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KLD
07-31-2004, 03:59 PM
Thermodynamic Edge For Low Carbohydrate Diets: SUNY Downstate Researchers Say All Calories Are NOT Alike

In a paper published in Nutrition Journal (Open Access, available without subscription at http://www.nutritionj.com/home), two researchers from SUNY Downstate Medical Center show that low carbohydrate, high protein diets can be expected to be more effective than low fat diets, going against long standing prejudice of the nutritional community, which has claimed that only calories count.

(PRWEB) July 31, 2004 -- “There are numerous examples of low carbohydrate diets being more effective than low fat diets with the same number of calories. It doesn’t always happen but it can happen,” said Dr. Richard Feinman of the Department of Biochemistry. “The nutritional establishment has been reluctant to accept this, because they say it violates the law of thermodynamics. However, they never seriously look at the thermodynamics, which not only says its possible, but it is to be expected.” he added.

In their paper, Dr. Feinman and Dr. Eugene J. Fine explain that thermodynamics is as much about efficiency as it is about energy conservation. Carbohydrate is an efficient fuel, whereas protein is not. On a low carbohydrate/high protein diet, even though total energy is conserved, more energy is wasted as heat, a process known as thermogenesis. This energy comes from burning fat.

The researchers stress that “the human body is not a storage locker. It is a machine and the efficiency of the machine is controlled by hormones and enzymes. Carbohydrates increase insulin and other hormones that regulate enzymes, leading to storage rather than burning of fat.”

“Of course, people are different” said the authors, “but many people are sensitive to the effects of carbohydrates and for them, a low carb diet is going to work well.”

The practical point is that getting rid of the idea that “a calorie is a calorie” opens the door for serious research into what kind of diets will be most effective and which people will benefit most. “This is important,” they explain “because millions of people
are seriously trying to lose weight on low carbohydrate diets, and instead of being given directions on the best way to do this, they have been largely discouraged by health professionals and self-appointed expert groups. The obesity epidemic is too important to allow this to happen.”

Note to editors/reporters: You can read the entire scientific paper by going to http://www.nutritionj.com/home and clicking on “Provisional PDF” at the bottom of the headline.

http://www.prweb.com/releases/2004/7/prweb145415.htm

Karen

Harold
08-01-2004, 06:16 AM
Wanted to read the paper, but the pdf file won't open. Oh well, this is not a new argument in the fat wars. While fat has a lot of calories stored in it, it also takes a lot of calories to unlock it for use. What we see on food labels. as explained to me, is the net calorie gain and not the total amount of calories in the fat. We know some people will be more effecient at converting fat than others, but my guess is all fats are treated by the same formula and I suspect they should not be since they are chemically different.

What I would really like to see is a study on is the difference between the way animal fats and the condensed processed fats we consume from plants are processed by our bodies, and the effects they have. I've seen comparisons done between virgin olive oil and animal fats, but they seemed to assume, in the early days, all processed plant fats would be the same. Now they are warning us about trans fats and I suspect we will see other plant fats added to the list in the future.

lilly
08-01-2004, 06:42 AM
i can open it Harold,maybe it just wasn,t working when you tried it,its a very good article.

Harold
08-01-2004, 06:47 AM
Lilly, must be on my end. Updated the reader recectly and my browser. Will have to check which one it is.

Seems my browser and reader are on track. So it must be something else. Will have to try another site.

KLD
08-01-2004, 10:07 AM
I just checked mine again, and it opens with no problem.

Karen