counter customizable free hit
America's Seniors at www.TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com
 
AddThis Feed ButtonNow, keep up to date with daily feeds of newly posted stories about America's Seniors...click on the box to the left
Election 2008...New! MSNBC Dashboard with continuous updates...information...stats...click here
 

 

 

 

Low-Fat Diets More Likely to Reduce Risk of Heart Disease Than Low-Carb Diets
 
 


Home
Up
Apple a Day Helps
Apple Benefits
Apples Explained
Apple Health Benefits
Apple Juice Helps
Apple Peel Helpful
Apple Types
Avoid Ad Claims
Artichoke Questions
Beer vs. Wine
Black Rapberries
Bladder Cancer Fighter
Boomers Age, Induldge
Boomers Eat Well
Breakfast Important
Bottled Water Questioned
Broccoli Aids Immunity
Caffine Helpful
Calorie Cuts, Aging
Calories Don't Add Up
Cancer Fighters
Cancer-Fighting Food
Cancer Fighting Ingredient
Center Studies Obesity
Cereal Helps Heart
Cherry Juice Helps
Cooking Light
Cherries Healthy
Coffee Helpful
Cranberry Benefit
Cranberries Fight Infection
Cultural Differences
Curry Aids Heart
Diabetic Cooking Tips
Dietian Role
Diets Back on Track
Diet,Painful Bladder
Do Diet Products Work
Don't Skip Breakfast
Dump Artificial Sweetners
Eat Fish, Keep Memory
Eating Green
Eat Less More Often
E-Coli Danger
Eating Light
Eat Well Guided Tour
Failure to Change Diet
Fat New Normal
Fish Healthy Food
Fish Oil Benefits
Five a Day Works
Foie Gras Problems
Folic Acid Role
Food Safety Tips
Food Trends Change
Fresh Food Promoted
Garlic Healthy
Grapes Fight Alzheimer's
Green Onion Dip
Good at any Age Food
Green Tea, Arthritis
Green Tea, Breast Cancer
Green Tea, Immunity
Healthy Cooking
Healthy Beans
Healthy Beef
Healthy Antioxidants
Healthy Diet
Healty 'Fast Food'
Healthy Food Trend
Healthy Holiday Food
Healthy Juices
Healthy Thanksgiving Meal
Heartburn Quiz
Heart-Healthy Food
High Protein Benefits
How Much Salt
Importance of Diet
Local Foods Best
Losing Weight
Lower Cholesterol
Low Fat Diet Best
Maintain Right Weight
Making Healthy Foods
March Nutrition Month
Mediterranean Diet
Misleading Weight Loss Claims
More Fruits, Vegetables
More or Less Salt?
Oatmeal Benefit Reaffirmed
Obesity Grows
Older Adults Weight
Olive Extract, Cancer
Olive Oil Benefits
Omega-3 Important
One Glass OK
Onions, Curry Benefit
Oprah's Diet Secrets
Organic Definitions
Out of Sight
Overweight Risk
PA Senior Nutrition
Pasta Still Bargin
Plant Diet & Alzheimer's
Power Drink Growth
Preventing Seizures
Problem Diet Tips
Racial Differences in Tips
Raspberries Healthy
Red Grapfruit Healthy
Reduce Hot Flashes
Reduce Salt
Red Wine Sales Up
Relieve Gassiness
Restrict Calories, Live Longer
Salad Month
Serving Size
Shellfish Healthy
Soluble Fiber
Soy Can Help
Soy Compound, Hot Flashes
Strawberries Healthy
Sugar Causes Aging?
Tackle Triglycerides
Tea Auto-Immune System
Think, Eat Green
Tomato Benefit
Treating Obesity
Trans-Fats Danger
Treating Eating Disorders
Types of Meals
Value of Garlic
Vegetables, Arteries
Vegetarian Benefits
SC Food Coupons
Tart Cherries Healthy
The Power of Juice
Therapeutic Milk
Top Food Trends
Vegetables Good
Vegetables Important
Walnut Guidelines
What Americans Eat
What We Eat, Drink
Where's the Beef?
Whole Grain Best
Whole Grain/Diabetes
Whole Grain Healthy
Women's Digestive Concerns
10 Healthy Foods
2008 Calorie Concerns

Home
45 Million Uninsured
Abdominal Screenings
Addiction
Allergy Season
Deaf Seniors
Alzheimer's News
Arthritis,Bones
Back Surgery May Help
Blacks & Obesity
Liver Cancer Pill
Blood Pressure News
Cancer Headlines
Chronic Disease
Craig Screenings
Chronic Pain, Disease
Dental Health
Reliable Ovarian Test
diabetes_news
Diet
Disabilities Examined
Exercise News
Falls, Serum Link
Faith & Health
Fibromyalgia
Flu Season
Foot Care
Foot Care Myths
Get Involved
Heart & Stroke News
Hearing
How's Your Thyroid
Incontinence Sufferers
Kidney News, Information
Hip Replacement Advances
HIV, Aging Population
Lack of Action
Lung Transplants
Marrow Transplants
Medical Causes Falls
Kiss, Don't Shake Hands
Liver Health News
Mental Health
Million with Shingles
New Alliance
Obesity Problems
Overactive Bladder
Parkinson's News
Psoriasis Disease Links
Respiratory Health
Problems Accumulate
Scar-Free Healing
Seeking a Cure
Seniors Health Tips
Seniors, Shingles
Spinal Injuries
Sleep Problems
Successful Therapy
Surgeon's Age
Surgery Information
vitamin_use.htm
Skin and Seasons
Throat Problems
Voice Tips
When to Call Doctor
Worst Pain?
Historic 'Brain Trust'
Varicose Vein Therapy

 

 

 



Google
 

 

Web TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com
 

New Service for TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com readers...roll mouse over, click on highlighted links in stories to review items from Amazon

AddThis Feed Button   Now, keep up to date with daily feeds of newly posted stories about America's Seniors...click on the box to the left

Low-Fat Diets More Likely to Reduce Risk of Heart Disease Than Low-Carb Diets

 

Newswise — Low-fat diets are more effective in preserving and promoting a healthy cardiovascular system than low-carbohydrate, Atkins’-like diets, according to a new study by researchers at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee.

The study, published in the February edition of the scientific journal Hypertension, was led by David D. Gutterman, M.D., Northwestern Mutual Professor of Cardiology, professor of medicine and physiology, and senior associate dean of research at the Medical College.

Shane Phillips, M.D., a former Cardiology faculty member at the Medical College, and now assistant professor in the department of physical therapy at the University of Illinois - Chicago, was the lead author.

Public awareness of the “obesity epidemic” has resulted in various dietary weight loss strategies. In America, it is estimated that 45 percent of women and 30 percent of men diet to lose weight.

 

“The nutrient-specific effects of these diets on cardiovascular health are largely unknown,” says Dr. Gutterman.

“Low-carbohydrate diets are significantly higher in total grams of fat, protein, dietary cholesterol and saturated fats than are low-fat diets. While a low-carbohydrate diet may result in weight loss and improvement in blood pressure, similar to a low-fat diet, the higher fat content is ultimately more detrimental to heart health than is the low-fat diet suggested by the American Heart Association,” points out Dr. Phillips..

“The higher fat content of a low-carbohydrate diet may put dieters at an increased risk of atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries) because low-carbohydrate diets often reduce protection of the endothelium, the thin layer of cells that line the blood vessels of the circulatory system.

"The reduced production from the endothelium of nitric oxide, a specific chemical, puts the vessel at higher risk of abnormal thickening, greater clotting potential, and cholesterol deposition, all part of the atherosclerosis process,” says Dr. Gutterman.

Over a six-week period, the researchers found reduced flow-mediated dilation in the arm artery in participants who were on the low-carbohydrate diet.

Reduced flow-mediated dilation, as measured in this study, is an early indicator of cardiovascular disease.

On the other hand, flow-mediated dilation improved significantly in participants on the low-fat diet suggesting a healthier artery which is less prone to developing atherosclerosis.

“We observed a reduction in brachial artery flow-mediated dilation after six weeks of weight loss on a low-carbohydrate, Atkins’-style diet,” Dr. Gutterman says.

Low-carbohydrate diets were also found to have significantly less daily folic acid than low-fat diets. Folic acid is thought to be helpful in reducing the likeliness of heart disease.

This protective effect results from the antioxidant property of folic acid and its ability to lower levels of homocysteine, a naturally occurring amino acid that can be dangerous at elevated levels.

The low-carbohydrate diet provided 20 grams of carbohydrates daily and was supplemented with protein and fat content according to the Atkins’ diet recommendations.

The low-fat diet provided 30 percent of the calories as fat, and was modeled after the American Heart Association’s recommendations.

“The composition of diet may be as important as the degree of weight loss in determining the effect of dietary interventions on vascular health,” Dr. Gutterman notes.

Twenty participants between the ages of 18 to 50 with a body mass index ranging from 29 to 39 were monitored for the study, and the type of diet was randomly assigned to participants. Weight loss, flow-mediated dilation, blood pressure and insulin and glucose levels in the participants were measured every two weeks for the six-week study.

The study was funded by the support of the National Institutes of Health General Clinical Research Center and the Medical College of Wisconsin Cardiovascular Center. It was conducted at Froedtert Hospital, the College’s major teaching affiliate.

Co-authors of the study included Jason Jurva, M.D., assistant professor of medicine; Amjad Syed, resident in surgery (University of Illinois – Chicago); Amina Syed, resident in family practice with the Medical College of Wisconsin Affiliated Hospitals; Jacquelyn Kulinski, senior medical student; Joan Pleuss, M.D., senior research dietician; and Raymond Hoffmann, Ph.D., professor of population health in the division of biostatistics.

 

 

...
...
...

 

 

 

 

 



Home
Up
About Us
America's Seniors WebMall
Aging News
California Report
Caregiving
Community/Workplace
Fitness,Health
Election 2008
Grandparents
Health Care Policy
Hispanic Seniors
Medicare News
Contents/Sitemap
Prescription Drugs
Pharma Suits
Restaurant Reviews
Rural Seniors
Safety & Security
Growing New Parts
Seniors Commentary
Seniors' Entertainment
Seniors Headlines
Seniors Finances
Seniors' Issues
Seniors Relationships
Seniors Rights
Social Security News
The Virtual Family
Total Care Pharmacy
Travel News
TSN Radio on Web
Veterans' Tribute
White House Cards
Privacy Policy
Sitemap Contents
Consumer Alert

 

 

 

 

Copyright 1999-2008 TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com
To Contact Us, Click Here