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New Support for the Atkins Diet
Yahoo Article finds evidence that the Atkins way of eating may prove some nay-sayers wrong.
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Ask any good doctor. It is totally bad for you and you shouldn't do it.
What's wrong with grilled chicken, tuna, greens, brown rice, and fruit. I bet you will lose just as much weight and not gain it back. I never understood how you can eat bacon and cheese all day and lose weight. |
WhatAboutBob:
I did ask a good doctor. He's a board-certified gasterenterologist (and also my brother). He supports the diet completely. Also, it's not a diet where people "eat bacon and cheese all day and lose weight". It's a way of eating that minimizes carbohydrate intake. Nothing is wrong with grilled chicken, tuna, greens, brown rice and fruit. You just need to limit the brown rice and fruit. Both have lots of carbs, and they're both allowed in moderation once the weight loss is finished or close to being finished. Atkins requires regular exercise (as well as vitamin supplements for those on the less-than-20-carbs-per day portion of the diet). There are a good number of people who are being successful on Atkins. It's just "better" news (i.e. more interesting) when there are reports of people living on bacon and cheese. |
Balanced diet > all
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I suggest any that choose to do the Atkins approach, to do it and more power to you. Nutritional science will need the results good or bad to truly know what long term effects are. I salute you for volunteering.
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Sun Tzu:
Low carb'ing has been around for a looonnnng time. It's what people did by default before we had grocery stores filled with aisles and aisles of crap and junk food. |
I am interested to know, as LC's effect seems to be proportional to total weight...if there is anyone out there who only has had about 20 lbs to lose and was able to do so through atkins...if so, how many carbs (grams) were they taking in? I have tried it on and off (I am on it now) and have seen some weight loss, however, I am interested in any anecdotal evidence from people who are in the 30-60g carbs/day range.
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zen:
The Atkins book indicates that most people will be able to eat between 60-90g of carbs per day without changing weight. Each person will have his/her own equilibrium. In the 30-60g range, you'll still lose weight, just not as quickly. The 20g per day thing with Atkins is not permanent....it's only required during the first 2 weeks. After that people can start adding 5g/day each week (25g/day for week 3, 30g/day for week 4, etc.). It allows you to slow your weight loss down and find out where your equilibrium is. Once you find it, if you still have weight to lose, you dial it back 5g-10g/day until you hit your goal. I'm guessing mine is in the 90-100g range, but it'll probably drop as I get older. |
I have been doing LC for a while now. I find it pretty easy to stick to--although I allow myself a cheat day to replenish glycogen stores--especially with all the low-carb products available today.
I do tend to eat healthier, lower fat foods than a traditional Atkins [yes, I realize that Atkins is more flexible folowing the induction phase] and keep my fiber intake fairly high. In my opinion the key to the whole low-carb diet is cutting out sugar and ESPECIALLY high fructose corn syrup. |
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Ask any good doctor. It is totally bad for you and you shouldn't do it. What's wrong with grilled chicken, tuna, greens, brown rice, and fruit. I bet you will lose just as much weight and not gain it back. I never understood how you can eat bacon and cheese all day and lose weight. --- See now this is funny, I can eat grilled chicken, tuna, greens, whole grain brown rice and non-glycemic fruit on the atkins diet. All of which I can eat as much as I want (excluding the brown rice, only good for a cup or so). ;) -SF |
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http://www.atkinsdietalert.org/registry.html if no complications have arose that valuable data. |
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Well, if everyone wants to debate the topic, try doing so in a forum that has people a lot more experienced than I am.
Atkins Diet Bulletin Board You'll probably never agree with anyone there, but at least you'll hear from people who have been doing it longer, have been engaged in the testing you recommend, and are equally adept at posting links to articles on Atkins. By the way, that link to the Atkins Diet Alert sight is sponsored by PETA. |
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mistake
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Apparently folks aren't reading the posts before them when they post. I already said my brother (who's an MD) told me he approves of Atkins.
danielboy: glad to hear it! |
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For 14 days I've balanced my diet much more strongly toward protein and fat than carbs. That's right, my 2-week Atkins induction ended yesterday, and I lost 12.4 pounds. All while eating plenty of salad and other vegetables. |
Atkins challenged traditional notions of nutrition with his diet. It's natural that doctors who had the 'food pyramid' drilled into their heads in medical school will resist the idea.
The thing is, if you've had even one semester of Biochem, you can see how the Atkins diet works. Simple sugars and simple starches break down into glycogen with almost zero energy input from the body. Protein and fats require a significant amount of energy from the body to be broken down into glycogen. Therefore, you can eat more raw calories of protein and fat and still lose weight. Remember how everyone says that you burn more calories eating celery than you get from the celery? Similar principle. |
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Your statement about simple sugars and starches apply to someone that isnt working out and depleting glycogen at accelerated rates, but is most definately factual. But its only telling one aspect of the spectrum. Where does insulin the anabolic hormone in the body (even more than test) factor into what your referencing? WHy are you only mentioning simples? While the final breakdown is comparable the breakdown is different when targeting complex carbs; entirely different. What about the elevated cortisol level that will occur upon ketosis? There enough free radical production going on from just living in todays times why help it? WHy only focus on weight? If a person starts dropping pounds (via looking at their scale to gauge progress) but are doing so in a catabolic state do you think that will last? Do you think living with ketosis with the body being in a catabolic state (it takes an enormous amount of dietary finese to be ketonic and anabolic) is a good thing? Why? A caliper and tape measure for lean mass measurements fills in the gaps, and in a majority of cases tell a much different and suprising picture. WHat do you think the human brain's main source of nutrients and fuel comes from? |
Ah...you are going deeper than I intended into Biochem.
I do know that Atkins' is very similar to the diets recommended to diabetics. It stabilizes insulin levels and prevents the high-lows in blood sugar levels caused by the pancreas dumping huge amounts of insulin into the bloodstream right after meals in response to the spike in blood sugar. This benefits me personally, because I get migraines when my blood sugar falls too low, and that prevents me from successfully dieting on high-carb, low-fat diets. Regarding the rest of your question, I'm afraid I can't answer reliably, since my Biochem is 15 years behind me. I'm sure someone at the Atkins Institute message boards can help, though. |
From what I remember, the brain runs on glucose. If there's no glucose readily available, the body'll start tearing up muscle tissue to get amino acids to convert to glucose. I'm not a dietician, nor am I a biochemist, so I may be wrong.
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my aunt lives by the atkins diet, she says that it makes her mood better during the day
maybe its phsycological, but i may try it, sounds great! |
I'm not going to throw in any three dollar words or numbers other than these - I've been on Adkins for almost sixty days - I've lost 35 pounds and gone down 4 pant sizes. Works for me!
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A friend of mine just started this diet, and he says he lost 9 pounds in a week. He has totally cut out carbs (to the best of his knowledge)
Is this healthy? Losing 9 pounds in a week? I thought there was 2 types of carbs, good ones (complex carbs) and the bad ones. Totally cutting out carbs is supposed to be really bad for you. Or am I wrong about this? |
I'm also down 35 pounds, and recent bloodwork confirms I'm healthier than I've been in a long time. I've had a complete blood panel done once a year for the past 21 years (those anal retentive flight physicians), so there is some trend data available. I look and feel healthy. Why argue with results?
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Can anyone point me towards a resource that tells you which Carbs are good and which are bad? I have been looking at the nutrition charts on everything today and it seems like even a bowl of Special K cereal seems to be high in carbs. |
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you need a mix of complex carbs and simple sugers, the simple sugers break down really quick and give short term energy, while the complex break down slower and give you longer term energy. |
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Carbs are divided into several categories. Here is a good site that I googled that can maybe help you understand the difference in the types of carbs: http://www.bodybuildingpro.com/carbdiet.html Hope that helps. |
Very helpful Mael and Plan9. Thanks!
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