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The limitations of reduction in fat as a general strategy are evident in the pattern
of consumption during the obesity epidemic where almost all the increase in
calories was due to the increase in carbohydrate consumption.The massive Women’s Health Initiative
showed that reducing dietary fat did not improve the incidence of obesity,
cardiovascular disease or diabetes.
And it’s not just the type of fat.
Whereas replacing saturated fat with unsaturated fat may be beneficial,
replacing any fat with carbohydrate is generally deleterious for cardiovascular
disease, diabetes and weight gain.
How is this possible? The effect of
dietary fat is controlled by carbohydrate, directly or through stimulation of
insulin which is an anabolic hormone and tends to bias metabolism towards fat
storage rather than oxidation. You
are not what you eat. You are what
you do with what you eat. For this reason, carbohydrate restriction will
generally trump the effects of any kind of fat.
Much careful research
shows that carbohydrate-restricted diets, even when they increase fat intake are
generally beneficial for cardiovascular disease and diabetes, and no diet has ever
been shown to be more effective for weight loss. Conversely, there are now
numerous popular books and scientific studies pointing out how political
considerations gave rise to the low fat idea in the face of much contradictory
evidence.
“The deleterious effects of fat have been measured in the presence of high
carbohydrate. A high fat diet in the presence of high carbohydrate is different
than a high fat diet in the presence of low carbohydrate.”
Richard Feinman, PhD
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