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Physicians Offer 10 Points in Rebuttal of Low-Carb
Attack
Report in Whole Foods Magazine |
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Michael R. Eades, M.D. and Mary Dan
Eades, M.D., husband-and-wife physicians whose books, lectures and
television appearances have helped millions lose weight, recently
mounted a defense of the low-carbohydrate approach to weight management
against a major attack by a group called the Physicians Committee for
Responsible Medicine (PCRM).
In its report on low-carb diets, released November 20, the PCRM, located
in Washington, DC, questioned the safety of this approach and called for
an investigation by the federal government.
In his dual capacity as executive editor of the Denver, CO-based
LowCarbiz, a weekly newsletter, and chairman of the Low Carb Summit, a
business conference scheduled to be held in Denver January 22-23, Dean
Rotbart said he had contacted the doctors Eades, among whose books are
Protein Power and The 30-Day Low Carb Solution, and asked them to
address the PCRM arguments.
According to Rotbart, the Eades turned out a "brilliant rebuttal" to the
PCRM report, which has been posted on the front page of the LowCarbiz
website (no subscription required to read it all). Portions of the Eades'
remarks are reproduced below, courtesy of the authors and LowCarbiz.
The physicians lead off with 10 rebuttal points:
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PCRM uses what is at best anecdotal
information and presents it in the guise of a scientific
investigation.
-
At least a dozen studies have been
conducted recently in major medical and scientific research
institutions and published in top-notch journals that confirm the
low-carbohydrate diet is superior to the low-fat diet in multiple
respects.
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The respondents to the PCRM poll
would represent only 0.00001125% or one one-thousandth of one percent
of individuals following a low-carbohydrate diet.
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Researchers from Harvard recently
reported that subjects could eat 300 calories more per day on a
low-carbohydrate diet than those following a low-fat diet and still
lose the same amount of weight over a 12-week period.
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Dieters would prefer to lose fat
rather than lean tissue, which is precisely what happens with
low-carbohydrate diets.
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Virtually every study done on
low-carbohydrate diets shows that weight loss is accompanied by either
an improvement or no change in heart disease risk factors.
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Low-carb dieters who consume green
leafy and colorful vegetables and low-glycemic fruits are not at risk
of osteoporosis (long-term bone loss).
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The whole idea that protein in the
amounts eaten in modified low-carbohydrate diets damages kidneys is a
vampire myth that refuses to die no matter how many stakes have been
driven through its heart by a multitude of medical studies.
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Overall, there is no evidence that
meat causes colon cancer, or any other cancer, for that matter.
Actually many cancer-fighting nutrients are in meat and a reduction in
meat intake might be more likely to increase cancer risk.
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As the data continue to accumulate
and the studies increase in number, the efficacy of the modified
low-carbohydrate diet will finally be established to the satisfaction
of all.
The Eades find a "delicious twist of
fate" in charging that the PCRM is using "the worst kind of anecdotal
reporting" to justify its claims - after years in which low-carbohydrate
advocates were accused of the same offense.
"In the last couple of years, however," they assert, "at least a dozen
studies have been conducted in major medical and scientific research
institutions throughout the world and published in top-notch medical and
scientific journals that confirm what we and others have been saying for
years-the low-carbohydrate diet is superior to the low-fat diet not only
for weight loss but for improvement of virtually all of the components
of the metabolic syndrome as well."
The Eades note that "PCRM and other groups and individuals who are
anti-low-carbohydrate diet typically define the low-carbohydrate diet as
the Atkins Diet, which in its original form was an extremely low, almost
no carbohydrate, very high-fat diet that bears little resemblance to the
low-carbohydrate diets recommended by us and others (including the
current Atkins plan). Most people on low-carbohydrate diets focus on
limiting their intake of carbohydrates to 30-70 grams per day and let
the fat and protein content of their diet fall wherever it may within
this carbohydrate restriction."
They continue, "Compared to the standard American diet, most people
following a low carb diet end up consuming significantly fewer
carbohydrates, about the same or marginally higher amounts of protein
and fat, and a smaller number of total calories." The Eades concede,
"There is little question that the reduction in calories drives the
weight-loss engine of the low-carbohydrate diet " Nevertheless, they
imply that this is in no way a "slight" to the validity of
low-carbohydrate food plans.
On the contrary, in highlighted sections near the end of their rebuttal,
they offer their take on how low-carb eating can prove beneficial
against various disease states. For example, with regard to
cardiovascular disease, they say, "Virtually every study done on
low-carbohydrate diets shows that weight loss is accompanied by either
an improvement or no change in heart disease risk factors. Few, if any,
studies of low-carbohydrate diets show a worsening of heart disease risk
factors. Most authorities agree that excess body fat is a risk factor
for heart disease; so even the studies that show no improvement in other
risk factors in subjects on low-carbohydrate diets actually do
demonstrate a lowered cardiovascular disease risk implicit in the weight
loss they bring about."
Renal function is another area in which the Eades have something to say.
"Fear of kidney damage has long been the bugaboo of people following
low-carbohydrate diets. It's doubtful that anyone pursuing a
low-carbohydrate diet for any length of time hasn't been told at least
once that his or her kidneys are in danger. Here again the PCRM doesn't
disappoint; the group is right there leading the chorus. And PCRM
doesn't beat around the bush: 'High-protein diets are associated with
reduced kidney function,' so says its report. No equivocation there. But
once again PCRM has missed the boat.... Studies from around the world
have shown that the amount of protein contained in the modified version
of the low-carbohydrate diet does not harm the kidneys. Even studies in
patients with diabetic kidney disease show they will harm their kidneys
more by increasing their carbohydrate intake and running up their blood
sugars than they do by increasing their protein intake."
The Eades close their rebuttal by noting PCRM's own admission that the
"weakness" of its data is that "adverse health effects were
self-reported and are not likely to have the same prevalence in the
general population. Data collection was Web-based and no attempt was
made to assure a representative sample." Why, then, the doctors ask,
does PCRM find these data of a magnitude to require the "urgent need for
monitoring" by our "public health authorities?"1
1 Whole
Foods Magazine, January 2004
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