SUNDAY, June 26 (HealthDay News) -- Curbing calories is the key
ingredient for diabetics seeking to lose weight, and low-fat diets
that are either high in protein
or high in carbs are equally effective, researchers say.
"I think there are two key messages from this study," said study lead author Jeremy D. Krebs, a senior lecturer with the school of medicine and health sciences at the University of Otago in Wellington, New Zealand. "The first is that no matter what diet we prescribe, people find it extremely difficult to sustain the changes from their habitual diet over a long time. But if they are able to follow either a high-protein diet or a high-carbohydrate diet, they can achieve modest weight loss."
Krebs said this first message conveys flexibility and allows
people to choose the approach that best suits them and "even to
swap between dietary approaches when they get bored."
The second point "is that for people with diabetes, if they can
adhere to either diet and achieve weight loss, then they do get
benefits in terms of their diabetes control and cardiovascular
risk," he added.
Krebs and his colleagues are scheduled to report their findings
Sunday in San Diego at the American Diabetes Association
meeting.
To compare the potential benefits of two popular dietetic
approaches, the authors tracked nearly 300 overweight men and women
between the ages of 35 and 75 who were on a new, two-year
nutritional program.
To start, all the participants had a body mass index greater
than 27, meaning they were moderately overweight, and all had type
2 diabetes.
The researchers randomly assigned the participants to one of two
groups: a low-fat/high-protein group or a low-fat/high-carb
group.
For the first half year, all attended twice-weekly group
sessions led by a dietitian; for the following six months, sessions
took place monthly.
Weight and waist circumference were measured at six months, one
year, and two years. Kidney function and lipid (blood fats)
profiles were also assessed throughout.
Food diaries indicated that total calorie intake went down in
both groups. Ultimately, both groups lost a similar amount of
weight and reduced their waist size in similar measure, the
investigators found. And by the end of the two-year period, both
groups had similar blood fat profiles.
Krebs and his colleagues concluded that their "real-world"
experiment demonstrated that both approaches afford similar
benefits, with the principal driving factor behind sustained weight
loss being calorie reduction rather than either high-carb or
high-protein consumption.
Lona Sandon, a registered dietitian and assistant professor of
clinical nutrition at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical
Center at Dallas, said the observations were "not at all
surprising."
"This is pretty consistent with other research out there that has conducted other long-term comparisons in the general population," she said. "In the first six months you might see a little better benefit from a high-protein approach. But long-term, the initial benefits from a high-protein diet seem to diminish over time, and the two diets end up being essentially equivalent," Sandon explained.
"The bottom-line is that
the issue for weight loss is calories," Sandon added. "Not
where those calories come from. You need to create an energy
deficit to lead to weight loss, and that happens by decreasing
those calories. That's just been shown again and again."
Experts note that research presented at medical meetings is
considered preliminary because it has not been subjected to the
rigorous scrutiny required for publication in a peer-reviewed
medical journal.
More information
For more on nutrition and diabetes, visit the
American Diabetes Association.