| by Joseph Brasco, MD
[ Page 1 | Page 2
| References ]
Unfortunately,
the debate over the validity of this concept has primarily
been waged in the media and lay publications and not in
the scientific journals. Many of the popular books which
support this position are gimmicky, and often, lack adequate
scientific referencing. Yet, at their core is very important
concept -- limiting the intake of carbohydrates, (especially
as cereal grains and starches), will improve human health.
Some critics
claim that reduced carbohydrate diets are a fashion trend.
Well, this so called trend actually dates back some time.
Anthropological study of early hominids has concluded
that they lived as hunters-gathers. While nuts, seeds,
vegetation and fruit made up an important part of the
hunter- gather's diet, his mainstay was hunted or scavenged
animal prey.
More recent
evaluations of early man's nutritional patterns by Dr.
Loren Cordain, estimate that as much as 65 percent of
his calories were derived from animal products. Granted,
early man was not eating corn fed Angus beef from Jewel,
but he was eating the meat, the organs and the bones of
his prey. Essentially, a high protein/fat diet. It was
a mere 10,000 years ago that man began exploiting an agricultural
niche.
This transition
was made due to decreasing population of large game prey
and an increasing population of humans. While undeniable
good has transcended this dietary shift, i.e., growth
of the human population, establishment of permanent settlements,
the inception of civilization itself - man's health may
have suffered in the transition. Generally, in most parts
of the world, whenever cereal-based diets were first adopted
as a staple food replacing the primarily animal-based
diets of hunter-gatherers, there was a characteristic
reduction in stature, a reduction in life span, an increase
in infant mortality, an increased incidence of infectious
disease, an increase in diseases of nutritional deficiencies
(i.e., iron deficiency, pellagra), and an increase in
the number of dental caries and enamel defects.
In a review
of 51 references examining human populations from around
the earth and from differing chronologies, as they transitioned
from hunter-gathers to farmers, one investigator concluded
that there was an overall decline in both the quality
and quantity of life. There is now substantial empirical
and clinical evidence to indicate that many of these deleterious
changes are directly related to the predominately cereal-based
diets of these early farmers. Since 99.99% of our genes
were formed before the development of agriculture, from
a biological perspective, we are still hunter-gathers.
Thus, our diet
should reflect the sensibilities of this nutritional niche:
lean meats; fish; seafood; low glycemic vegetables and
fruit, (modern agriculture has significantly increased
the sugar and starch content of vegetables and fruits
over their Paleolithic counterparts), nuts and seeds -
the evolutionary diet.
Glycemic Index
The term glycemic
index, (GI) (a qualitative indicator of carbohydrate's
ability to raise blood glucose levels), has seen a lot
of mileage among the many non-ketogenic low carbohydrate
diets. Most of these diets attribute the rise in obesity
to the over consumption of high glycemic carbohydrates,
and the subsequent over production of insulin. While this
may be an oversimplification, there is growing evidence
to support a relationship between GI and non-insulin dependent
diabetes (NIDDM), and obesity. In a prospective study
of 65,000 US women, researchers were able to demonstrate
that the dietary GI was positively associated with the
risk of NIDDM. The authors concluded that diets with a
high GI increase insulin demand and thus cause hyperinsulinemia
among patients with NIDDM, as well as in normal subjects.
If chronic, this hyperinsulinemia can increase the risk
for, as well as exacerbate NIDDM.
The issue of
carbohydrates and insulin has more recently been addressed
in a review article by Grundy. Grundy states that because
secretion by pancreatic beta-cells is glucose sensitive,
a high intake of carbohydrates has been reported to produce
higher post prandial insulin levels. Moreover, it is possible
that repeated stimulation of a high insulin output by
high-carbohydrate diets could hasten an age-related decline
in insulin secretion and lead to an earlier onset of NIDDM.
However, chronic
hyperinsulinemia is not only associated with NIDDM, but
is also related to a host of other medical conditions
jointly known as Syndrome X. The constellation of disorders
comprising Syndrome X include hypertriglyceridemia, increased
LDL cholesterol, decreased HDL cholesterol, hypertension,
hyperuricemia and obesity. If high GI carbohydrates in
fact contribute to chronic hyperinsulinemia as multiple
studies suggest, they are likely to be causative of these
other conditions as well. In addition to their role in
hyperinsulinemia, studies have also linked high GI foods
with overeating.
One study found
an inverse relationship between satiety and both glycemic
and insulin index. In another study,it was found that
voluntary energy intake after a high GI meal was 53% greater
than after a medium GI meal and was 81% greater than after
the low GI meal. The authors concluded that a high GI
meal promotes excessive food intake in obese subjects.
The literature clearly points to a role of high GI carbohydrates
in the development of insulin resistance and its subsequent
disorders.
However, GI
is obviously not the whole story. One researcher examined
the insulin demand generated by isoenergetic portions
of common foods. While some of the results were predictable,
i.e., the fact that glucose and insulin sources were highly
correlated, some were unexpected, i.e., some protein-based
foods induced as much insulin secretion as did some carbohydrate
rich foods. At first glance, these results seem confounding.
However, if one looks at the broader function of insulin,
they are consistent.
Insulin is
not just responsible for glucose disposal, but for storage
and uptake of multiple nutrients. Whether these other
nutrients can result in a chronic hyperinsulinemic state,
as seen with high GI diets, is not known; it is unlikely
due to their compensatory effect on glucagon. The other
major difference between the insulin response of other
nutrients versus carbohydrate is their effect on blood
glucose.
While protein
and fat stimulate insulin response, their effect on glucose
is minimal. This lack of effect on blood sugar is more
than trivial difference. It actually may be the glycosylation
of end organs (especially the pancreatic beta-cells) that
ultimately leads to NIDDM and its associated conditions.
Thus, while a hyperinsulinemic state is not desirable
for human health under any circumstance, the combination
of hyperinsulinemia with impaired glucose homeostasis
is likely to prove even more deliterious.
While the current
literature would support limiting the consumption of high
GI foods, GI certainly does not provide the final answer.
If one was to follow this concept literally (as some popular
books suggest) one could argue that potato chips at a
GI of 50-59% were more beneficial than carrots at a GIU
of 90-99%.
A better way
of looking at carbohydrates is to return to the principles
of the "evolutionary diet." Robert Crayhon, M.S., author
and champion of the "Paleolithic diet", divides carbohydrates
into two basic groups, paleocarbs and neocarbs. Paleocarbs
include vegetables, fruits and perhaps tubers. Neocarbs
(carbohydrates introduced within the last 10,000 years
or less), include grains, legumes, and especially flour
products, which did not exist for most of human history.
The worst of
the neocarbs include sugar and white flour products. If
we follow the simple guidelines of restricting ourselves
to paleocarbs, we will in general be eating fiber rich,
nutrient dense, low glycemic carbohydrates, the best nature
has to offer.
Epidemiological
Data
Another argument
against carbohydrate restriction is based on epidemiological
evidence, and the Pima Indians are frequently cited. The
Arizona Pima Indians have received the attention of the
medical community because of their prodigious rates of
obesity, which is nearly 70% among the adult population.
Along with the reputation of being one of the most obese
people known, the Arizona Pima has a rate of diabetes
8 times the national average with nearly 50% of the adult
population over 35 afflicted with this condition.
In spite of
innumerable studies, examining the Pima from every imaginable
vantage point, there has been no defining discovery explaining
the Pima's plight. One hypothesis favored by Eric Ravussn,
Ph. D, is that after generations of living in the desert,
the only Pima who survived famine and drought were those
highly adept at storing fat in times of plenty. These
"thrifty" genes which once ensured the Pima's' survival
are now at the root of his demise.
Although it
is not known for certain what metabolic processes these
"thrifty" genes control, insulin resistance and glucose
homeostasis are thought to be at the heart of the matter.
Since preagricultural, man's diet was primarily derived
from animal sources (protein/fat), an insulin resistant
genotype would have minimized glucose utilization and
thus, proven to be of an evolutionary advantage. As primitive
peoples have become acculturated and have assumed a modern
diet, the constant supply of highly refined, high glycemic
index carbohydrates has resulted in postprandial hyperinsulinemia
and the subsequent diseases associated with this condition
i.e. obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, etc.
The Arizona
Pima's diet prior to acculturation was essentially that
of a hunter-gather with some subsistence farming: (chollacatus
buds, honey mesquite, poverty weed, prickly pears, mule
deer, white-winged dove, black-tailed jackrabbit, squawfish,
and they raised wheat, squash and beans). However, by
the end of the second World War, the Pima had almost entirely
left their traditional lifestyle and adopted the typical
American diet.
There are many
problems with the typical American diet, and to blame
the Pima's situation on just one element of that diet
would be disingenuous. However, given the current scientific
and anthropological studies, one could suggest that the
high availability of sugar and highly refined, high glycemic
carbohydrates (i.e. neocarbs), are at the core of the
Pima's health crisis. It could also be extrapolated that,
while the Pima's "thrifty" genes may work at a more accelerated
pace, it is the same set of genes interacting with the
same diet and producing the same results in the average
American.
In 1991, the
Pima's story became even more interesting. Peter Bennett
FRCP, the lead epidemiologist studying the Arizona Pima,
discovered in Sierra Madre, Mexico, the remnants of a
tribe that once comprised the Southern half of the Pima
Nation. However, unlike their Northern brothers, the Mexican
Pima remained, in general, unacculterated and living a
traditional lifestyle. Also, unlike their northern counterparts,
the Mexican Pimas were not obese, nor did they share in
the Arizona Pima's high rate of diabetes and degenerative
diseases. This dichotomy has been termed the "Pima Paradox."
Since the Mexican Pima consume a diet comprised mostly
of beans, potatoes, corn tortillas and the occasional
animal product, (i.e. chicken) , this has often been used
as the epidemiological case study for the benefit of high
carbohydrate diets in obesity management.
However, two
issues confound this example. First, on average, the Mexican
Pima's have 23 to 26 hours/week of occupational physical
activity versus the Arizona Pima's 5 hours or less. Certainly,
such high levels of activity could mitigate the hyperinsulinemic
effects of the Mexican Pima's diet. The second issue is
the "Enigma" within the "Paradox". Although the Mexican
Pima does not have the health issues of the Arizona Pima,
they still have a prevalence rate of diabetes at 6.4%
(approximately 1.5x greater that the non Pima Mexicans),
and a 13% incidence of obesity among the adult population.
While these
numbers are impressive compared to the US population,
and stellar compared to the Pima population, the question
remains why should an essentially unacculturated population
performing on average 23-26 hours of physical labor per
week have any incidence of diabetes or obesity. When modern
day hunter-gatherers were studied by anthropologists,
incidence of these conditions were non existent, even
among the eldest members of tribe. The "evolutionary diet"
model would thus suggest, in spite of their improved health
over the Arizona Pimas, the Mexican Pimas are still consuming
a less than optimal diet.
Although conclusions
drawn from epidemiological data can sometimes be misleading,
the real message that can be taken from the Pimas is that
as a species we have proclivity towards obesity, a proclivity
that will vary based on our genetic stock. This genetic
predisposition, while multifactorial in nature, probably
centers around insulin resistance and glucose homeostasis.
Since our preagricultural ancestors did not have ready
access to simple carbohydrates, fats were the preferred
source of caloric energy, and glucose conservation was
evolutionarily advantageous.
In modern times,
the detrimental combination of low physical activity,
hypercaloric intake, and over consumption of neocarbs
is at the root of our obesity crisis. A return to an evolutionary
based diet - lean meats, seafood, fish, vegetables, fruits,
(raw) nuts and seeds and moderate physical activity, will
ultimately be the cure.
Health Risk
Associated with reduced Carbohydrate Intake
Another argument
against carbohydrate restriction focuses on the purported
health risk of this dietary approach. Of the three macronutrients,
protein, fat and carbohydrate, it is only carbohydrate
that is nonessential to the human diet. Humans can exist
for extraordinarily long periods of time without carbohydrate
consumption as long as essential protein and fat needs
are met. It is thus perplexing why nutritional dogma ascribes
so many risks to the restriction of this non-essential
nutrient.
Ketosis
Ketosis is
a natural physiologic state induced during prolonged states
of decreased glucose availability. It is triggered by
severe coloric restriction or when carbohydrate intake
falls below 20-30 grams, (most of the current low carbohydrate
diets are nowhere near this level of restriction).
In ketosis,
a set of elaborate metabolic processes occur which have
the net result of decreasing insulin secretion, increasing
glucagon secretion, switching off glycolysis, turning
on lipolysis, switching muscles from glucose to almost
entirely fatty acids for fuel, and ultimately providing
ketone bodies (produced in the liver), markedly diminishing
the need for glucose by the brain in particular and the
body in general.
Ketosis was
an absolutely vital survival mechanism for early man.
It allowed him to survive periods of starvation as well
as long periods of carbohydrate deprivation. Despite the
role ketosis plays in normal human physiology, its' modern
application has often been portrayed with multiple negative
health connotations. However, both scientific and epidemiological
data has failed to justify these concerns. The ketogenic
diet has been used for nearly 70 years to treat refractory
seizures in the pediatric population. Multiple recent
studies have described nutritionally balanced, food varied
versions of this diet.
One investigator
looked at the health profiles of adults who had been treated
during childhood with ketogenic diet. He found no evidence
of adverse effects on cardiovascular function, including
arteriosclerosis, hypertension or cardiac abnormalities.
Blood cholesterol determinations were performed on these
adults and all were normal. These studies thus fail to
reveal any short term complication or long term sequelae
associated with ketogenic diets.
In the mid
twenties to late thirties, the famed anthropologist V.
Stefansson chronicled the life and culture of the Eskimo
in a series of books and journal articles. Of the many
observations made by Stefansson, he was most intrigued
with their diet and health. In spite of a nearly 100%
animal based diet, the Eskimo people enjoyed an excellent
state of well being and a freedom from many western diseases.
This observation
was greeted with a high degree of skepticism in a scientific
community that was becoming increasingly hostile toward
the role of protein and fat in the American diet. To silence
his critics, Steffansson devised a study whereby he would
consume an all meat diet for one year. Under observation
at Bellvue Hospital in New York City, Stefansson and a
colleague did in fact consume for one year an all meat
diet. At years end, to the surprise of the scientific
community, both investigators were in excellent health.
They demonstrated weight loss with reduction in body fat,
normal kidney and liver function, and improvement in blood
lipids (within the limits of diagnostic testing of the
time).
The "Bellvue
ward study" created quite a stir in the scientific community
and was detailed in numerous articles appearing both in
popular and professional literature. Although long term
commentary cannot be made, this remarkable study certainly
speaks to the short term safety of a ketogenic diet. Ample
scientific, epidemologic and anthropological data exists
to support the general safety of a ketogenic diet. However,
this data does not exonerate all the modern inceptions
of this diet.
Traditional
cultures who consumed a largely animal based diet, derived
a great deal of their vitamins and nutrients by consuming
the organs, eyes, glands and gonads of their prey. Modern
ketotic diets are primarily based on common American foods,
i.e. meats, eggs and cheeses. They do not qualify the
source of animal products (i.e. salmon versus bacon),
and are usually overloaded with salt. In general, these
diets are only concerned about limiting carbohydrate intake
without overall regard to food quality.
In the most
popular version of the ketogenic diet, Dr. Atkins New
Diet Revolution, Dr. Atkin's writes "at the other end
of the spectrum is a convenience food that sounds terrible
fatty, but in fact, contains nearly none. Those are the
maximizers of crispness - fried pork rinds - the zero
carbohydrate consolation prize for corn or potato chip
addicts. Virtually all the fat has been rendered off,
leaving you with the protein matrix that held the pork
fat together. Your pate, sour-cream based dips and guacamole
find an exceedingly crisp and comfortable home atop a
fried pork rind.
In spite of
their potential physiologic benefits, the modern ketogenic
diets with their unbalanced, nutrient poor and often absurd
dietary suggestion are difficult to support. However,
ketogenic diet based on evolutionary appropriate foods
would be interesting to pursue in clinical practice. Lack
of fruits, vegetables and grains Aside from the ketogenic
diets, most other reduced carbohydrate programs allow
for the ample consumption of vegetables and the modest
consumption of low glycemic fruit, (the best sources of
nutrients and phytonutrients available to man).
Of the major
carbohydrate sources mentioned, only grain is heavily
restricted. Although present diet dogma portrays grain
as the quintessential food source, (it is at the base
of the food pyramid after all), many nutritional scientist
have called this assertion into question. In a work of
prodigious proportions (342 literature citations), Dr.
Loren Cordain examines mans double edged relationship
with grain.
On one hand
man is utterly dependent upon grain as a primary caloric
source and yet grain may be at the core of many of our
common maladies. As would be predicted by the evolutionary
diet model, Dr. Cordain concludes that grain is biologically
novel to the diet of mankind as it was introduced as a
staple food only 10,000 years (or less) ago. Due to its
relatively recent introduction, our species has not fully
adapted physiologically to its digestion and metabolism.
In spite of
the impressive nutrient profiles of grain, the vitamins
and minerals often occur in forms that have low bioavaildality
to the human digestive tract. In addition to these poorly
utilizable nutrients, grain contains many secondary metabolic
components commonly categorized as anti-nutrients.
Anti-nutrients
are chemical compounds naturally occurring in grains,
which evolved to protect the plants from predators. Processing
and cooking does not not fully rid the grain of these
elements, thus making them prominent in our diet. Recent
scientific study has linked these anti-nutrients to a
number of negative biological consequences which include:
allergen based disorders; pancreatic hypertrophy and disruption
of the gut cell wall tight junctions (thus exposing the
systemic circulation to food allergens and gut flora).
One of the
most curious of these negative processors associated with
grain anti-nutrients is a phenomenon known as molecular
mimicry. Molecular mimicry is when a similarity of structure
is shared by products of dissimilar genes. When this phenomenon
occurs within the human body, the potential for developing
an autoimmune reaction is created. The main body of evidence
implicates viral and bacterial pathogens as initiators
of cross-reactivity and autoimmunity. However, there is
an emerging body of literature supporting the view that
dietary antigens including cereal grains may also induce
cross-reactivity and hence autoimmunity by virtue of peptide
structures homologous to those in the host.
The diseases
that may share this common origin are numerous and varied.
They may include everything from aphthous ulcers (canker
sores), to rheumatoid arthritis to non-insulin dependent
diabetes to multiple sclerosis. While many of these assertions
may seem preposterous to a society reared on grain, evolutionary
pressures would suggest otherwise. The primate gut was
initially adapted to both the nutritive and defensive
components of dicotyledonous plants rather that the nutritive
and defense components of mono- cotyledons cereal grains.
Consequently,
humans, like other primates, have had little evolutionary
experience in developing a physiology that can both fully
utilize and defend against the compounds which naturally
occur in cereal grains. So, while the motives for limiting
grains may be completely unrelated, many of the popular
incarnations of reduced carbohydrate diets may be paying
their readers a great - albeit - indirect service.
Increased Saturated
Fats
Of all our
nutritional mantras, the one most widely and emphatically
proclaimed is the relationship between saturated fats
and coronary artery disease. One would think a "fact"
so ingrained in our social psyche would be supported by
mountains of evidence. However, the reality is the data
to support the "diet-heart hypothesis" is flimsy at best
- non existent at worst. In an extensive review of existing
studies, Ravnskov came to the conclusion that, "Few observations
agree with the diet-heart idea, but a large number have
falsified most effectively.
Man's diet
possibly includes factors of importance to the vessels
or the heart, but there is little evidence that saturated
fatty acids as a group are harmful or that polyunsaturated
fatty acids as a group are beneficial." In a similar review,
Dr. Mary Enig was also unable to find a solid relationship
between saturated fat consumption and coronary artery
disease. She instead came to the conclusion that the inordinate
increase in trans fatty acid consumption was more likely
the causative factor.
When discussing
the "dietary heart hypothesis", the work of Dean Ornish,
M.D., is often cited as clinical evidence for the efficacy
of dietary fat reduction. However, while Ornish is a major
proponent of the "low fat diet", in his studies a number
of coronary artery risk factors are addressed, in addition
to the dietary changes. In Ornish's work, study participants
underwent vigorous lifestyle changes, which included smoking
cessation, stress management, exercise and a low-fat (near
vegan) diet (the only animal products allowed were egg
whites and one cup of non-fat milk or yogurt per day).
After following
these changes for one year, the experimental group did
show an overall regression of atherosclerotic plaque,
Ornish's study is extraordinarily important because he
was able to demonstrate, in quantifiable terms to the
medical community, that lifestyle changes could be as
powerful as drugs in managing a serious disease. However,
to extrapolate that this study proves the value of the
low fat diet is fallacious.
Ornish manipulates
four separate variables in his study, all of which have
purported association with cardiovascular disease. To
suggest that any one variable or combination of variables
is more important than the other cannot be concluded from
Ornish's data. Even if diet alone is examined, there are
multiple variables within the diet, that in and of themselves
could have significance. Was it the omission of trans
fatty acids (which have been linked to cardiovascular
disease)? Was it the increase of antioxidants provided
by the intake of fresh fruits and vegetables? Was it the
fact that the experimental group experienced an average
loss of 22 lbs?
Again, to conclude
that it was the "low fat diet" which was primarily responsible
for the experimental group's success (as the study is
often interpreted), is quite disingenuous. A factor often
overlooked in Ornish's work is the effect of low fat/high
carbohydrate diets on lipid profiles. While it is true,
the experimental group had an overall reduction in cholesterol,
there was a concomitant reduction in HDL cholesterol with
an increase in triglycerides.
Numerous recent
studies have verified this dietary effect. Of these current
studies, Berglund specifically looked at the response
of the reduction in dietary total and saturated fats and
HDL cholesterol subtypes. The study demonstrated a decrease
in dietary total and saturated fat resulted in a significant
decrease in HDL2 and HDL2b cholesterol concentrations.
The authors concluded that the dietary changes suggested
to be prudent for a large segment of the population will
primarily affect the concentrations of the most prominent
antiatherogenic HDL subpopulations.
Although definitive
conclusions for the general population may be premature,
in individuals demonstrating evidence of hyperinsulinemia
and dyslipidemia (i.e. - Syndrome X) carbohydrate restriction
is imperative for improved lipid profiles. In nutrition,
as well as in life, balance is always the key. Nowhere
is balance more crucial than in the discussion of dietary
fats.
No diet, whether
it be high fat - low fat (or anything in-between), if
it promotes imbalances in fatty acid profiles, will in
the long run have negative health consequences. In the
mid '50s, the biochemist, anthropologist, and explorer
Hugh Sinclair suggested an alternative explanation for
the relationship between dietary fat and cardiovascular
disease.
Sinclair noted
that several people groups existed that consumed relatively
high amounts of fat and yet were free of heart disease.
Sinclair detailed the dietary habits of the Eskimos (previously
discussed); the Masai people of Kenya who ate large quantities
of ruminant milk and meat; and Jamaicans who ate large
amounts of saturated fat in the form of coconut oil. All
three groups, all consuming high fat diets, were relatively
free from heart disease.
Sinclair suggested
that the polyunsaturated profiles of these diets were
protective, and concluded that the rise in cardiovascular
disease was more related to their exclusion from the diet
rather than the inclusion of saturated fats or cholesterol.
Since Sinclair's day, our biochemical understanding of
fat has increased exponentially. We now realize it is
not just the polyunsaturated content of the diet, but
the ratio of N-6 to N-3 polyunsaturates that may ultimately
determine health.
Both dietary
extremes discussed fail to introduce balance in this ratio.
High carbohydrate diet due to their high grain and plant
content will ultimately be low in N-3 fats (especially
long chain N-3 fats - i.e. EPA/DHA), thus unbalancing
the N-6/N-3 ratio. Low carbohydrate diets, in their popular
form, rely heavily on commercially raised grain-fed meats
and poultry (the fatty acid profile of the meat from wild
game, free range beef and poultry have a significantly
higher N-3 to N-6 ratio), eggs (free range hens also make
better eggs) and cheeses.
A diet based
on these foods will also greatly unbalance the N6/N3 ratio.
Although the precise ratio remains controversial, the
N6/N3 ratio should probably be in the range of 4-3/1 to
optimize human health, western diets rich in vegetable
oils, cereal grains and grain fed live stock, drive this
ratio to an unprecedented 50-10:1. This imbalance may
have implications in a host of diseases, including hyperinsulinemia,
artherosclerosis and tumorgenesis.
When the diets
of hunter-gatherer populations are studied, authors have
concluded that their N6/N3 ratio varied between 4:1 to
1:1. This ratio appears to be biologically optimal. Based
on these considerations, investigators, have advocated
a return to dietary ratios of ancestral humans. A diet
based on lean meats (wild game or free range livestock),
fish, raw nuts and seed, vegetables, low glycemic fruit
(paleocarbs) - "an evolutionary diet" - not only will
be helpful in the management of obesity, but in a host
of other common western diseases, including cardiovascular
disease.
Dietary Protein
and Cardiovascular Disease
Multiple recent
studies have demonstrated the benefit of dietary fats
(especially N-3 polyunsaturates and monounsaturates) in
cardiovascular disease and in the reduction of cardiovascular
risk factors. A more recent study trend has examined the
possible beneficial role of dietary protein.
Wolfe has published
numerous articles demonstrating the positive effects of
the isocaloric substitution of protein for carbohydrate
on lipid profiles. His studies have demonstrated a decreased
LDL-C, an increased HDL-C, and reduction of triglycerides,
thus reversing the dietary effects of increased carbohydrates.
Wolfe states that substitution of carbohydrate for fat
in the diet results in a reduction in HDL apoprotein transport
rates along with increased catabolism of apolipoprotein
A-1.
The decreases
in plasma VLDL and LDL resulting from substitution of
protein for carbohydrate in the diet may relate to either
increased catabolism or decreased production. Thus, according
to Wolfe's work, the simple dietary substitution of protein
for carbohydrate could have profound health benefits.
Wolfe's data
has recently been validated by Hu. In this study the dietary
habits of over 80,000 women were examined. After controlling
for variables, high protein intakes were associated with
lowered risk of ischemic heart disease. Both animal and
vegetable protein sources were protective. This inverse
association was noted in women on both low fat or high
fat diets. Wolfe's and Hu's work both indicate that dietary
protein has cardioprotective properties independent of
those of dietary fat.
Given the multiple
health benefits ascribed to N-3 polyunsaturates and the
evolving data regarding dietary protein - fish may be
one of the best foods for human consumption. In a fascinating
piece of epidemiological work, Marcovina compared 2 racially
homogenous Bantu populations from Tanzania. The only appreciable
difference between the groups was their dietary habits.
The Bantu living closer to the shore had a predominantly
fish based diet, while the inland Bantu consumed an essentially
vegan diet (a diet devoid of animal products ). When plasma
lipoprotein (a) (an independent cardiovascular risk factor)
levels were compared, those among the fish eating population
were 40% lower. This suggests another cardioprotective
aspect of fish consumption.
In a recent
study by Mori, he demonstrated the inclusion of fish in
a weight loss program yielded greater results than either
fish consumption or weight loss alone in their obese subjects.
The experimental group in their study demonstrated improved
glucose, insulin and lipid metabolism, as well as greater
reductions in blood pressure, heart rate and weight loss
versus controls. This study suggests a novel approach
to the dietary management of obesity and NIDDM.
Perhaps the
most influential of the studies looking at the benefits
of fish, was the Diet and Reinfarction Trial (also known
as the DART trial). In this study, the authors demonstrated
that the addition of a modest amount of fish (2-3g of
EPA per week or the equivalent of 300g of fatty fish per
week) reduced post myocardial infarction mortality by
about 29% when compared to controls.
One of the
more interesting aspects of the study was that the control
group was instructed on the standard fat reduction diet
and on average had lower cholesterol levels than did the
experimental group. The authors theorized that the fish
oils had a favorable effect on clotting mechanisms and
blood platelets, as well as a potential anti-arrhythmic
effect on the ischemic heart. The results of this study
are profound, especially given the modest and otherwise
innocuous interventions undertaken.
Given the evidence
of the benefit of N-3 polyunsaturates, coupled with the
potential benefits of dietary protein, fish clearly is
a biologically superior food source. The isocaloric substitution
of fish for dietary carbohydrates is not only evolutionary
appropriate, by may have untoward health benefits from
weight control to improved glucose homeostasis to cardiovascular
disease prevention.
Risk of Osteoporosis
Of all the
potential negative side effects of dietary protein, the
issue of osteoporosis is perhaps the most difficult to
resolve. The literature is greatly divided on the topic,
and clear recommendations are hard to find. In a recent
study, Munger found that the intake of dietary protein,
specifically from animal sources was associated with a
reduced incidence of hip fractures in post menopausal
women.
In the articles'
discussion, a brief review of protein's controversial
role in osteoporosis was undertaken. In the studies showing
a potential benefit (as in the author's paper), it has
been theorized that dietary protein may strengthen bone
by its effect on the structure and function of bone-related
proteins.
In studies
demonstrating a negative effect, it has been argued that
dietary protein (especially in the form of animal based
protein) is a primary source of acid ash, which results
in the acidification of urine. In order to buffer the
urine and maintain acid-base homeostasis, calcium salts
are mobilized from the skeleton, resulting in a net calciuria.
Over time, this buffering of endogenous acids may contribute
to a progressive decline in skeletal mass and, ultimately,
lead to osteoporosis.
However, Wachman
and Bernstein, the two authors who originally postulated
this mechanism for osteoporosis, theorized that by increasing
the dietary alkaline ash this process could be halted.
In a study by Sebastian., he was able to reduce calicuria
and improve overall calcium/phosphorous balance by the
administration of potassium bicarbonate as a buffering
agent to postmenopausal women consuming an acid promoting
diet. The authors suggest that potassium bicarbonate could
be administered long-term as a novel means of preventing
and treating postmenopausal osteoporosis.
In a 4-year
longitudinal study by Tucker, he was able to demonstrate
that a greater bone mineral density was associated with
increased dietary potassium and magnesium levels, as well
as increased consumption of fruits and vegetables. The
authors concluded that this positive association was due
to the beneficial effects of potassium and magnesium on
calcium balance and bone metabolism, as well as the buffering
properties of increased alkaline ash in the form of fruits
and vegetables.
Given the divergent
nature of the theories, it is highly probable that both
have merit. With respect to protein's beneficial effects,
protein is certainly necessary for proper bone matrix
formation and metabolism. It is likely a chronic suboptimal
intake will jeopardize this function. One could conjecture
that the studies finding a negative association between
protein and osteoporosis have somehow highlighted this
aspect of the equation. Those studies finding a positive
association between protein and osteoporosis are probably
looking at the endogenous acid production issue.
In an article
by Remer, he calculated the potential renal acid load
(PRAL) of frequently consumed foods in order to help dietitians
design diets of varying urinary pH. On their list, animal
protein sources (as expected) were calculated to increase
PRAL. However, grain products, legumes and dairy products
(especially hard cheeses) also increased PRAL. In fact
, according to Remer's data brown rice had a greater PRAL
than any of the meat products examined (with the exception
of canned corned beef - if you want to call that meat).
Perhaps the
most ironic of all, was Remer's finding that cheeses had
the highest of the calculated PRALs. Parmesan, cheddar,
and processed American cheese had PRALs almost 2 times
any meat product. In light of Remer's data, the relationship
of protein and osteoporosis cannot fully be determined
without addressing the total dietary PRAL. The type of
protein being consumed (lean meats vs. Processed meats
vs. Cheese) and the other foods in the diet are likely
to significantly affect the study's outcome.
The protein
osteoporosis controversy was addressed in a review article
by Spencer. According to the author, numerous studies
have been published on the calcium-losing effect of protein.
However, several aspects of the study conditions have
to be considered in the interpretation of the results.
Some of these are the type of protein, such as purified
proteins (which seem not to promote calciuria): the duration
of the study (there may be a transient increase in calciuria
followed by a normalization or reduction); whether the
phosphorous (which has an independent calcium sparing
effect) intake remained the same, was increased, or decreased;
whether the diets were under strict control or with outpatient
volunteers; whether the protein intake was changed from
a low to a high protein intake or was changed from a normal
to a high protein intake; and whether excessively high
protein intakes were used.
All these factors
affect urinary calcium excretion during high protein consumption.
After reviewing the available data, based on the aforementioned
criteria, the authors concluded, "to our knowledge, no
convincing data have been published showing that a high
protein diet, using complex proteins for prolonged periods
of time under strictly controlled dietary conditions,
causes calcium loss."
It is quite
obvious that the role of dietary protein in calcium homeostasis
is complex and multifactorial in nature. However, given
the work of Remer, it may actually be the net PRAL of
the diet that is most important in influencing the development
of osteoporosis, rather than the diet's absolute protein
content. Since most of the current low carbohydrate diets
encourage the ample consumption of vegetables, this is
likely to offset any potential acidifying effects of increased
dietary protein.
In fact, given
most individuals do not consume enough vegetables and
fruits, these diets are likely to promote better acid-base
balance then the average American diet. Unlike the more
modified low carbohydrate diets, modern ketogenic diets
may pose a risk for calciuria since they rely heavily
on animal protein, cheeses, and cured meats, and are usually
not salt restricted (the Cl ion- not the Nat ion - can
also cause a renal acid load and subsequently calciuria).
However, since
most people are in ketosis for only a short period of
time (after which they are theoretically supposed to transition
into a modified low carbohydrate diet), it is unlikely
that these diets will significantly contribute to an individual's
overall risk for osteoporosis.
Kidney and
Liver Damage
While it is
generally accepted that people with pre existing kidney
and liver disease will benefit from some level of protein
restriction there is no data to support proposition that
increased dietary protein will actually cause kidney or
liver damage. In a study by Blum, he examined the kidney
function of a group of healthy individuals consuming an
ad lib. high-protein diet, as compared to a group of healthy
vegetarians (Isn't that an oxymoron?). At the study's
end, the authors concluded that protein does not affect
kidney function in normal kidneys, and it does not influence
the deterioration of kidney function with age.
The relationship
of protein and the liver is somewhat more complex. Although
there is no evidence that increased dietary protein will
cause permanent liver damage, there is an actual dietary
"protein ceiling". According to Rudman there is a lever
at which dietary protein intake can exceed the liver's
ability to metabolize it to the urea, thus leading to
a build up of intermediary metabolites. These metabolites
can subsequently lead to a toxic state in the affected
individual.
The level of
protein at which this will occur varies, but it is thought
to be possible when protein makes up 30-40% of the calories
in an eucaloric diet (the percent calories from protein
can be higher in a hypocaloric diet).
"Rabbit Starvation"
(a term coined by V. Stefansson to describe the phenomenon
of excessive dietary protein) often occurred among explorers
who would live for long periods of time on extremely low
fat small game animals (i.e. rabbits). The condition was
marked by nausea, vomiting, weight loss and fatigue. "Rabbit
Starvation" was reversible when the percentage of daily
calories from protein began to drop. Although the "Rabbit
Starvation" phenomenon could effect an individual consuming
a ketogenic diet, it is highly improbable.
In general,
if one is consuming commercially available meats (even
chicken), the percentage of calories from fat would be
too high to induce this condition. In the modified low
carbohydrate diets, due to the varied food sources, the
risk of protein toxicity, for all practical purposes,
is non-existent.
Conclusion
A critical
reading of the current literature certainly supports the
dietary trends of decreased carbohydrate intake (especially
of neocarbs), increased protein intake, and increased
fat intake (especially of monounsaturates and N-3 polyunsaturates).
The data that supports these contentions comes from a
wide spectrum of disciplines, including the basic sciences,
medical science, epidemiology, and anthropology.
The one dietary
program that addresses these principles in full, is the
so called "evolutionary diet." The modern inception of
this prehistoric lifestyle would favor the consumption
of lean meats (preferably wild game or non-grain fed,
free-range domesticated animals), fish, seafood, vegetables,
fruits, raw nuts, and seed. Notably absent from this dietary
genre are dairy products, cereal grains, beans, legumes
and concentrated sweets (except for perhaps the occasional
foray into raw honey!).
Adherence to
these dietary guidelines will not only address obesity,
but may also prove helpful in the management of everything
from NIDDM to diseases of autoimmunity to cardiovascular
illnesses. The guidelines are broad, but can be made quite
specific depending on the goals, lean body mass, activity
level, and overall health of the patient.
In the last
few years, there has been a literal explosion of data
in the nutritional sciences. Sometimes when addressing
this data, we are put in the uncomfortable situation of
realizing that today's facts are rapidly becoming tomorrow's
fiction. However, by keeping an open mind and always questioning
what we think we know, we will be able to provide our
patients with the best and most innovative care possible.
DR MERCOLA'S COMMENT:
My congratulations to Dr.
Brasco for compiling such an outstanding review of the
concerns that some have when confronted with the "low
carb" diet. Dr. Brasco is an internist and gastroenterologist
and I believe one of the best in the country. It is a
strange paradox of medicine that most GI specialist know
virtually nothing about nutrition. That is certainly not
true of Dr. Brasco who is clearly one of the leading nutritional
GI specialists in the country. I could not recommend him
more highly if you need a specialist.
I typically
warn my patients that the diet recommended is NOT low
carbohydrate but full of vegetables which are the good
carbohydrates. Dr. Brasco provides an incredible review
of the literature and some very sound scientific support
for what appears to be the diet most of us were designed
to eat.
I frequently
explain to patients that part of the reason for the confusion
on the carbohydrate issue is the fact that not all carbohydrates
are created equal. The glycemic index mentioned above
is one science tool that is used to explain this, but
most patients have a hard time with this concept. I give
them an analogy to think of grains and most below ground
vegetables as a simple train. Each car in the train represents
a simple sugar molecule which is easily broken down once
it reaches the digestive system.
I then ask
them to visualize that same train but this time stacked
20 to 50 high with other trains and each train care interconnected
to the cars above them. This is an accurate representation
of the much more highly complexed and branched sugar molecules
that are present in most above ground vegetables. They
have multiple bonds connecting each of the sugar molecules
and take the body a long time to break them down. The
extra time allows the body to slowly use the sugar and
thus not have to secrete large amount of insulin to store
the excess.
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