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Protein diet plus exercise equals
more weight loss
New York -
Women who follow a high-protein, low-carbohydrate diet may lose
more weight and body fat, particularly when they engage in regular
exercise, than those whose diets are low in protein and high in
carbohydrates, a team of Illinois researchers reports.
"A protein-rich diet, restricting
carbohydrates, is a very good way to lose weight," study author Dr.
Donald K. Layman told Reuters Health. And, he added, "It definitely
enhances the benefits of doing exercise."
Yet, both a high-protein and a
high-carbohydrate diet are effective for women who desire to reduce
their cholesterol level or otherwise improve their blood lipid
profile, the report indicates.
A growing body of research points to
the benefits of low-calorie diets that are low in carbohydrates and
high in protein. Regular exercise is also known to be both a necessary
component of any effective weight loss strategy and key to the
maintenance of that weight loss. Yet, few researchers have examined
the combined role of a high-protein, low-carbohydrate diet and
exercise in weight loss and body composition.
To investigate, Layman, a nutrition
professor at the University of Illinois, in Urbana, and his team
studied 48 women, aged 40 - 56 years. The women were randomly assigned
to one of four groups: a high-protein diet group, a high-protein diet
group that exercised, a high-carbohydrate group and a
high-carbohydrate group that exercised. [
The diets were equal in total energy,
and were both "nutritionally sound," the researcher noted, allowing
the women to consume recommended amounts of fruits, vegetables and
dairy products, while controlling their servings of protein and
carbohydrates, respectively.
Those who exercised were required to
walk for at least 30 minutes a day for five days a week and to
participate in a resistance training program twice a week, using
weight machines.
At the end of the 16-week study
period, women in all four groups lost a significant amount of weight,
lost body fat and reduced their calorie intake, Layman and his team
report in the Journal of Nutrition.
However, those who consumed the
high-protein diet lost more body weight and total fat and less lean
muscle mass than did those on the high-carbohydrate diet, the report
indicates. Further, the addition of exercise, particularly to the
high-protein diet, allowed women to lose even more body fat and
preserve lean mass.
For example, women that consumed a
high protein diet and exercised reduced their body fat by 21.4
percent, while those on the high-carbohydrate diet that did not
exercise experienced a 12.8 percent drop in body fat, study findings
show.
Both the high-protein and the
high-carbohydrate diets improved the women's levels of blood fats, but
the effect varied according to the specific diet, the researchers
note.
The high-carbohydrate group
experienced greater drops in their total cholesterol level and their
level of the "bad" LDL cholesterol, while the high-protein group
experienced greater drops in their level of triacylglycerol and
maintained higher levels of the "good" HDL cholesterol.
Both diets "improved (the women's)
profile but they were a little different in how they improved it,"
Layman noted. Thus, in answering the question of which diet works
best, Layman emphasized that it "depends on who you are."
Women with high levels of
triglycerides and low levels of HDL cholesterol, such as those with
the pre-diabetes metabolic syndrome, may gain the most benefit from a
high-protein diet, for example, while those with high cholesterol may
gain more benefit from the high-carbohydrate diet, the report
indicates.
The research was funded by the
Illinois Council on Food and Agricultural Research, the National
Cattlemen's Beef Association, the Beef Board and Kraft Foods. --
Reuters
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