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Low Fat Diets Cause Obesity |
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Low Fat Diets Cause Obesity, Diabetes, & Heart Disease Epidemics
by GARY TAUBES
July 7, 2002
What if It's All Been a Big Fat Lie?
By GARY TAUBES
If the members of the American medical establishment were to have a collective find-yourself-standing-naked-in-Times-Square-type
nightmare, this might be it. They spend 30 years ridiculing Robert
Atkins, author of the phenomenally-best-selling ''Dr. Atkins' Diet
Revolution'' and ''Dr. Atkins' New Diet Revolution,'' accusing the
Manhattan doctor of quackery and fraud, only to discover that the
unrepentant Atkins was right all along. Or maybe it's this: they find that
their very own dietary recommendations -- eat less fat and more
carbohydrates -- are the cause of the rampaging epidemic of obesity in
America. Or, just possibly this: they find out both of the above are true.
When Atkins first published his ''Diet Revolution'' in 1972, Americans were just
coming to terms with the proposition that fat -- particularly the saturated fat of meat
and dairy products -- was the primary nutritional evil in the American diet. Atkins
managed to sell millions of copies of a book promising that we would lose weight
eating steak, eggs and butter to our heart's desire, because it was the
carbohydrates, the pasta, rice, bagels and sugar, that caused obesity and even
heart disease. Fat, he said, was harmless.
Atkins allowed his readers to eat ''truly luxurious foods without limit,'' as he put it,
''lobster with butter sauce, steak with bearnaise sauce . . . bacon cheeseburgers,''
but allowed no starches or refined carbohydrates, which means no sugars or
anything made from flour. Atkins banned even fruit juices, and permitted only a
modicum of vegetables, although the latter were negotiable as the diet progressed.
Atkins was by no means the first to get rich pushing a high-fat diet that restricted
carbohydrates, but he popularized it to an extent that the American Medical
Association considered it a potential threat to our health. The A.M.A. attacked
Atkins's diet as a ''bizarre regimen'' that advocated ''an unlimited intake of saturated
fats and cholesterol-rich foods,'' and Atkins even had to defend his diet in
Congressional hearings.
Thirty years later, America has become weirdly polarized on the subject of weight.
On the one hand, we've been told with almost religious certainty by everyone from
the surgeon general on down, and we have come to believe with almost religious
certainty, that obesity is caused by the excessive consumption of fat, and that if we
eat less fat we will lose weight and live longer. On the other, we have the
ever-resilient message of Atkins and decades' worth of best-selling diet books,
including ''The Zone,'' ''Sugar Busters'' and ''Protein Power'' to name a few. All push
some variation of what scientists would call the alternative hypothesis: it's not the fat
that makes us fat, but the carbohydrates, and if we eat less carbohydrates we will
lose weight and live longer.
The perversity of this alternative hypothesis is that it identifies the cause of obesity
as precisely those refined carbohydrates at the base of the famous Food Guide
Pyramid -- the pasta, rice and bread -- that we are told should be the staple of our
healthy low-fat diet, and then on the sugar or corn syrup in the soft drinks, fruit juices
and sports drinks that we have taken to consuming in quantity if for no other reason
than that they are fat free and so appear intrinsically healthy. While the
low-fat-is-good-health dogma represents reality as we have come to know it, and the
government has spent hundreds of millions of dollars in research trying to prove its
worth, the low-carbohydrate message has been relegated to the realm of unscientific
fantasy.
Over the past five years, however, there has been a subtle shift in the scientific
consensus. It used to be that even considering the possibility of the alternative
hypothesis, let alone researching it, was tantamount to quackery by association.
Now a small but growing minority of establishment researchers have come to take
seriously what the low-carb-diet doctors have been saying all along. Walter Willett,
chairman of the department of nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health, may
be the most visible proponent of testing this heretic hypothesis. Willett is the de
facto spokesman of the longest-running, most comprehensive diet and health studies
ever performed, which have already cost upward of $100 million and include data on
nearly 300,000 individuals. Those data, says Willett, clearly contradict the
low-fat-is-good-health message ''and the idea that all fat is bad for you; the exclusive
focus on adverse effects of fat may have contributed to the obesity epidemic.''
These researchers point out that there are plenty of reasons to suggest that the
low-fat-is-good-health hypothesis has now effectively failed the test of time. In
particular, that we are in the midst of an obesity epidemic that started around the
early 1980's, and that this was coincident with the rise of the low-fat dogma. (Type 2
diabetes, the most common form of the disease, also rose significantly through this
period.) They say that low-fat weight-loss diets have proved in clinical trials and real
life to be dismal failures, and that on top of it all, the percentage of fat in the
American diet has been decreasing for two decades. Our cholesterol levels have
been declining, and we have been smoking less, and yet the incidence of heart
disease has not declined as would be expected. ''That is very disconcerting,'' Willett
says. ''It suggests that something else bad is happening.''
The science behind the alternative hypothesis can be called Endocrinology 101,
which is how it's referred to by David Ludwig, a researcher at Harvard Medical School
who runs the pediatric obesity clinic at Children's Hospital Boston, and who
prescribes his own version of a carbohydrate-restricted diet to his patients.
Endocrinology 101 requires an understanding of how carbohydrates affect insulin and
blood sugar and in turn fat metabolism and appetite. This is basic endocrinology,
Ludwig says, which is the study of hormones, and it is still considered radical
because the low-fat dietary wisdom emerged in the 1960's from researchers almost
exclusively concerned with the effect of fat on cholesterol and heart disease. At the
time, Endocrinology 101 was still underdeveloped, and so it was ignored. Now that
this science is becoming clear, it has to fight a quarter century of anti-fat prejudice.
The alternative hypothesis also comes with an implication that is worth considering
for a moment, because it's a whopper, and it may indeed be an obstacle to its
acceptance. If the alternative hypothesis is right -- still a big ''if'' -- then it strongly
suggests that the ongoing epidemic of obesity in America and elsewhere is not, as
we are constantly told, due simply to a collective lack of will power and a failure to
exercise. Rather it occurred, as Atkins has been saying (along with Barry Sears,
author of ''The Zone''), because the public health authorities told us unwittingly, but
with the best of intentions, to eat precisely those foods that would make us fat, and
we did. We ate more fat-free carbohydrates, which, in turn, made us hungrier and
then heavier. Put simply, if the alternative hypothesis is right, then a low-fat diet is
not by definition a healthy diet. In practice, such a diet cannot help being high in
carbohydrates, and that can lead to obesity, and perhaps even heart disease. ''For a
large percentage of the population, perhaps 30 to 40 percent, low-fat diets are
counterproductive,'' says Eleftheria Maratos-Flier, director of obesity research at
Harvard's prestigious Joslin Diabetes Center. ''They have the paradoxical effect of
making people gain weight.''
scientists are still arguing about fat, despite a century of research, because the
regulation of appetite and weight in the human body happens to be almost
inconceivably complex, and the experimental tools we have to study it are still
remarkably inadequate. This combination leaves researchers in an awkward position.
To study the entire physiological system involves feeding real food to real human
subjects for months or years on end, which is prohibitively expensive, ethically
questionable (if you're trying to measure the effects of foods that might cause heart
disease) and virtually impossible to do in any kind of rigorously controlled scientific
manner. But if researchers seek to study something less costly and more
controllable, they end up studying experimental situations so oversimplified that their
results may have nothing to do with reality. This then leads to a research literature
so vast that it's possible to find at least some published research to support virtually
any theory. The result is a balkanized community -- ''splintered, very opinionated and
in many instances, intransigent,'' says Kurt Isselbacher, a former chairman of the
Food and Nutrition Board of the National Academy of Science -- in which
researchers seem easily convinced that their preconceived notions are correct and
thoroughly uninterested in testing any other hypotheses but their own.
What's more, the number of misconceptions propagated about the most basic
research can be staggering. Researchers will be suitably scientific describing the
limitations of their own experiments, and then will cite something as gospel truth
because they read it in a magazine. The classic example is the statement heard
repeatedly that 95 percent of all dieters never lose weight, and 95 percent of those
who do will not keep it off. This will be correctly attributed to the University of
Pennsylvania psychiatrist Albert Stunkard, but it will go unmentioned that this
statement is based on 100 patients who passed through Stunkard's obesity clinic
during the Eisenhower administration.
With these caveats, one of the few reasonably reliable facts about the obesity
epidemic is that it started around the early 1980's. According to Katherine Flegal, an
epidemiologist at the National Center for Health Statistics, the percentage of obese
Americans stayed relatively constant through the 1960's and 1970's at 13 percent to
14 percent and then shot up by 8 percentage points in the 1980's. By the end of that
decade, nearly one in four Americans was obese. That steep rise, which is
consistent through all segments of American society and which continued unabated
through the 1990's, is the singular feature of the epidemic. Any theory that tries to
explain obesity in America has to account for that. Meanwhile, overweight children
nearly tripled in number. And for the first time, physicians began diagnosing Type 2
diabetes in adolescents. Type 2 diabetes often accompanies obesity. It used to be
called adult-onset diabetes and now, for the obvious reason, is not.
So how did this happen? The orthodox and ubiquitous explanation is that we live in
what Kelly Brownell, a Yale psychologist, has called a ''toxic food environment'' of
cheap fatty food, large portions, pervasive food advertising and sedentary lives. By
this theory, we are at the Pavlovian mercy of the food industry, which spends nearly
$10 billion a year advertising unwholesome junk food and fast food. And because
these foods, especially fast food, are so filled with fat, they are both irresistible and
uniquely fattening. On top of this, so the theory goes, our modern society has
successfully eliminated physical activity from our daily lives. We no longer exercise
or walk up stairs, nor do our children bike to school or play outside, because they
would prefer to play video games and watch television. And because some of us are
obviously predisposed to gain weight while others are not, this explanation also has
a genetic component -- the thrifty gene. It suggests that storing extra calories as fat
was an evolutionary advantage to our Paleolithic ancestors, who had to survive
frequent famine. We then inherited these ''thrifty'' genes, despite their liability in
today's toxic environment.
This theory makes perfect sense and plays to our puritanical prejudice that fat, fast
food and television are innately damaging to our humanity. But there are two
catches. First, to buy this logic is to accept that the copious negative reinforcement
that accompanies obesity -- both socially and physically -- is easily overcome by the
constant bombardment of food advertising and the lure of a supersize bargain meal.
And second, as Flegal points out, little data exist to support any of this. Certainly
none of it explains what changed so significantly to start the epidemic. Fast-food
consumption, for example, continued to grow steadily through the 70's and 80's, but
it did not take a sudden leap, as obesity did.
As far as exercise and physical activity go, there are no reliable data before the
mid-80's, according to William Dietz, who runs the division of nutrition and physical
activity at the Centers for Disease Control; the 1990's data show obesity rates
continuing to climb, while exercise activity remained unchanged. This suggests the
two have little in common. Dietz also acknowledged that a culture of physical
exercise began in the United States in the 70's -- the ''leisure exercise mania,'' as
Robert Levy, director of the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, described it in
1981 -- and has continued through the present day.
As for the thrifty gene, it provides the kind of evolutionary rationale for human
behavior that scientists find comforting but that simply cannot be tested. In other
words, if we were living through an anorexia epidemic, the experts would be
discussing the equally untestable ''spendthrift gene'' theory, touting evolutionary
advantages of losing weight effortlessly. An overweight homo erectus, they'd say,
would have been easy prey for predators.
It is also undeniable, note students of Endocrinology 101, that mankind never evolved
to eat a diet high in starches or sugars. ''Grain products and concentrated sugars
were essentially absent from human nutrition until the invention of agriculture,''
Ludwig says, ''which was only 10,000 years ago.'' This is discussed frequently in the
anthropology texts but is mostly absent from the obesity literature, with the
prominent exception of the low-carbohydrate-diet books.
What's forgotten in the current controversy is that the low-fat dogma itself is only
about 25 years old. Until the late 70's, the accepted wisdom was that fat and protein
protected against overeating by making you sated, and that carbohydrates made you
fat. In ''The Physiology of Taste,'' for instance, an 1825 discourse considered among
the most famous books ever written about food, the French gastronome Jean
Anthelme Brillat-Savarin says that he could easily identify the causes of obesity after
30 years of listening to one ''stout party'' after another proclaiming the joys of bread,
rice and (from a ''particularly stout party'') potatoes. Brillat-Savarin described the
roots of obesity as a natural predisposition conjuncted with the ''floury and feculent
substances which man makes the prime ingredients of his daily nourishment.'' He
added that the effects of this fecula -- i.e., ''potatoes, grain or any kind of flour'' --
were seen sooner when sugar was added to the diet.
This is what my mother taught me 40 years ago, backed up by the vague
observation that Italians tended toward corpulence because they ate so much pasta.
This observation was actually documented by Ancel Keys, a University of Minnesota
physician who noted that fats ''have good staying power,'' by which he meant they
are slow to be digested and so lead to satiation, and that Italians were among the
heaviest populations he had studied. According to Keys, the Neapolitans, for
instance, ate only a little lean meat once or twice a week, but ate bread and pasta
every day for lunch and dinner. ''There was no evidence of nutritional deficiency,'' he
wrote, ''but the working-class women were fat.''
By the 70's, you could still find articles in the journals describing high rates of
obesity in Africa and the Caribbean where diets contained almost exclusively
carbohydrates. The common thinking, wrote a former director of the Nutrition Division
of the United Nations, was that the ideal diet, one that prevented obesity, snacking
and excessive sugar consumption, was a diet ''with plenty of eggs, beef, mutton,
chicken, butter and well-cooked vegetables.'' This was the identical prescription
Brillat-Savarin put forth in 1825.
It was Ancel Keys, paradoxically, who introduced the low-fat-is-good-health dogma in
the 50's with his theory that dietary fat raises cholesterol levels and gives you heart
disease. Over the next two decades, however, the scientific evidence supporting this
theory remained stubbornly ambiguous. The case was eventually settled not by new
science but by politics. It began in January 1977, when a Senate committee led by
George McGovern published its ''Dietary Goals for the United States,'' advising that
Americans significantly curb their fat intake to abate an epidemic of ''killer diseases''
supposedly sweeping the country. It peaked in late 1984, when the National
Institutes of Health officially recommended that all Americans over the age of 2 eat
less fat. By that time, fat had become ''this greasy killer'' in the memorable words of
the Center for Science in the Public Interest, and the model American breakfast of
eggs and bacon was well on its way to becoming a bowl of Special K with low-fat
milk, a glass of orange juice and toast, hold the butter -- a dubious feast of refined
carbohydrates.
In the intervening years, the N.I.H. spent several hundred million dollars trying to
demonstrate a connection between eating fat and getting heart disease and, despite
what we might think, it failed. Five major studies revealed no such link. A sixth,
however, costing well over $100 million alone, concluded that reducing cholesterol by
drug therapy could prevent heart disease. The N.I.H. administrators then made a
leap of faith. Basil Rifkind, who oversaw the relevant trials for the N.I.H., described
their logic this way: they had failed to demonstrate at great expense that eating less
fat had any health benefits. But if a cholesterol-lowering drug could prevent heart
attacks, then a low-fat, cholesterol-lowering diet should do the same. ''It's an
imperfect world,'' Rifkind told me. ''The data that would be definitive is ungettable, so
you do your best with what is available.''
Some of the best scientists disagreed with this low-fat logic, suggesting that good
science was incompatible with such leaps of faith, but they were effectively ignored.
Pete Ahrens, whose Rockefeller University laboratory had done the seminal research
on cholesterol metabolism, testified to McGovern's committee that everyone
responds differently to low-fat diets. It was not a scientific matter who might benefit
and who might be harmed, he said, but ''a betting matter.'' Phil Handler, then
president of the National Academy of Sciences, testified in Congress to the same
effect in 1980. ''What right,'' Handler asked, ''has the federal government to propose
that the American people conduct a vast nutritional experiment, with themselves as
subjects, on the strength of so very little evidence that it will do them any good?''
Nonetheless, once the N.I.H. signed off on the low-fat doctrine, societal forces took
over. The food industry quickly began producing thousands of reduced-fat food
products to meet the new recommendations. Fat was removed from foods like
cookies, chips and yogurt. The problem was, it had to be replaced with something
as tasty and pleasurable to the palate, which meant some form of sugar, often
high-fructose corn syrup. Meanwhile, an entire industry emerged to create fat
substitutes, of which Procter & Gamble's Olestra was first. And because these
reduced-fat meats, cheeses, snacks and cookies had to compete with a few
hundred thousand other food products marketed in America, the industry dedicated
considerable advertising effort to reinforcing the less-fat-is-good-health message.
Helping the cause was what Walter Willett calls the ''huge forces'' of dietitians,
health organizations, consumer groups, health reporters and even cookbook writers,
all well-intended missionaries of healthful eating. Few experts now deny that the
low-fat message is radically oversimplified. If nothing else, it effectively ignores the
fact that unsaturated fats, like olive oil, are relatively good for you: they tend to
elevate your good cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein (H.D.L.), and lower your bad
cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein (L.D.L.), at least in comparison to the effect of
carbohydrates. While higher LDL raises your heart-disease risk, higher HDL reduces
it.
What this means is that even saturated fats -- a k a, the bad fats -- are not nearly as
deleterious as you would think. True, they will elevate your bad cholesterol, but they
will also elevate your good cholesterol. In other words, it's a virtual wash. As Willett
explained to me, you will gain little to no health benefit by giving up milk, butter and
cheese and eating bagels instead.
But it gets even weirder than that. Foods considered more or less deadly under the
low-fat dogma turn out to be comparatively benign if you actually look at their fat
content. More than two-thirds of the fat in a porterhouse steak, for instance, will
definitively improve your cholesterol profile (at least in comparison with the baked
potato next to it); it's true that the remainder will raise your LDL, the bad stuff, but it
will also boost your HDL The same is true for lard. If you work out the numbers, you
come to the surreal conclusion that you can eat lard straight from the can and
conceivably reduce your risk of heart disease.
The crucial example of how the low-fat recommendations were oversimplified is
shown by the impact -- potentially lethal, in fact -- of low-fat diets on triglycerides,
which are the component molecules of fat. By the late 60's, researchers had shown
that high triglyceride levels were at least as common in heart-disease patients as
high LDL cholesterol, and that eating a low-fat, high-carbohydrate diet would, for
many people, raise their triglyceride levels, lower their HDL levels and accentuate
what Gerry Reaven, an endocrinologist at Stanford University, called Syndrome X.
This is a cluster of conditions that can lead to heart disease and Type 2 diabetes.
It took Reaven a decade to convince his peers that Syndrome X was a legitimate
health concern, in part because to accept its reality is to accept that low-fat diets
will increase the risk of heart disease in a third of the population. ''Sometimes we
wish it would go away because nobody knows how to deal with it,'' said Robert
Silverman, an N.I.H. researcher, at a 1987 N.I.H. conference. ''High protein levels can
be bad for the kidneys. High fat is bad for your heart. Now Reaven is saying not to
eat high carbohydrates. We have to eat something.''
Surely, everyone involved in drafting the various dietary guidelines wanted Americans
simply to eat less junk food, however you define it, and eat more the way they do in
Berkeley, Calif. But we didn't go along. Instead we ate more starches and refined
carbohydrates, because calorie for calorie, these are the cheapest nutrients for the
food industry to produce, and they can be sold at the highest profit. It's also what we
like to eat. Rare is the person under the age of 50 who doesn't prefer a cookie or
heavily sweetened yogurt to a head of broccoli.
''All reformers would do well to be conscious of the law of unintended
consequences,'' says Alan Stone, who was staff director for McGovern's Senate
committee. Stone told me he had an inkling about how the food industry would
respond to the new dietary goals back when the hearings were first held. An
economist pulled him aside, he said, and gave him a lesson on market disincentives
to healthy eating: ''He said if you create a new market with a brand-new
manufactured food, give it a brand-new fancy name, put a big advertising budget
behind it, you can have a market all to yourself and force your competitors to catch
up. You can't do that with fruits and vegetables. It's harder to differentiate an apple
from an apple.''
Nutrition researchers also played a role by trying to feed science into the idea that
carbohydrates are the ideal nutrient. It had been known, for almost a century, and
considered mostly irrelevant to the etiology of obesity, that fat has nine calories per
gram compared with four for carbohydrates and protein. Now it became the fail-safe
position of the low-fat recommendations: reduce the densest source of calories in
the diet and you will lose weight. Then in 1982, J.P. Flatt, a University of
Massachusetts biochemist, published his research demonstrating that, in any
normal diet, it is extremely rare for the human body to convert carbohydrates into
body fat. This was then misinterpreted by the media and quite a few scientists to
mean that eating carbohydrates, even to excess, could not make you fat -- which is
not the case, Flatt says. But the misinterpretation developed a vigorous life of its
own because it resonated with the notion that fat makes you fat and carbohydrates
are harmless.
As a result, the major trends in American diets since the late 70's, according to the
U.S.D.A. agricultural economist Judith Putnam, have been a decrease in the
percentage of fat calories and a ''greatly increased consumption of carbohydrates.''
To be precise, annual grain consumption has increased almost 60 pounds per
person, and caloric sweeteners (primarily high-fructose corn syrup) by 30 pounds. At
the same time, we suddenly began consuming more total calories: now up to 400
more each day since the government started recommending low-fat diets.
If these trends are correct, then the obesity epidemic can certainly be explained by
Americans' eating more calories than ever -- excess calories, after all, are what
causes us to gain weight -- and, specifically, more carbohydrates. The question is
why?
The answer provided by Endocrinology 101 is that we are simply hungrier than we
were in the 70's, and the reason is physiological more than psychological. In this
case, the salient factor -- ignored in the pursuit of fat and its effect on cholesterol --
is how carbohydrates affect blood sugar and insulin. In fact, these were obvious
culprits all along, which is why Atkins and the low-carb-diet doctors pounced on
them early.
The primary role of insulin is to regulate blood-sugar levels. After you eat
carbohydrates, they will be broken down into their component sugar molecules and
transported into the bloodstream. Your pancreas then secretes insulin, which shunts
the blood sugar into muscles and the liver as fuel for the next few hours. This is why
carbohydrates have a significant impact on insulin and fat does not. And because
juvenile diabetes is caused by a lack of insulin, physicians believed since the 20's
that the only evil with insulin is not having enough.
But insulin also regulates fat metabolism. We cannot store body fat without it. Think
of insulin as a switch. When it's on, in the few hours after eating, you burn
carbohydrates for energy and store excess calories as fat. When it's off, after the
insulin has been depleted, you burn fat as fuel. So when insulin levels are low, you
will burn your own fat, but not when they're high.
This is where it gets unavoidably complicated. The fatter you are, the more insulin
your pancreas will pump out per meal, and the more likely you'll develop what's
called ''insulin resistance,'' which is the underlying cause of Syndrome X. In effect,
your cells become insensitive to the action of insulin, and so you need ever greater
amounts to keep your blood sugar in check. So as you gain weight, insulin makes it
easier to store fat and harder to lose it. But the insulin resistance in turn may make
it harder to store fat -- your weight is being kept in check, as it should be. But now
the insulin resistance might prompt your pancreas to produce even more insulin,
potentially starting a vicious cycle. Which comes first -- the obesity, the elevated
insulin, known as hyperinsulinemia, or the insulin resistance -- is a chicken-and-egg
problem that hasn't been resolved. One endocrinologist described this to me as ''the
Nobel-prize winning question.''
Insulin also profoundly affects hunger, although to what end is another point of
controversy. On the one hand, insulin can indirectly cause hunger by lowering your
blood sugar, but how low does blood sugar have to drop before hunger kicks in?
That's unresolved. Meanwhile, insulin works in the brain to suppress hunger. The
theory, as explained to me by Michael Schwartz, an endocrinologist at the University
of Washington, is that insulin's ability to inhibit appetite would normally counteract
its propensity to generate body fat. In other words, as you gained weight, your body
would generate more insulin after every meal, and that in turn would suppress your
appetite; you'd eat less and lose the weight.
Schwartz, however, can imagine a simple mechanism that would throw this
''homeostatic'' system off balance: if your brain were to lose its sensitivity to insulin,
just as your fat and muscles do when they are flooded with it. Now the higher insulin
production that comes with getting fatter would no longer compensate by
suppressing your appetite, because your brain would no longer register the rise in
insulin. The end result would be a physiologic state in which obesity is almost
preordained, and one in which the carbohydrate-insulin connection could play a
major role. Schwartz says he believes this could indeed be happening, but research
hasn't progressed far enough to prove it. ''It is just a hypothesis,'' he says. ''It still
needs to be sorted out.''
David Ludwig, the Harvard endocrinologist, says that it's the direct effect of insulin on
blood sugar that does the trick. He notes that when diabetics get too much insulin,
their blood sugar drops and they get ravenously hungry. They gain weight because
they eat more, and the insulin promotes fat deposition. The same happens with lab
animals. This, he says, is effectively what happens when we eat carbohydrates -- in
particular sugar and starches like potatoes and rice, or anything made from flour, like
a slice of white bread. These are known in the jargon as high-glycemic-index
carbohydrates, which means they are absorbed quickly into the blood. As a result,
they cause a spike of blood sugar and a surge of insulin within minutes. The
resulting rush of insulin stores the blood sugar away and a few hours later, your
blood sugar is lower than it was before you ate. As Ludwig explains, your body
effectively thinks it has run out of fuel, but the insulin is still high enough to prevent
you from burning your own fat. The result is hunger and a craving for more
carbohydrates. It's another vicious circle, and another situation ripe for obesity.
The glycemic-index concept and the idea that starches can be absorbed into the
blood even faster than sugar emerged in the late 70's, but again had no influence on
public health recommendations, because of the attendant controversies. To wit: if
you bought the glycemic-index concept, then you had to accept that the starches
we were supposed to be eating 6 to 11 times a day were, once swallowed,
physiologically indistinguishable from sugars. This made them seem considerably
less than wholesome. Rather than accept this possibility, the policy makers simply
allowed sugar and corn syrup to elude the vilification that befell dietary fat. After all,
they are fat-free.
Sugar and corn syrup from soft drinks, juices and the copious teas and sports drinks
now supply more than 10 percent of our total calories; the 80's saw the introduction
of Big Gulps and 32-ounce cups of Coca-Cola, blasted through with sugar, but 100
percent fat free. When it comes to insulin and blood sugar, these soft drinks and fruit
juices -- what the scientists call ''wet carbohydrates'' -- might indeed be worst of all.
(Diet soda accounts for less than a quarter of the soda market.)
The gist of the glycemic-index idea is that the longer it takes the carbohydrates to
be digested, the lesser the impact on blood sugar and insulin and the healthier the
food. Those foods with the highest rating on the glycemic index are some simple
sugars, starches and anything made from flour. Green vegetables, beans and whole
grains cause a much slower rise in blood sugar because they have fiber, a
nondigestible carbohydrate, which slows down digestion and lowers the glycemic
index. Protein and fat serve the same purpose, which implies that eating fat can be
beneficial, a notion that is still unacceptable. And the glycemic-index concept
implies that a primary cause of Syndrome X, heart disease, Type 2 diabetes and
obesity is the long-term damage caused by the repeated surges of insulin that come
from eating starches and refined carbohydrates. This suggests a kind of unified field
theory for these chronic diseases, but not one that coexists easily with the low-fat
doctrine.
At Ludwig's pediatric obesity clinic, he has been prescribing low-glycemic-index
diets to children and adolescents for five years now. He does not recommend the
Atkins diet because he says he believes such a very low carbohydrate approach is
unnecessarily restrictive; instead, he tells his patients to effectively replace refined
carbohydrates and starches with vegetables, legumes and fruit. This makes a
low-glycemic-index diet consistent with dietary common sense, albeit in a higher-fat
kind of way. His clinic now has a nine-month waiting list. Only recently has Ludwig
managed to convince the N.I.H. that such diets are worthy of study. His first three
grant proposals were summarily rejected, which may explain why much of the
relevant research has been done in Canada and in Australia. In April, however,
Ludwig received $1.2 million from the N.I.H. to test his low-glycemic-index diet
against a traditional low-fat-low-calorie regime. That might help resolve some of the
controversy over the role of insulin in obesity, although the redoubtable Robert Atkins
might get there first.
The 71-year-old Atkins, a graduate of Cornell medical school, says he first tried a
very low carbohydrate diet in 1963 after reading about one in the Journal of the
American Medical Association. He lost weight effortlessly, had his epiphany and
turned a fledgling Manhattan cardiology practice into a thriving obesity clinic. He then
alienated the entire medical community by telling his readers to eat as much fat and
protein as they wanted, as long as they ate little to no carbohydrates. They would
lose weight, he said, because they would keep their insulin down; they wouldn't be
hungry; and they would have less resistance to burning their own fat. Atkins also
noted that starches and sugar were harmful in any event because they raised
triglyceride levels and that this was a greater risk factor for heart disease than
cholesterol.
Atkins's diet is both the ultimate manifestation of the alternative hypothesis as well
as the battleground on which the fat-versus-carbohydrates controversy is likely to be
fought scientifically over the next few years. After insisting Atkins was a quack for
three decades, obesity experts are now finding it difficult to ignore the copious
anecdotal evidence that his diet does just what he has claimed. Take Albert
Stunkard, for instance. Stunkard has been trying to treat obesity for half a century,
but he told me he had his epiphany about Atkins and maybe about obesity as well
just recently when he discovered that the chief of radiology in his hospital had lost 60
pounds on Atkins's diet. ''Well, apparently all the young guys in the hospital are
doing it,'' he said. ''So we decided to do a study.'' When I asked Stunkard if he or any
of his colleagues considered testing Atkins's diet 30 years ago, he said they hadn't
because they thought Atkins was ''a jerk'' who was just out to make money: this
''turned people off, and so nobody took him seriously enough to do what we're finally
doing.''
In fact, when the American Medical Association released its scathing critique of
Atkins's diet in March 1973, it acknowledged that the diet probably worked, but
expressed little interest in why. Through the 60's, this had been a subject of
considerable research, with the conclusion that Atkins-like diets were low-calorie
diets in disguise; that when you cut out pasta, bread and potatoes, you'll have a hard
time eating enough meat, vegetables and cheese to replace the calories.
That, however, raised the question of why such a low-calorie regimen would also
suppress hunger, which Atkins insisted was the signature characteristic of the diet.
One possibility was Endocrinology 101: that fat and protein make you sated and,
lacking carbohydrates and the ensuing swings of blood sugar and insulin, you stay
sated. The other possibility arose from the fact that Atkins's diet is ''ketogenic.'' This
means that insulin falls so low that you enter a state called ketosis, which is what
happens during fasting and starvation. Your muscles and tissues burn body fat for
energy, as does your brain in the form of fat molecules produced by the liver called
ketones. Atkins saw ketosis as the obvious way to kick-start weight loss. He also
liked to say that ketosis was so energizing that it was better than sex, which set
him up for some ridicule. An inevitable criticism of Atkins's diet has been that
ketosis is dangerous and to be avoided at all costs.
When I interviewed ketosis experts, however, they universally sided with Atkins, and
suggested that maybe the medical community and the media confuse ketosis with
ketoacidosis, a variant of ketosis that occurs in untreated diabetics and can be fatal.
''Doctors are scared of ketosis,'' says Richard Veech, an N.I.H. researcher who
studied medicine at Harvard and then got his doctorate at Oxford University with the
Nobel Laureate Hans Krebs. ''They're always worried about diabetic ketoacidosis.
But ketosis is a normal physiologic state. I would argue it is the normal state of
man. It's not normal to have McDonald's and a delicatessen around every corner. It's
normal to starve.''
Simply put, ketosis is evolution's answer to the thrifty gene. We may have evolved to
efficiently store fat for times of famine, says Veech, but we also evolved ketosis to
efficiently live off that fat when necessary. Rather than being poison, which is how
the press often refers to ketones, they make the body run more efficiently and
provide a backup fuel source for the brain. Veech calls ketones ''magic'' and has
shown that both the heart and brain run 25 percent more efficiently on ketones than
on blood sugar.
The bottom line is that for the better part of 30 years Atkins insisted his diet worked
and was safe, Americans apparently tried it by the tens of millions, while
nutritionists, physicians, public- health authorities and anyone concerned with heart
disease insisted it could kill them, and expressed little or no desire to find out who
was right. During that period, only two groups of U.S. researchers tested the diet, or
at least published their results. In the early 70's, J.P. Flatt and Harvard's George
Blackburn pioneered the ''protein-sparing modified fast'' to treat postsurgical patients,
and they tested it on obese volunteers. Blackburn, who later became president of the
American Society of Clinical Nutrition, describes his regime as ''an Atkins diet
without excess fat'' and says he had to give it a fancy name or nobody would take
him seriously. The diet was ''lean meat, fish and fowl'' supplemented by vitamins and
minerals. ''People loved it,'' Blackburn recalls. ''Great weight loss. We couldn't run
them off with a baseball bat.'' Blackburn successfully treated hundreds of obese
patients over the next decade and published a series of papers that were ignored.
When obese New Englanders turned to appetite-control drugs in the mid-80's, he
says, he let it drop. He then applied to the N.I.H. for a grant to do a clinical trial of
popular diets but was rejected.
The second trial, published in September 1980, was done at the George Washington
University Medical Center. Two dozen obese volunteers agreed to follow Atkins's diet
for eight weeks and lost an average of 17 pounds each, with no apparent ill effects,
although their LDL cholesterol did go up. The researchers, led by John LaRosa, now
president of the State University of New York Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn,
concluded that the 17-pound weight loss in eight weeks would likely have happened
with any diet under ''the novelty of trying something under experimental conditions''
and never pursued it further.
Now researchers have finally decided that Atkins's diet and other low-carb diets have
to be tested, and are doing so against traditional low-calorie-low-fat diets as
recommended by the American Heart Association. To explain their motivation, they
inevitably tell one of two stories: some, like Stunkard, told me that someone they
knew -- a patient, a friend, a fellow physician -- lost considerable weight on Atkins's
diet and, despite all their preconceptions to the contrary, kept it off. Others say they
were frustrated with their inability to help their obese patients, looked into the
low-carb diets and decided that Endocrinology 101 was compelling. ''As a trained
physician, I was trained to mock anything like the Atkins diet,'' says Linda Stern, an
internist at the Philadelphia Veterans Administration Hospital, ''but I put myself on
the diet. I did great. And I thought maybe this is something I can offer my patients.''
None of these studies have been financed by the N.I.H., and none have yet been
published. But the results have been reported at conferences -- by researchers at
Schneider Children's Hospital on Long Island, Duke University and the University of
Cincinnati, and by Stern's group at the Philadelphia V.A. Hospital. And then there's
the study Stunkard had mentioned, led by Gary Foster at the University of
Pennsylvania, Sam Klein, director of the Center for Human Nutrition at Washington
University in St. Louis, and Jim Hill, who runs the University of Colorado Center for
Human Nutrition in Denver. The results of all five of these studies are remarkably
consistent. Subjects on some form of the Atkins diet -- whether overweight
adolescents on the diet for 12 weeks as at Schneider, or obese adults averaging 295
pounds on the diet for six months, as at the Philadelphia V.A. -- lost twice the
weight as the subjects on the low-fat, low-calorie diets.
In all five studies, cholesterol levels improved similarly with both diets, but
triglyceride levels were considerably lower with the Atkins diet. Though researchers
are hesitant to agree with this, it does suggest that heart-disease risk could actually
be reduced when fat is added back into the diet and starches and refined
carbohydrates are removed. ''I think when this stuff gets to be recognized,'' Stunkard
says, ''it's going to really shake up a lot of thinking about obesity and metabolism.''
All of this could be settled sooner rather than later, and with it, perhaps, we might
have some long-awaited answers as to why we grow fat and whether it is indeed
preordained by societal forces or by our choice of foods. For the first time, the N.I.H.
is now actually financing comparative studies of popular diets. Foster, Klein and Hill,
for instance, have now received more than $2.5 million from N.I.H. to do a five-year
trial of the Atkins diet with 360 obese individuals. At Harvard, Willett, Blackburn and
Penelope Greene have money, albeit from Atkins's nonprofit foundation, to do a
comparative trial as well.
Should these clinical trials also find for Atkins and his high-fat, low-carbohydrate
diet, then the public-health authorities may indeed have a problem on their hands.
Once they took their leap of faith and settled on the low-fat dietary dogma 25 years
ago, they left little room for contradictory evidence or a change of opinion, should
such a change be necessary to keep up with the science. In this light Sam Klein's
experience is noteworthy. Klein is president-elect of the North American Association
for the Study of Obesity, which suggests that he is a highly respected member of his
community. And yet, he described his recent experience discussing the Atkins diet
at medical conferences as a learning experience. ''I have been impressed,'' he said,
''with the anger of academicians in the audience. Their response is 'How dare you
even present data on the Atkins diet!' ''
This hostility stems primarily from their anxiety that Americans, given a glimmer of
hope about their weight, will rush off en masse to try a diet that simply seems
intuitively dangerous and on which there is still no long-term data on whether it works
and whether it is safe. It's a justifiable fear. In the course of my research, I have
spent my mornings at my local diner, staring down at a plate of scrambled eggs and
sausage, convinced that somehow, some way, they must be working to clog my
arteries and do me in.
After 20 years steeped in a low-fat paradigm, I find it hard to see the nutritional world
any other way. I have learned that low-fat diets fail in clinical trials and in real life,
and they certainly have failed in my life. I have read the papers suggesting that 20
years of low-fat recommendations have not managed to lower the incidence of heart
disease in this country, and may have led instead to the steep increase in obesity
and Type 2 diabetes. I have interviewed researchers whose computer models have
calculated that cutting back on the saturated fats in my diet to the levels
recommended by the American Heart Association would not add more than a few
months to my life, if that. I have even lost considerable weight with relative ease by
giving up carbohydrates on my test diet, and yet I can look down at my eggs and
sausage and still imagine the imminent onset of heart disease and obesity, the latter
assuredly to be caused by some bizarre rebound phenomena the likes of which
science has not yet begun to describe. The fact that Atkins himself has had heart
trouble recently does not ease my anxiety, despite his assurance that it is not
diet-related.
This is the state of mind I imagine that mainstream nutritionists, researchers and
physicians must inevitably take to the fat-versus-carbohydrate controversy. They
may come around, but the evidence will have to be exceptionally compelling.
Although this kind of conversion may be happening at the moment to John Farquhar,
who is a professor of health research and policy at Stanford University and has
worked in this field for more than 40 years. When I interviewed Farquhar in April, he
explained why low-fat diets might lead to weight gain and low-carbohydrate diets
might lead to weight loss, but he made me promise not to say he believed they did.
He attributed the cause of the obesity epidemic to the ''force-feeding of a nation.''
Three weeks later, after reading an article on Endocrinology 101 by David Ludwig in
the Journal of the American Medical Association, he sent me an e-mail message
asking the not-entirely-rhetorical question, ''Can we get the low-fat proponents to
apologize?''
Gary Taubes is a correspondent for the journal Science and author of ''Bad Science:
The Short Life and Weird Times of Cold Fusion.''
Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company
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