| Anti-Low-Carb Jibberish To Start The New Year |
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| by Jimmy Moore | |
| Monday, 08 January 2007 | |
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It was almost as predictable as the sun rising in the morning. You knew they were lurking around waiting for the right time and the beginning of the new year last week was the perfect opportunity for them. They've got your full attention right now and have set their plan into motion. Of course, I'm referring to the anti-low-carb zealots out there in the media. Not everyone in the press is opposed to low-carb (like this recent Galveston (TX) Daily News column). You've seen the negativity about low-carb in just this past week, haven't you? A jab here, an insult there at the Atkins diet and the smirky irreverent remarks many of these journalists trying to be cute have made about our beloved low-carb way of eating. Just in case you missed these somehow, here are a few that I saw: [Charles] Platkin said in an online interview this summer that when he was just 10, he was so conscious of being overweight that he got his parents to buy him the first Dr. Atkins diet book. It did not help him keep weight off, nor did a succession of what he termed "futile quick-weight-loss diets." These, he said, reduce calories by severely limiting the variety of foods people can eat. But such restrictions are "impossible to maintain over the long-term." It's only fitting that I start with Mr. Diet Detective himself--Charles Stuart Platkin who has previously written negative things about the Atkins/low-carb nutritional approach in his syndicated column. I first challenged Charles on his viewpoints in this blog post which then precipitated a stern response from him. He has repeated this idea that low-carb is not for the long-term many time before and even said in an interview with me last year that livin' la vida low-carb is as detrimental as obesity on the health of Americans. Pretty wild stuff! Despite my obvious vehement disagreement with his point of views as espoused in this column about his new book The Diet Detective's Count Down: 7500 of Your Favorite Food Counts with Their Exercise Equivalents for Walking, Running, Biking, Swimming, Yoga, and Dance (which I will be reviewing VERY soon!), Platkin recently added me to his list of writers right here at DietDetective.com to blog about low-carb living. I am grateful for this opportunity to share my point of view. I have explained to Charles already that I disagree with his comments about low-carb not working over the long haul and that my food choices have not been severely limited as he claims. My willingness to articulate these viewpoints is why he wanted me to write for his web site. That's admirable of him for wanting to give a platform for other views, although he's still wrong about low-carb and I will continue to hold his feet to fire about it! :) 2. The St. Petersburg Times (AGAIN!) The Atkins diet does, indeed, work. You cut the carbohydrates, increase the fat and the weight can melt off. This is because a very low carbohydrate diet makes the blood acidic, a process referred to as ketosis. This, in turn, suppresses appetite. Virtually no one can stay on this diet indefinitely, and once carbohydrates are reintroduced, ketosis disappears and weight returns rapidly. At the height of the Atkins craze, Americans everywhere jumped at the opportunity to order burgers without the buns and cholesterol-filled plates of steak and eggs. All of that excess, and you still lost weight! But, as the diet became increasingly extreme, many in the medical community began to question its health benefits. Today, we know that any extreme diet is not healthy: - A diet containing too great a percentage of calories from carbohydrates leads to weight gain, insulin resistance and a higher risk of diabetes, heart attacks, strokes and perhaps high blood pressure. - A diet containing too much saturated or polyunsaturated fat can also lead to weight gain and an increased risk of heart attacks, strokes and cancer. This guest column written by Dr. David Lipschitz from DrDavidHealth.com is in response to the great news about low-carb that was revealed in November 2006 regarding a long-term study on the effects of low-carb diets on heart health. That research concluded there was no connection to an increased risk of heart disease from consuming a low-carb diet and that the fears of those who oppose this way of eating are unfounded. But that doesn't stop them from STILL railing against it as "extreme" and unable to stay on it for more than a short amount of time. Well, I've been livin' la vida low-carb for over three years now and my weight and health are better than ever! Of course, if I ever were to get off of the plan and exponentially add carbohydrates back into my diet, then why wouldn't I expect to GAIN weight?! That's why this is a permanent lifestyle change, not just some fad diet. As for this notion that fat makes you fat, Dr. Lipschitz you really need to to reading up on the latest research my friend. Check out this excerpt from my interview with University Of Connecticut researcher Dr. Jeff Volek about this subject matter: "Eating fat does not make you fat, storing fat makes you fat. And carbohydrates play a major role in storing fat. So the level of dietary carbohydrate is really the most important factor to control because it dictates what happens to fat. Carbs are dominant and fat is passive. When carbohydrates are low, fat tends to be burned, and when carbohydrates are high dietary fat tends to be stored. The same holds true for the atherogenic effects of saturated fat. The body handles saturated fat better when carbohydrates are low." So, the only time fat becomes an issue is when you combine it with the consumption of a large amount of carbohydrates. Cut the carbs down and the supposedly negative effects of eating fat, even saturated fat, are negated. And that's a fact, Jack! Foulds began developing the product while the low-fiber Atkins diet was all the rage, out of the company's conviction that pasta, as a slow-burning complex carbohydrate, had a place in healthy diets. "With all the focus on the Atkins diet, we saw the mass of confused consumers," Bradley said. What dieters wanted most, he was convinced, was to eat better and lose weight. "We thought long and hard about the landscape, and we came to the decision that we didn't believe in low carb," he said. Instead of jumping on the bandwagon, the company took the opposite tack. In this column about a pasta company surviving the low-carb craze, they describe the Atkins diet as "low-fiber." Hmmm, that's strange because Dr. Atkins himself always advocated eating plenty of fiber for satiety and to stay regular. It's an issue I addressed in my blog post "Allow Your Bowel To Shake, Rattle, & Roll." Trackback(0)
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