The verdict is in: Not
all calories are created equal
by Stephanie
Thurrott | November 15, 2018
It’s what we’ve been
told all our lives—burn as many calories as you take in, and you’ll maintain
your weight. It’s why you think you can walk off those French fries, or treat
yourself to a bag of pretzels after an hour at the gym.
Just one problem—it
might not be true. A recent study published
in The BMJ found that, for maintaining weight loss, calories from
low-carb foods are better than those from high-carb foods.
Cutting carbs could
boost metabolism
In the study, people
eating a low-carb diet sped up their metabolisms by about 250 calories a day
compared to those eating high-carb diets. That’s a notable difference—it could
translate to a 22-pound weight loss over three years, on average.
The low-carbers also
had other differences that might help them keep weight off. They had
significantly lower levels of ghrelin, a hormone that can make you hungry, and
leptin, a protein linked with storing body fat.
And choosing a
low-carb diet may make even more of an impact as we get older.
“With age, insulin
resistance tends to increase and lean mass decreases,” says David S. Ludwig, MD, PhD. Those changes
can slow our metabolisms, making it harder to keep weight off.
“So our findings may
provide special benefit to older demographic groups—but this speculation
requires more study,” he says. Ludwig is one of the study’s principal
investigators and an endocrinologist, researcher, and professor at Harvard
Medical School and Harvard School of Public Health.
What does low carb
look like?
During the study, a sample dinner
included a selection of salmon, spinach, oranges, and milk for everyone. The
low-carbers added peanuts and cheddar cheese. The high-carbers ate long-grain
and wild rice, whole-wheat bread, vanilla yogurt, and dried cranberries
instead. Calorie counts were controlled.
If you’re sold on
cutting carbs, try chopping out refined grains and added sugars first—they seem
to be linked with fat storage.
Moderate amounts of
unprocessed carbs like whole fruits, legumes, root vegetables, and small
amounts of whole grains are better choices.
“And non-starchy
vegetables are essentially unlimited,” says Ludwig.
The nitty-gritty on
the study
The study examined
165 adults age 18 to 65 with body mass indexes that put them in the
“overweight” or “obese” categories. First, before the study started, they each
lost 10% to 14% of their body weight.
Then, researchers
divided them into three groups, taking in 20%, 40%, or 60% of their calories
from carbohydrates. Protein levels stayed fixed at 20% for everyone. Fat made
up the rest of the calories for each group. The participants followed those
diets for 20 weeks while researchers studied how they maintained their weight
loss.
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