From
my vantage point (as a health and fitness professional down in the trenches),
it looks more like tanks, artillery and machine guns have been drawn! Tragically,
the people being hurt the most by these 'diet wars' are not the experts, but the
dieters.
After
its original publication in 1972, The Atkins Diet was regurgitated in 1992 as
'Dr. Atkins New Diet Revolution,' creating a new surge of interest in low carbohydrate
dieting. Then, in July of 2002, the controversy reached an all time high when
the New York Times Magazine published an essay by Gary Taubes titled, 'What if
it's all been a big fat lie?' The article suggested that new research was now
proving the late Dr. Atkins had been right all along.
More
research in 2003 seemed to corroborate the Taubes story: Two studies in the New
England Journal of Medicine in May of 2003, and another in June 2003 in the Journal
of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, suggested that Atkins was equally, if
not more effective for weight loss than conventional diets, at least in the short
term.
With
the publication of this new information, Atkins supporters boasted, 'See, I told
you so,' while their opponents fired back in defense of their high carb, low fat
positions. Meanwhile, low carb foods and supplements became all the rage, bread
and pasta sales took a nosedive and the wheat industry cried the blues.
With
differences in opinion as opposite as the North and South Poles, it's become unbearably
confusing and frustrating to know which weight loss method is best and safest.
At the date of this writing, in late 2003, obesity has reached an all time high
–AGAIN! According to the Journal of the American Medical Association, 64% of
Americans are overweight and 31% are obese, and it's only getting worse.
Obviously,
the popular weight loss methods today, including the low carb diet, are still
missing something, but what?
If
you're confused by the whole high carb, low carb thing and if you're frustrated
with your attempts at trying to lose weight and keep it off, then this may be
the most important report you will ever read. In the next few minutes, you'll
discover the real truth about low carb diets and a real solution to the problem
of excess body fat. Read on to learn the 10 Lies about the Atkins diet and the
truth that will set your body free!
Lie
#1: The Atkins and other low carb diets don't work
If
your definition of what "works" is quick weight loss, then the Atkins Diet DOES
work. Recent studies showed that the Atkins Diet causes greater weight loss than
the American Heart Association-recommended high carb, low fat diet. In fact, for
obese people with disorders of carbohydrate metabolism (hyperinsulinemia, hypoglycemia,
and insulin resistance), Atkins-style diets have been shown to work especially
well.
However,
if your definition of what "works" is permanent fat loss, then the Atkins diet
doesn't fare so well... but neither do any other diets. It seems that despite
some encouraging initial successes, Atkin's dieters still face the same difficulties
keeping off the weight as everyone else. Some of the same studies showing rapid
weight loss on Atkins in the beginning also showed substantial weight gain as
soon as the diets ended.
Truth
is, a growing body of evidence is mounting that carbohydrate restriction can accelerate
weight loss in the short term, but it has yet to be proven that it keeps the fat
off in the long run.
Which
approach towards low carb dieting is best is also up for debate: Not all low carb
diets are high fat or ketogenic and not all are 'ultra-low' in carbs. A low carb
diet can be low in carbs and high in fat, it can be low in carbs and high in protein,
or it can be somewhere in the middle.
I
predict that continued research will discover that moderate carbohydrate restriction
(especially in a cyclical fashion) and careful selection of carbohydrates, will
in fact assist with fat loss via hormonal control, metabolic efficiency and appetite
regulation. I believe that neither extreme - the severely restricted low carb
diet (ketogenic diet) or the very high carb, low fat diet – will emerge the
victor.
Lie
#2: There's a ton of new research proving the Atkins diet is effective
If
you surf around the Internet for a while searching for 'Atkins Diet,' you are
likely to see a lot of advertisements and news briefs pointing to the new research
'proving' that Atkins is effective.
"New
England Journal of Medicine Vindicates Atkins diet."
"Studies
suggest Atkins diet is safe."
"New
research challenges 30 years of Nutritional Dogma."
Truth
is, these headlines are not giving you the full picture.
Until
and unless you have closely examined these studies and the researcher's interpretation
of the results, don't be so quick to believe the hearsay.
The
general conclusion of nearly all these studies is that Atkins IS equally if not
more effective for short term weight loss than conventional diets. However, nearly
all the researchers also conclude with remarks such as:
"The
results are very preliminary,"
"The take-home message is that this diet deserves
further study." "More research is needed."
Furthermore,
consider what the Atkin's diet was being compared to in these studies: The traditional
'food pyramid' diet with 60-65% carbs including plenty of pasta, cereals and bread,
right?
What
if the traditional high carb diet is wrong too?
Don't
write off carb restriction completely, but don't ditch all your carbs yet either.
Lie
#3: The new studies prove that the Atkins diet is healthy and doesn't raise cholesterol
as previously believed
In
a May of 2003, the results of a 12-month study on the Atkins diet were reported
in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM). One group followed the traditional
food pyramid with 60% of the calories from carbohydrates while the second group
followed the Atkins diet.
After
one year, Atkins participants had a greater increase in the good HDL cholesterol
and a larger drop in triglyceride than the high carb group. Gary Foster, the leader
of the study said, "Our initial findings suggest that low carb diets may not
have the adverse effects we anticipated."
Conventional
wisdom has dictated for years that saturated fat and cholesterol were dangerous
and unhealthy, contributing to coronary heart disease. This led most health professionals
to condemn low carb diets that allowed large amounts of saturated fat.
This
belief is now being questioned. Many authors such as Mary Enig and Uffe Rashnkov
have presented compelling cases that dietary cholesterol and saturated fat do
not cause heart disease. The latest research seems to confirm this. However, many
factors affected the results of these new studies.
In
some studies, the subjects did not follow the Atkins Diet to exact specifications
and never entered ketosis, so conclusions about The Atkin's Diet, ketosis and
coronary health cannot be drawn yet. In other studies, cholesterol-lowering drugs
were used. And in still others, some subjects actually showed increases in total
cholesterol. Those who did show improvements may have previously been on a high
refined sugar, high saturated fat diet and dropping the sugar was one step in
the right direction. Furthermore, some of the drop in blood cholesterol could
be attributed to the decrease in body weight.
Clearly,
you can't lump all dietary fats into the same category. Processed and chemically
altered trans fats have been condemned by virtually every health and nutrition
expert on the planet. Other fats, like salmon and fatty fish, are among the healthiest
and cardio-protective foods you can eat. Much evidence is showing that reasonable
amounts of naturally occurring saturated fats such as those found in whole eggs
and red meat also need not be feared (especially in the absence of sugars).
Truth
is, all the information we have available at this time indicates the 'fat phobia'
and 'fat makes you fat' scare has been unfounded because not all fat is the same.
However, claims that diets very high in overall and saturated fat are healthy
and safe for long term use are still premature.
Lie
#4: The Atkins diet will help you keep fat off for good
Dr.
Atkins writes that his diet "Is so perfectly adapted to use as a lifetime diet
that, unlike most diets, the weight won't come back."
It's
a weight loss axiom that the more extreme a diet and the faster the weight loss,
the more difficult it is to maintain the results. Slow, steady and balanced seems
to win the race when it comes to weight control.
Unfortunately
this isn't what most people want to hear. The four pounds per week and up to 15
pounds in the first two weeks that Atkins promises sounds much more impressive.
There
are two things you really need to know about rapid weight loss:
(1)
What kind of weight was lost? How much of it was body fat and how much was water,
glycogen and lean tissue?
(2)
Are you going to you keep the weight off for good?
Most
low carbers won't keep the weight off for more than a year, and many will fall
off the wagon long before that.
Keith
Ayoob, a spokesperson for the American Dietetic Association (ADA), said in an
official ADA statement about the 2003 NEJM studies: "Twelve months is an equalizer;
you hit a wall. Your lifestyle starts to be affected and you get bored. A high
dropout rate is a sign that extreme diets can be difficult to maintain.
Truth
is, despite Dr. Atkin's claims and the new research apparently supporting them,
we still don't know what will happen in the long run. Based on the results of
the recent three, six, and twelve month studies, researchers have begun to organize
longer trials. One of them will be five years in length.
What
you will probably see in long term studies is that Atkins and other very low carb
diets, while effective for weight loss in the short term, will be found no more
effective for long term fat loss than any other restrictive diet (and that's NOT
very effective).
Lie
#5: Calories don't count and you can eat as much as you want while on the Atkins
diet.
Dr.
Atkins proposed that calories don't count and he advised his clients to eat as
much as they want while on his program. Atkins wrote, "The so called calorie
theory has been a millstone around the necks of dieters and a miserable and malign
influence on their efforts to lose."
Here's
the truth about calories and low carb diets:
When
you go on a very low carb (ketogenic) diet with more fat, your appetite is diminished
and you feel fuller. Appetite control may be a legitimate benefit of the Atkins
diet, especially for individuals who struggle with hypoglycemia, hunger and cravings.
As Dr. Atkins points out, "Our physical urges are hard to combat."
However,
this does not mean you can eat as much as you want. It means that your hunger
may be blunted on Atkin's plan, causing you to automatically eat less without
counting calories or even thinking about calories.
People
on the Atkins diet who lose weight are not eating more than they burn and losing
fat in spite of it. Whether you count calories and consciously eat fewer than
you burn, or you don't count them and unconsciously eat fewer than you burn, either
way, the end result is the same.
While
counting calories in the literal sense is clearly not always necessary, you always
have to be aware of calories and portions. No diet or special combination of foods
can override the law of calorie balance.
Anyone
who believes that you can eat as much as you want and still lose weight is living
in a dream world.
Lie
#6: A brand new study just proved that the Atkins diet gives you a metabolic advantage
so you really can eat as much as you want
A
12 week study conducted by the Harvard School of Public Health and presented in
October 2003 to the North American Association for the Study of Obesity found
that subjects on a low carb regimen lost just as much weight as those on a standard
high carb, low fat diet.
The
shocking part was that the group on the Atkins diet could eat 300 more calories
than the group eating the conventional high carb food pyramid diet. This left
researchers scratching their heads saying,
"It
doesn't make sense - it defies the laws of thermodynamics." "A lot of our assumptions
about a calorie is a calorie are being challenged."
Unfortunately,
some of the Atkins troops were quick to interpret the results as meaning, 'See,
I told you calories don't count.'
Actually,
calories do count and the explanation for these results is quite simple.
A
calorie is NOT just a calorie. If all calories were created equal then a 2000
calorie diet of Krispy Kreme doughnuts would have the same effect as a 2000 calorie
diet of chicken breast and green vegetables. Do you really think these two diets
will have the same effects on your health and body composition?
Certain
foods and certain diets DO give you a metabolic advantage. One advantage is the
effect of a diet's composition on your hormones; namely insulin and glucagon.
A
second advantage is called the thermic effect of food. The thermic effect of food
means that a certain number of calories are used just to digest and absorb the
food, leaving a net calorie value substantially less than the total amount of
caloric energy that was contained in the food.
For
example, a lean protein food such as chicken breast has a thermic effect of around
20-30%. This means that for every 100 calories of chicken breast consumed, the
NET energy utilized by the body is only 70-80 calories. (Some people call this
'negative calories.')
Stated
differently, this means you really CAN lose weight on a higher calorie intake
if you eat foods with a high thermic effect.
What's
especially interesting, giving confirmation of the metabolic advantage of a high
protein diet, is that the foods provided in this particular study were low carb,
but NOT typical Atkins fare. Instead of lots of red meat and saturated fat, the
subjects ate mostly fish, chicken, salads, vegetables and unsaturated oils.
I
think study's director, Penelope Green, hit the nail on the head when she said,
"Maybe they (the low carb, high protein group) burned up more calories digesting
their food."
Truth
is, not one study has ever proven that you can 'eat as much as you want' on Atkins
or any diet. Even when a diet provides a metabolic advantage, AFTER that advantage
is factored in and you look at NET calorie utilization, you are still left with
the calories in versus calories out equation.
Lie
#7: The Atkins diet causes faster and greater FAT loss than conventional diets
Most
health, medical and nutrition organizations recommend that you lose weight (body
fat) at a rate of no more than 2 pounds per week. In his book, Dr. Atkins says
that the average weight loss in the first two weeks on his plan is 8 to 15 pounds.
Like
many diets, Atkins overstresses total weight loss (and quick weight loss), while
not stressing enough the difference between body weight, body water, body fat
and lean body mass.
Truth
is, low carb diets definitely cause greater weight loss, especially in the initial
phases. But this is mostly due to a large drop in water weight and glycogen (stored
carbohydrate), not necessarily increased fat loss.
Weight
loss is the wrong goal! Your goal should be permanent fat loss and you should
be measuring and tracking your body fat percentage and lean body mass on a regular
basis.
Don't
gloat over large, rapid 'weight losses;' it might be mostly water and muscle.
Lie
#8: Carbohydrates make you fat
Dr.
Atkins wrote, and I quote, "Carbohydrates are the very food that makes you
fat." He also wrote, "Diets high in carbohydrates are precisely what most
overweight people don't need and can't become slim on."
These
are very misleading statements of half-truth.
The
'carbs make you fat' myth is probably the most pervasive and damaging lie about
weight control ever told. It's caused tremendous confusion and frustration to
already confused and frustrated dieters.
First,
focusing primarily on any macronutrient (protein, carbs or fat) or macronutrient
ratio should be secondary to energy balance. What makes you fat is eating too
many calories.
Truth
is, you can't blame all 'carbohydrates' as a group for why we are getting fatter.
What type of carbohydrates are we talking about? There are good carbs and bad
carbs. The 'bad' carbs are the refined ones; white flour and white sugar products
like white bread, white pasta, sugar sweetened cereals, candy and soft drinks.
To
avoid confusion, I would suggest never using the word 'carbohydrate' without putting
the adjective 'refined' or 'natural' in front of it.
Ironically,
Dr. Atkins did make this distinction in his book, yet he still chose to recommend
removal of almost ALL carbs during the induction and weight loss phases of his
diet - even the healthy and nutrient-dense good (natural) carbs. This creates
rapid weight loss and the appearance of a hugely successful diet right from the
first week.
Again,
the real questions are: What kind of weight was lost and can you keep the weight
off for good?
A
healthy, maintainable fat burning diet should be centered on natural foods, and
for most people, that includes natural carbs in moderation - not the total removal
and demonizing of all carbohydrates.
Lie
#9: Ketosis makes you feel better and doesn't affect your performance
The
human organism is neither pure carnivore, nor pure vegetarian. Your body is a
remarkable machine that is fully capable of adapting to whatever fuel is provided
in predominance. You can burn protein, fat, or carbs for energy and most people
can adapt well to using dietary fat for energy after a short adjustment period.
However, carbohydrates are your body's preferred - and most efficient - fuel source
for strength training and vigorous physical activity.
Many
low carbers believe that fat is a more efficient energy source than carbohydrates,
but this is not true. Fat is not a more efficient energy source, it is only a
more concentrated energy source.
Since
the fuel for muscular contraction is carbs (glycogen) a high fat, low carb diet
is not the best approach to fat loss for athletes, bodybuilders or highly active
individuals. These diets simply don't support high intensity training.
Very
low carb diets might be a temporary quick fix for the sedentary, severely overweight,
or those with orthopedic conditions that prevent any exercise. It seems that ketogenic
diets take off weight even with little or no exercise (although the weight loss
won't be pure fat and you may not keep it off). Some Atkins dieters even report
feeling more energetic after adapting to the low carbs and high fat. It's likely,
however, that most of them were relatively inactive. Low carbs and high activity
don't go well together.
Truth
is, a more balanced diet of natural foods combined with exercise is a much better
way to take off pure fat for good.
Anyone
who CAN exercise SHOULD exercise! Of the two methods for creating a calorie deficit
- burning more, or eating less - the former is the superior method with far fewer
downsides. Any fat loss program that does not make exercise the centerpiece is
ultimately destined for failure.
Lie
#10: Ketogenic diets (very low carb) are the secret to fat loss
The
term 'low carb' is used very broadly. To some, a diet like the Zone, which consists
of 40% carbs is 'low carbs.' To others, 'low carb' is more extreme. A ketogenic
diet is a VERY low carb diet, usually between 40-70 grams of carbs per day or
less. The induction phase of the Atkins diet is limited to only 20 grams per day.
Because
they allow virtually no carbohydrate, ketogenic diets, by definition, are extremely
strict and nutritionally unbalanced. It's an irrevocable law that the more 'extreme'
a nutrition program is, the greater the side effects and the more difficult the
diet will be to stay on.
Dr.
Atkins claimed, "Ketosis is the secret weapon of super effective dieting."
Truth
is, while some recent studies have suggested low carb diets do work, not a single
study has proven that it's necessary to restrict carbs so severely that you go
into ketosis.
The
benefits of reduced carbs and more protein/fat include a higher thermic effect,
appetite regulation and hormonal control. What the low carb folks don't want you
to know is that a moderate reduction in carbohydrates (and/or removal of processed
carbs) is often all it takes to get these benefits, while being much easier to
maintain for the long haul.
So
if ketogenic and very low carb diets aren't the best way to achieve permanent
fat loss, then what is the best way???
Dr
Atkins made many excellent points about weight control in his book. He spoke out
on the evils of processed carbohydrates. He identified carbohydrate sensitivity
and hyperinsulinemia as contributing factors in obesity. He spoke of the metabolic
advantage of high protein. He pointed out that there may not be a direct one to
one correlation between saturated fat, dietary cholesterol and heart disease.
To
his credit, Dr. Atkins had discovered some important facts about weight control,
and had the courage to publish and stand by them long before anyone else did.
In the end, unfortunately, he drew some questionable conclusions from this information
and, like so many other diet gurus, he left out some large and important pieces
to the puzzle.
If
permanent fat loss were as simple as removing carbohydrates from your diet, then
why has obesity surged to an all-new high in 2003 and why are there so many Atkins
failures?
Could
it be possible that the conventional high carb, low fat food pyramid approach
and the Atkins diet approach have BOTH missed the mark, and that the optimum diet
for permanent fat loss is somewhere in the middle?
Could
it be possible that dieting is the absolute worst way to lose body fat and that
the proper type of exercise program combined with a more balanced approach to
nutrition is the answer?
One
of the biggest errors weight loss seekers make today is to accept one philosophy
completely or reject it completely. They take a side and 'take up arms' to defend
their position without considering the merit of each individual piece of the philosophy.
Most of the weight loss programs being promoted today contain perfectly valid
points, but as a whole, are a total mish mash of truth, half-truths and lies.
That's
why, for over 20 years, I have literally turned myself into a human guinea pig
in my search for a sensible and healthy method of permanent fat loss. I studied
and then personally tested the low carb diet, the high carb diet, and nearly every
other diet in between. I found good points and bad points in all of them, many
of which I have already revealed to you in this report.
I
then compiled all the positive points of each fat loss method into a structured
format, while discarding all the negatives. What emerged was nothing short of
remarkable: An all-natural system that has allowed me to peak at a body fat level
of 3.4% and to maintain my body fat at 9% or less all year round, for the last
15 years… without drugs, extreme diets, or unnecessary supplements. It's worked
for thousands of other people too.
If
you would like to learn exactly what I discovered about permanent, natural fat
loss from two decades of study and experimentation... and if you'd like to learn
how it can help you escape the diet wars for good, and finally achieve the body
you've always wanted, I encourage you to visit my fat loss web page at http://www.burnthefat.com/ and take
a look for yourself.
About
The Author
Tom Venuto is a bodybuilder, gym owner, freelance writer, success
coach and author of "Burn the Fat, Feed The Muscle" (BFFM): Fat
Burning Secrets of the World's Best Bodybuilders and Fitness Models. Tom
has written over 150 articles and has been featured in IRONMAN magazine, Natural
Bodybuilding, Muscular Development, Muscle-Zine, Exercise for Men and Mens
Exercise. Tom's inspiring and informative articles on bodybuilding, weight loss
and motivation are featured regularly on dozens of websites worldwide. For information
on Tom's Burn
The Fat e-book, click here: www.burnthefat.com.