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Low-carb diet may help women with ovary problems

By Stephen Daniells





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21/04/2006 - Adopting a low-carb diet may improve fertility problems and hormone profiles of women suffering from polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), says US research.

PCOS affects between five and ten per cent of all women of childbearing age and is a leading cause of infertility, according to the US National Women's Health Information Center. While the direct cause is not known, the condition is strongly associated with insulin resistance.

European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE) define the condition as having irregular ovulation, increased levels of the make hormone androgen, and the presence of cysts on the ovaries.

The researchers, led by Crystal Douglas from the University of Alabama at Birmingham, hypothesized that a low-carbohydrate diet could increase insulin sensitivity, and decrease circulating insulin levels, which in turn decreases levels of insulin-stimulated androgen synthesis.

Eleven non-diabetic women with clinically diagnosed PCOS were recruited to take part in three 16-day trials. The women consumed three test diets with three-week washout periods between each diet intervention period. The average age of the women was 33, with an average BMI of 30 kilograms per square metre.

The effects of the low-carbohydrate or a monounsaturated fatty acid (MUFA)-enriched diet were compared to a standard diet containing 56 per cent carb, 16 per cent protein, 31 per cent fat. The fatty acid content of the standard diet was 10 per cent polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) and 13 per cent MUFA.

The low-card diet consisted of 43 per cent carb, 15 per cent protein, 45 per cent fat. PUFAs made up 17 per cent, while MUFAs 18 per cent. The MUFA-enriched diet consisted of 55 per cent carb, 15 per cent protein, 33 per cent fat. PUFAs made up 6 per cent, while MUFAs 17 per cent. All diets were equally calorific.

The low-carb diet “significantly affected concentrations of fasting insulin, cholesterol, free fatty acids, and acute insulin response to glucose, but circulating concentrations of the reproductive hormones were not significantly affected by the intervention,” wrote the authors in the journal Fertility and Sterility (Vol. 85, pp. 679-688).

From baseline values, levels of fasting insulin decreased by 31 per cent, and the acute insulin response to glucose decreased by 16 per cent for the low-carb diet. The MUFA-enriched diet decreased levels of insulin by 25 per cent, and the acute insulin response to glucose level actually increased by seven per cent.

“Because elevated insulin is thought to contribute to the endocrine abnormalities in PCOS, a reduction in insulin would be expected to ultimately result in an improved endocrine profile.

Utilising this low carbohydrate diet in conjunction with a reduced calorie, weight loss regimen may produce additional favourable results in overweight and obese PCOS subjects,” concluded the researchers.

The low carb diet boom looks over for people in the mainstream, with Atkins Nutritionals, one of the main proponents of the low carb lifestyle, filing for bankruptcy last year. However, a recent meeting of scientists discussed the ‘Nutritional and Metabolic Aspects of Carbohydrate Restriction'.

The advocates who attended the conference were more interested in low carb from a disease management viewpoint rather than a general approach to nutrition.

Indeed, conference organizer Richard Feinman, professor of biochemistry at SUNY Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn said in January: “Some of the clinical results, particularly in diabetes, are quite remarkable.”
 
There is still just a big difference between a healthy low-carb diet and eating nearly nothing but meat, eggs, cheese, and the like. Even though I don't really agree with low carb, since you need carbohydrates for exercise, and I believe you need exercise, therefore making me not agree with low carb... all I'm saying is that people who eat pretty much only meat, eggs, cheese, and things like that, are misinformed and I believe they're hurting themselves.

You girls think I'm knocking low-carb here but I'm not. Like I said, I don't necessarily agree with it, but I'm not knocking it. I'm just against having a diet full of nothing but meat, eggs, and cheese, while thinking that's the proper, healthy thing to do. You can have a healthy low-carb diet without doing this.
 
You don't see us running around trying to tell everyone on low fat diets that "we don't agree" with them.

Sorry, but you know, the original poster did in fact ask what's everybody's opinion about this idea. I simply gave my opinion just as they asked. Why are you wigging out about it? If the poster didn't want opinions, they wouldn't have asked. I didn't randomly hunt down anything you said and gave you a lecture on it, I provided my opinion about a subject after it was publicly asked what everybody's opinion was. You act like I'm on a witch hunt and got your number or something. We were asked what's our opinions on a meat/egg binge, and I said I thought it was bad. What's the problem? If you believe something else, by all means, supply your opinion, but I don't see the point of some of this animosity. Surely we can debate and supply facts along with opinions without getting all emotional.
 
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Lol yeah I did back in Sept. People use different diet techneqes
thats why there are so many diets out there and you go with what
works.I feel as long as your not starving yourself or eating like you
did before pizza candy cake ect then your doing something right.
Tammy
 
Sorry, but you know, the original poster did in fact ask what's everybody's opinion about this idea. I simply gave my opinion just as they asked. Why are you wigging out about it? If the poster didn't want opinions, they wouldn't have asked. I didn't randomly hunt down anything you said and gave you a lecture on it, I provided my opinion about a subject after it was publicly asked what everybody's opinion was. You act like I'm on a witch hunt and got your number or something. We were asked what's our opinions on a meat/egg binge, and I said I thought it was bad. What's the problem? If you believe something else, by all means, supply your opinion, but I don't see the point of some of this animosity. Surely we can debate and supply facts along with opinions without getting all emotional.

Easy tiger! I simply gave my opinion too.
 
A high intake of fat and cholesterol in the diet in usually blamed for elevated blood cholesterol, but as you will learn, sugar and and excess intake of carbohydrate and trans fats are the real villians.

My 78 year old grandfather is skinny as a rail. He is highly active, always has been, he has worked very hard all his life. They eat traditional farm-based, southern oriented, natural foods, they don't eat things that would be high in trans-fats often whatsoever. But, the arteries in his neck are blocked pretty bad, really bad plaque on the artery walls. We thought he was going to die a few years ago when he passed out due to them. So, according to the author of this book... this has just GOT to be due to those EVIL CARBS, right?
 
I'm just simply wondering where his plaque came from, that's all. It didn't appear out of nowhere, and it obviously didn't come from all the meat and eggs that he has eaten all his life. That quote seemed to offer a pretty good answer.
 
Another thing struck me odd about that quote. It basically says that we worry too much about taking in too much bad cholesterol, and that the real problem is trans-fats. Well, the worst part about trans-fats is that they both raise your bad cholesterol and also lower your good cholesterol. The end result is the same thing, is it not? I don't get it, seems like that's basically saying that we worry too much about getting hit by a yellow Corvette when crossing the road, but the real culprit is getting hit by red Mustangs. Same difference, you still end up dead by the same exact means.
 
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It's an adaptation of the Atkins diet(by the way he died of heart failure.) The first stage of the Atkins is mostly meat, eggs, cheeses. It will really strip the weight off. I was on that stage before and lost a bunch though it quickly came back.
By the way.... Atkins died in April of 2003 because of head injuries from when he fell on the ice in front of his office.
 
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