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Carbohydrate
Unloading: A Reality Check
A
high-carbohydrate diet makes you fat and hurts your athletic performance.
Sounds hard to believe? It is--yet it's the premise of several carbohydrate-bashing
diet books currently on the market. These books (Enter the Zone,
Protein Power, and Healthy for Life) all feature diets that supposedly
hold the key to lifetime thinness. Their shared theme is that Americans
should eat a high-protein diet, instead of the high-carbohydrate
diet recommended by most health professionals. Some books even claim
that a high-protein, low-carbohydrate diet prevents and treats heart
disease, cancer, diabetes, and depression, and in the process, helps
us reach peak physical and mental performance. But do these books
provide a better way to eat? No. Carbohydrate-bashing diet books
claim that carbohydrates are bad because they raise blood sugar
level and cause the release of insulin--a supposedly evil hormone
that makes you fat. Insulin, it is said, causes high-carbohydrate
food to be stored as fat rather than used for energy. Such claims
are due for a reality check.
Reality Check 1:
Carbohydrates and insulin don't make you fat. Insulin isn't a harmful
hormone. It's essential for the transfer of glucose (blood sugar)
from the bloodstream to the body's cells, where it fuels all activities.
What matters in weight loss isn't carbohydrates and insulin, but
calories. Getting a high percentage of your calories from carbohydrate
doesn't make you fat, because weight depends only on how many calories
you take in relative to how many you burn off. Paying attention
to calories is critical for weight control. When people are encouraged
to eat more carbohydrate and less fat, some get the wrong message.
They think they can eat as much high-carbohydrate food as they want,
as long as the food is fat-free. Consequently, they eat too many
low-fat sweets and extra-large portions of starches. As a result,
they can't lose weight and may feel that carbohydrates have "betrayed"
them. Cutting back on dietary fat does reduce total calories more
than cutting back on carbohydrate, because fat supplies more than
twice the calories by weight. In addition, fat is more likely to
be stored as body fat than is carbohydrate. However, a person who
cuts back on fat calories but adds them back in the form of carbohydrate
calories is not going to lose weight. It's a simple matter of energy
balance that holds true for people whether they're active or not
.
Reality Check 2:
High-protein, low-carbohydrate diets don't increase your ability
to burn fat. No diet will help you gain better access to your body's
fat stores during exercise. Carbohydrate, not fat, is the primary
fuel for exercise at or above 70% of aerobic capacity, the intensity
at which most people train and compete (2). Fat only becomes available
for fuel after about 20 minutes of exercise, and most people don't
work out long enough to directly burn significant amounts of fat
during a workout. But regular exercise can create a calorie deficit
that promotes gradual fat loss over the long haul. Further, aerobic
exercise raises the level of several hormones that promote greater
fat use (2). Therefore, the best way to crank up your body's fat-burning
ability is to keep working out .
Reality Check 3:
High-protein, low-carbohydrate diets aren't the answer for people
who are insulin resistant. About 10% to 25% of all Americans are
insulin resistant. These people are likely to have high blood pressure,
high blood triglycerides (fatty substances), and a low level of
high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol (the "good" kind), all
of which contribute to an increased risk of heart disease. The muscle,
liver, and fat cells of these people are less sensitive to the actions
of insulin--most likely because they have fewer insulin receptors.
When insulin-resistant people eat simple or complex carbohydrate,
the pancreas compensates by dramatically increasing insulin secretion
to maintain normal blood glucose levels. According to the carbohydrate-bashers,
this oversecretion causes carbohydrate to be stored as fat, and
therefore insulin-resistant people are best helped through low-carbohydrate,
high-protein diets. There is no good evidence, however, that insulin
resistance or high blood insulin levels make people fat. The truth
is that reducing excess weight and increasing physical activity
are more important in treating insulin resistance than is the dietary
percentage of carbohydrate or fat. Weight loss and exercise both
increase insulin sensitivity, and increased sensitivity results
in lower blood insulin levels.(4) Weight loss allows the cells to
"recognize" insulin more easily so that less insulin is required.
Regular physical activity causes insulin to bind more easily to
muscle cell receptors and to promote glucose uptake more effectively
(4). Exercise and weight loss combined also have an additional benefit:
They lower the risk of heart disease by reducing triglycerides,
lowering blood pressure, and increasing HDL cholesterol.
Reality Check 4:
High-protein, low-carbohydrate diets are not magic regimens--they're
just very low-calorie. You'll lose weight on these diets because
of the severe caloric restriction, not because of what is supposedly
happening to insulin levels. You'll eventually lose something else,
too: your performance and well-being. You need to eat enough calories
and carbohydrate to maintain your muscle stores of glycogen--the
favored fuel for exercise. Following a low-calorie, low-carbohydrate
diet will only put you into a twilight zone of near starvation.
Reality Check 5:
You need carbohydrates to perform at your best. When you eat carbohydrate,
the body changes much of it into glucose, the chief source of energy
for the body. Glucose that is not needed immediately is stored as
glycogen in the liver and muscles for later use.
Although eating carbohydrate 30 to 45 minutes before exercise raises
insulin levels and lowers blood glucose, these effects are temporary
and will not harm performance. In fact, consuming carbohydrate an
hour before exercise can improve performance
(5).
Carbohydrate feedings 3 to 4 hours before exercise also enhance
performance by "topping off" glycogen stores
(6). Consuming carbohydrate during workouts lasting longer than
an hour aids endurance by providing glucose for your muscles when
they're running low on glycogen
(7,8).
Finally, taking in carbohydrate right after several hours of hard
training increases muscle glycogen storage
(9).
Active people and athletes require dietary carbohydrate to maintain
their muscle-stored glycogen, the predominant fuel for most sports.
They gain weight only if they consume more calories than they expend.
When this happens, they should blame their forks, not the carbohydrate.
Keep the Right Mix
So what's the bottom line on high-protein, low-carbohydrate diets?
They supposedly make you a thinner, healthier, and better athlete.
What they really do, though, is take the fun out of eating. Almost
all professional health groups in the country recommend dietary
variety--55% to 60% of calories as carbohydrate, 10% to 15% as protein,
and the remainder as fat. And variety at the table adds spice to
an active life.
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