What Exactly is a "Low-Carb" Diet Anyway?

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What Exactly is a "Low-Carb" Diet Anyway?

Having just finished the revised and expanded edition of my 2004 best-seller Living Low Carb (out in January, in case you were interested!), I’ve been thinking a lot recently about low-carb diets.

Specifically, I’ve been thinking about definitions.

How exactly do we define low-carb, anyway?

For years, low-carb suffered from bad publicity. Atkins- a superb nutritionist and very smart guy- couldn’t shake the stigma of recommending “pork rinds” (a recommendation that was taken out of context) and people who didn’t know any better thought his diet forbade all carbohydrates (it most certainly doesn’t).

Then there was the ketosis confusion. Ketosis- a harmless metabolic state that the body goes into when carbohydrate intake is very low- became identified with low-carb diets largely because early editions of Atkins’ books stressed ketosis as a desirable goal for the first stage of the Atkins diet (which limited carbs to 20 grams a day).

But very few low-carb diets put the body into ketosis.

Then there was the American Dietetic Association and its spokespeople, who frequently have a questionable relationship with the truth. These folks even characterized Barry Sears’ “The Zone” as a low-carb diet (even though the majority of calories on the Zone Diet come from carbs!)

So what exactly is a low-carb diet?

The American Dietetic Association designates “low carbohydrate diets” as less than 130 grams a day (or 26% of calories from a 2000 calorie diet). Though I hardly think this is “low”, it seems to be a decent working definition, given that most Americans consume a whopping 300 grams of carbs a day! (Just for the record, carbohydrate consumption before the epidemic of obesity averaged 43%, just about what is recommended by Dr. Sears in “The Zone”.)

According to Richard Feinman, PhD, Professor of Biochemistry at SUNY Downstate Medical Center and head of the Nutrition and Metabolism Society (of which I am a proud member), 26%-45% of calories from carbs is a good range for what we might call “moderate” or “controlled” carbohydrate eating. According to Feinman, less than 30 grams a day should be referred to as a “very low carbohydrate ketogenic diet”; the term “ketogenic diet” should be reserved for the therapeutic approach to epilepsy, for which it works quite well.

Some low-carb diets for weight loss limit carbs strictly (20-30 grams) for the first couple of weeks (the Atkins Induction Phase), then add them back gradually. Many health professionals and weight loss experts believe that you can get most of the benefits of “controlled carb eating” with anywhere up to 100 grams a day. In a recent blog, I talked about a study in which they used a vegan version of Atkins that contained 130 grams of carbs a day and everyone still lost weight and had improvements in their risk factors for heart disease to boot.

Remember- hard as it is to believe- your body has no physiological requirement for carbohydrate. That’s not to say you shouldn’t eat carbs- you should!

But if you’re looking to lose weight and improve your health, you should get the vast majority of them from vegetables and fruits.

Carbs from fruits and vegetables are loaded with vitamins, minerals, phytochemicals, fiber and other good stuff that your body thrives on. And you can eat more vegetables and berries than you can imagine and still stay in the range of 100-130 grams of carbs a day! Add to that about 100-120 grams of protein and about 60 grams of fat, and you’ve got a blueprint for health and weight management that will work for just about anyone.

2009-09-23T10:32:00-07:00

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2 Comments

  1. InsussYNumnen February 4, 2010 at 6:05 pm - Reply

    Excuse me for being OT … what Word Press theme do you use? It’s looking great!!

    • Dr. Jonny February 4, 2010 at 6:18 pm - Reply

      thank you! excuse me for being somewhat illiterate about this but i actually don’t know. Our marketing people set it up. I just write it!

      warmly
      jb

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