diets By Greg
Landry (Sincere thanks to Greg for letting me reprint this
article here!)
Copyright 2004
by Greg Landry, M.S..
Low carb (carbohydrate), high protein diets are the latest
dieting craze. However, before you jump on the band wagon,
you may want to consider a few things:
-
Low carb (ketogenic)
diets deplete the healthy glycogen (the storage form of
glucose) stores in your muscles and liver. When you deplete
glycogen stores, you also dehydrate, often causing the scale
to drop significantly in the first week or two of the diet.
This is usually interpreted as fat loss when it’s actually
mostly from dehydration and muscle loss. By the way, this is
one of the reasons that low carb diets are so popular at the
moment - there is a quick initial, but deceptive drop in
scale weight.
Glycogenesis (formation of glycogen) occurs in the liver and
muscles when adequate quantities of carbohydrates are
consumed - very little of this happens on a low carb diet.
Glycogenolysis (breakdown of glycogen) occurs when glycogen
is broken down to form glucose for use as fuel.
-
Depletion of
muscle glycogen causes you to fatigue easily, and makes
exercise and movement uncomfortable. Research indicates that
muscle fatigue increases in almost direct proportion to the
rate of depletion of muscle glycogen. Bottom line is that
you don't feel energetic and you exercise and move less
(often without realizing it) which is not good for caloric
expenditure and basal metabolic rate (metabolism).
-
Depletion of
muscle glycogen leads to muscle atrophy (loss of muscle).
This happens because muscle glycogen (broken down to
glucose) is the fuel of choice for the muscle during
movement. There is always a fuel mix, but without muscle
glycogen, the muscle fibers that contract, even at rest to
maintain muscle tone, contract less when glycogen is not
immediately available in the muscle. Depletion of muscle
glycogen also causes you to exercise and move less than
normal which leads to muscle loss and the inability to
maintain adequate muscle tone.
Also, in the absence of adequate carbohydrate for fuel, the
body initially uses protein (muscle) and fat. The initial
phase of muscle depletion is rapid, caused by the use of
easily accessed muscle protein for direct metabolism or for
conversion to glucose (gluconeogenesis) for fuel. Eating
excess protein does not prevent this because there is a
caloric deficit.
When insulin levels are chronically too low as they may be
in very low carb diets, catabolism (breakdown) of muscle
protein increases, and protein synthesis stops.
-
Loss of muscle
causes a decrease in your basal metabolic rate (metabolism).
Metabolism happens in the muscle. Less muscle and muscle
tone means a slower metabolism which means fewer calories
burned 24 hours-a-day.
-
Your muscles
and skin lack tone and are saggy. Saggy muscles don't look
good, cause saggy skin, and cause you to lose a healthy,
vibrant look (even if you’ve also lost fat).
-
Some
proponents of low carb diets recommend avoiding
carbohydrates such as bread, pasta, potatoes, carrots, etc.
because of they are high on the glycemic index - causing a
sharp rise in insulin. Certain carbohydrates have always
been, and will always be the bad guys: candy, cookies, baked
goods with added sugar, sugared drinks, processed / refined
white breads, pastas, and rice, and any foods with added
sugar. These are not good for health or weight loss.
However, carbohydrates such as fruits, vegetables, legumes,
whole grain breads and pastas, and brown rice are good for
health and weight loss. Just like with proteins and fats,
these carbohydrates should be eaten in moderation. Large
volumes of any proteins, fats or carbohydrates are not
conducive to weight loss and health.
The effect of high glycemic foods is often exaggerated. It's
does matter, but to a smaller degree than is often
portrayed. Also, the total glycemic effect of foods is
influenced by the quantity of that food that you eat at a
sitting. Smaller meals have a lower overall glycemic effect.
Also, we usually eat several types of food at the same time,
thereby reducing the average glycemic index of the meal, if
higher glycemic foods are eaten.
Also, glycemic index values can be misleading because they
are based on a standard 50 grams of carbohydrate consumed.
It wouldn't take much candy bar to get that, but it would
take four cups of carrots. Do you usually eat four cups of
carrots at a meal?
Regular exercisers and active people also are less effected
by higher glycemic foods because much of the carbohydrate
consumed is immediately used to replenish glycogen stores in
the liver and muscle.
-
Much of the
weight loss on a low carb, high protein diet, especially in
the first few weeks, is actually because of dehydration and
muscle loss.
-
The percentage
of people that re-gain the weight they've lost with most
methods of weight loss is high, but it's even higher with
low carb, high protein diets. This is primarily due to three
factors:
A. You have lost muscle. With that comes a slower metabolism
which means fewer calories are burned 24 hours-a-day. A loss
of muscle during the process of losing
weight is almost a guarantee for regaining the lost weight,
and more.
B. You re-gain the healthy fluid lost because of glycogen
depletion.
C. It's difficult to maintain that type of diet long-term.
D. You have not made a change to a long-term healthy
lifestyle.
-
Eating too
much fat is just not healthy. I know you've heard of people
whose blood levels of cholesterol and triglycerides have
decreased while on a low carb, high protein diet. This often
happens with weight loss, but it doesn't continue when
you're on a diet high in fat.
There are literally reams of
research over decades that clearly indicates that an
increase in consumption of animal products and/or saturated
fat leads to increased incidence of heart disease, strokes,
gall stones, kidney stones, arthritic symptoms, certain
cancers, etc. For example, in comparing
countries with varying levels of meat consumption, there
is a direct relationship between the volume of meat
consumption
in a country and the incidence of digestive cancers
(stomach,
intestines, rectal, etc.).
Fat is certainly necessary, and desirable in your diet, but
they should be mostly healthy fats and in moderation. Manufactured / synthetic "low fat" foods with lots of added
sugar are not the answer. Neither are manufactured /
synthetic
"low carb" foods with artificial sweeteners or added fat. By
the way, use of artificial sweeteners has never been shown
to aid in weight loss and they may pose health problems.
According to Dr. Keith-Thomas Ayoob of Albert Einstein
College of Medicine in New York, "In my experience,
unless you're willing to throw out decades of research,
you cannot ignore that diets chronically high in saturated
fats are linked to heart disease," Dr. Ayoob is also a
spokesman for the American Dietetic Association
and says that low carb, high protein diets are an attempt
at a quick fix and not a long-term lifestyle change.
-
As someone recently told me, "it must work - people
are losing weight". People that are truly losing fat on
low carb, high protein diets, are doing so because they
are eating fewer calories - that's the bottom line. There
is no magic - the same can be done on a healthy diet.
-
Low carb diets are lacking in fiber. Every plant-based
food has some fiber. All animal products have no fiber. A
lack of fiber increases your risk for cancers of the
digestive
track (because transit time is lengthened) and
cardiovascular
disease (because of fibers effect on fat and cholesterol).
It
also puts you at a higher risk for constipation and other
bowel
disorders.
-
Low carb diets lack sufficient quantities of the the
many
nutrients / phytonutrients / antioxidants found in fruits,
vegetables, legumes, and whole grains, necessary for health
and aiding in prevention of cancer and heart disease. In
fact,
you need these nutrients even more so when you're consuming
too much fat as is often the case on a low carb high protein
diet.
-
Americans already consume more than twice the amount
of protein needed. Add to that a high protein diet and you
have far too much protein consumption. By the way, most
people
don't realize that all fruits, all vegetables, all whole
grains,
and all legumes also contain protein. Animal products
contain
larger quantities of protein, but that may not be a good thing.
Excess dietary protein puts you at a higher risk for many
health
problems: gout (painful joints from high purine foods which
are
usually high protein foods), kidney disease, kidney stones,
osteoporosis (excess dietary protein causes leeching of
calcium
from the bones). By the way, countries with lower, healthier
intakes of protein also have a decreased incidence of
osteoporosis.
-
Low carb, high protein diets cause an unhealthy
physiological state called ketosis, a type of metabolic
acidosis.
You may have heard the phrase, "fat burns in the flame of
carbohydrate". Excess acetyl CoA cannot enter the Krebs
Cycle (you remember the old Krebs Cycle) due to insufficient
OAA. In other words, for fat to burn efficiently and without
production of excess toxic ketones, sufficient carbohydrate
must be available. Ketosis can lead to many health problems
and can be very serious at it’s extreme.
-
Bad breath. Often called "keto breath" or "acetone
breath", it’s caused by production of acetones in a state of
ketosis.
So why the low carb, high protein craze? I believe there are
several reasons.
A. Weight loss (mostly muscle and muscle fluid) is often
rapid during the first few weeks. This causes people to
think they’re losing fat rapidly.
B. It gives you
"permission" to eat the "bad foods" : bacon,
eggs, burgers, steak, cheese, etc., and lots of fat.
C. Many see it as the new "magic" they've been looking for,
although it's been around, in various forms, since the
1960's.
The good news is that there is a very healthy way to lose
weight, feel energetic, and to greatly increase your chances
of keeping it off. But that's another article.
Get movin'! :)
Author and
exercise physiologist, Greg Landry, offers his free, "Fast,
Healthy Weight Loss" newsletter at his site:
http://www.Landry.com
MagicallySLIM
provides you with the right information, tools and resources
to lose and control your weight
while eating what you want to eat, when you want and as much
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