Tag: low carb diet

  • Low-Carb Diet: Should You Try It

    Low-Carb Diet: Should You Try It

    It’s no wonder that confusion reigns when it comes to the worth and reliability of low-carb diets after all the conflicting studies and confusing interpretations of the information. It seems like debates are popping up everywhere!

    No matter if it’s Atkins, South Beach, or some other low-carb plan, there are approximately 30 million Americans are on a low-carb diet.

    Supporters contend that the large amount of carbohydrates in our diet has led to increased problems with obesity, diabetes, and other health situations. On the other hand, some attribute obesity and related health problems to overeating calories and lack of physical activity. They also express concern that without grains, fruits, and vegetables in low-carbohydrate diets may lead to deficiencies of some key nutrients, including vitamin C, fiber, folic acid, and many minerals.

    It is already known that any diet, whether high or low in carbohydrates, can produce meaningful weight loss during the early stages of the diet. Keep in mind, the key to a diet being successful is in being able to lose weight on a permanent basis.

    Let’s see if we can expose some mystery about low-carb diets. Following is a listing of some related points taken from recent studies and scientific literature.

    Point 1 – Some Differences Between Low-Carb Diets

    There are many famous diets created to lower carbohydrate consumption. Lowering total carbohydrates in the diet means that protein and fat will take up a proportionately greater amount of the total caloric intake.

    A low carbohydrate diet like the Atkins Diet restricts carbohydrates to a point where the body becomes ketogenic (a high-fat, low-carbohydrate diet that includes normal amounts of protein). Other low-carb diets like the Zone and Life Without Bread are less confined. Some, like Sugar Busters, announce-only to eliminate sugars and foods that elevate blood sugar levels excessively.

    Point 2 – What We Know about Low-Carb Diets

    +Close to all the studies to date have been small with a diversity of research objectives.

    Carbohydrates, caloric intake, diet duration, and participant characteristics are wide-ranged greatly. Most of the studies to date have two things in common, none of the research studies had people in the study with an average age of over 53 and none of the controlled studies lasted more than 90 days.

    +The results on older adults and long-term results are scarce. Many diet studies fail to keep track of the amount of exercise, and therefore caloric use, while people in the study are dieting. This helps to explain the variances between studies.

    +If you lose weight on a low-carb diet it is a function of the calorie intake and length of the diet, and not with a reduced amount of carbohydrates.

    +There is very little evidence on the long-range safety of low-carb diets. Even though the medical community has concerns, no short-term bad effects have been found with cholesterol, glucose, insulin, and blood-pressure levels among the people in the study on the diets. Because of the short period of the studies, the adverse effects may not show up. Losing weight typically leads to improvement in these levels, and this may offset an increase caused by a high-fat diet. The over-all weight changes for low-carb and other types of diets are similar.

    +Most low-carb diets can cause ketosis. Nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and confusion are some potential consequences. When first starting a low-carb diet some fatigue and constipation may be met and these symptoms usually disappear quickly.

    +Some report that you can have more calories when on a low-carb diet. Remember a calorie is a calorie no matter what you intake. When the study is not closely supervised variations will result from people cheating in the study on many factors of the study.

    There are three important factors I would like to re-emphasize:

    1. The overall success rate for low-carb and other types of diets are similar.

    2. A small amount of information exists on the long-term efficacy and safety of low-carb diets despite their huge popularity,

    3. Dieters usually experience boredom with a strict version of the low-carb diet and are not able to stay on diets of low-carb food.

    After observing the subject, a more severe and controlled study is needed on a long-range basis. The ketosis produced is abnormal and stressful metabolic state. The results may cause more problems than it solved.

    By picking a reliable diet you will benefit over a lifetime of proper eating and not a weight loss quickie.

    An excellent rule of thumb is to look at the diet long-range and see if you can see yourself still on that diet after a couple of weeks. However, by following a diet with fat, carbohydrates, protein and other nutrients in moderation may be the best way to go and a little more exercise won’t hurt either.

  • Staying Fit With a Low-Carb, High-Protein Diet

    Staying Fit With a Low-Carb, High-Protein Diet

    The low carb, high-protein diet became very popular due to the promotion of the ever-popular Atkins Diet Craze. This diet is very popular because there is no calorie counting involved, and many foods that many people love to eat are allowed on the diet. (think bacon)

    The Atkins diet is a high-protein diet, which means that weight loss during this diet will not result in lost muscle mass since protein is the main nutrient needed for maintaining a healthy muscle tone. This diet basically eliminates carbohydrates, which are simple sugars or foods that break down into simple sugars. These serve as empty calories in your diet, providing no nutrients yet many calories.

    While we won’t cover the Atkins diet here, we can give you basics of the high-protein, low-carb diet.

    First, let us identify carbohydrates. Sugar, including powdered sugar, granulated white sugar, brown sugar, or any type of sugar you can think of, is the main carbohydrate that you would need to eliminate.

    All types of pastas count as carbohydrates, meaning all noodles and spaghetti products must be eliminated. Starches of any type, such as white rice, potatoes, and potato chips, need to be eliminated.

    Cereals are mostly carbohydrates and should be avoided entirely during the diet phase. Because of the low-carb craze, there are many low-carb options of sodas, milk, ice cream, bread, beer, and wine available in the average supermarket. If you do consume these, be sure to do so only occasionally and in moderation, even if it is a low-carb type.

    Beware of foods that contain hidden sugars, like bacon, barbecue sauce, ketchup, salad dressing, cough syrup, and fruit juice. As strange as it may seem, fruits and fruit juices should be eliminated while in the weight loss phase of this diet, as they are nearly pure carbohydrates. Anything made with flour needs to be eliminated during the weight loss phase since as mentioned earlier they are high in carbohydrates.

    Staying Fit With a Low-Carb, High-Protein Diet

     

    So with all the things you must eliminate, what can you eat?

    Well, the good news is that you can eat all meats, fish, poultry, and seafood, except prepared meats like bacon and honey, baked ham, which are high in sugar. Skip the bread and have meat and salad, or meat in your salad.

    Eggs are very low-carb friendly, but be sure to skip the mayonnaise or salad dressing unless it is low-carb type mayonnaise or dressing.

    Any type of vegetable is fine, but be sure to realize that when making that salad that tomatoes are actually a fruit, and you want to limit your consumption of them at least during the weight loss phase.

    Choose brown rice as your starch replacement, as it is low in carbohydrates comparatively to potatoes, bread, or white rice.

    Cheese is good in limited amounts, as this is a high-protein, low-carb food. Butter and cream can be used but should be consumed in limited amounts. One complex carbohydrate that is good is fiber, as it does not break down into simple sugar, and helps the body with elimination. Further, fiber fills you up quickly without adding significant calories, so hunger pangs are fought off successfully.

    Staying Fit With a Low-Carb, High-Protein Diet

    Finally, make sure you are drinking at least eight 8-ounce glasses of water a day minimum in addition to any other liquid you may consume. Dehydration often masquerades as hunger and causes overeating. Of course, again exercise is a necessary and vital part of your diet plan, which we will cover in the next section on exercise.

    Once you lose the weight that you set out to lose, the weight loss phase of your diet is over. Of course keep in mind that you are making lifestyle changes, not going on fad or binge diets. This means that you will not go back to your old eating habits. Instead, you will introduce certain foods back into your diet in moderation. For example, you may add a couple of strips of bacon once a week to your meal plan.

    You can enjoy small portions of deserts of any kind, simply in moderation. It is best to avoid soft drinks altogether or opt for the low-carb type permanently. If you do introduce any other carbohydrate-laden foods, be sure to do so only at one meal, and in small portions.

    Reducing carbohydrates will become a lifestyle to you when following this plan, one is very likely to boost your overall energy level and help you keep the weight off.

    Staying Fit With a Low-Carb, High-Protein Diet

    If you’ve enjoyed this article on low carb, high-protein eating plan, leave us a comment. We’d love to read tips on what has worked for you best. You can contact me with any questions or comments as well.

  • How Safe Are Low Carb Diets?

    How Safe Are Low Carb Diets?

    Whether you’re in a grocery store, a restaurant or just watching the commercials on TV during your favorite show, you are bombarded with ads and special menus singing the praises of the virtues of the low carb diet. This low carb craze has virtually swept the western world and has dieters everywhere seeking out low carb this and low carb that with many reporting weight loss as a result!!!

    This is great news, right? Finally, an easy diet plan that makes you lose weight and you can eat lots of food as long as they have almost no carbs in them!!! But have we really struck gold, or have we simply struck fools gold? Is the idea of eating a low carb diet for weight loss really a good idea or are there any side effects that may come with these diets that adversely affect our health?

    How Safe Are Low Carb Diets?

    Consider this, many people want something for nothing, and this way of thinking also applies to those looking to lose weight but unfortunately, there is no miracle substitute to good sound nutritional practices. Our society is one that values quick fixes which is why the low carb diet plan is a perfect fit for this society’s way of thinking. This is what makes it so appealing.

    It is true that a large amount of weight will be lost as glycogen (stored carbohydrate) depletes in the muscles and liver, but this weight is from water, not fat loss which is not good for body composition or overall health. It is also true that the body will rely on free fatty acids for fuel when muscle glycogen is depleted, but the body will rely much more on amino acids (protein) from the breakdown of lean (muscle) tissue as well so while you may burn fat, you will also burn more muscle as well and remember, your heart is also a muscle! In addition to this, those on a carb-restricted diet have lower energy levels and shorter time to fatigue during physical activity which means any activity will likely be in shorter durations.

    The fact is you need carbohydrates for your brain, heart, and muscles as well as other vital organs. The main fuel of the brain and central nervous system is glucose, which is obtained most easily from carbohydrates. If carbohydrates remain unavailable for several days the body tries to conserve protein by producing an alternate fuel source known as ketones from the partial burning of fatty acids. As this breakdown continues, these ketones build in the blood causing a condition known as ketosis. Initial weight loss is not from fat but from water from the kidneys trying to rid the body of excess ketones.

    How Safe Are Low Carb Diets?

    Low carb diets make the blood more acidic, causing potentially serious and unwanted side effects like headaches, bad breath, dizziness, fatigue, and nausea. Also when carbohydrate stores are depleted in the body, the rate at which fat is metabolized is reduced meaning that carbohydrates are necessary for the ability to metabolize fat effectively. And keep this in mind, carbohydrates do not make you fat, calories, in general, make you fat so the most effective weight loss plan is simply to adjust your calorie intake to be in the right range for your own individual needs with the proper balance of nutrients.

    The fact is, just because you seem to notice a loss of overall body weight in the initial stages of a low carb diet doesn’t mean it is a good solid safe means of going about embarking on a weight loss venture. There is no substitute and there will never be a good substitute to a good sound nutritional plan coupled with a moderate exercise plan and making that plan a lifetime venture.

    How Safe Are Low Carb Diets?