Testimonials
I decided on a low-carbohydrate regimen. In the past I'd lost weight
on low fat/low calorie diets, but I always packed it back on, and
more with each cycle. Moreover, I prefer meat, fish, cheese, and eggs
to brown rice and collard greens. And then, it seemed reasonable to
me, carbohydrates being the chief contributor of glucose in the blood,
the fewer carbohydrates in the diet, the better the chance of getting
the blood sugar count down.
From the start I was puzzled that the American Diabetes Association
diet was virtually identical to the American Heart Association's,
Stroke Association's, and American Cancer Society's diets. Were these
organizations not faced with different problems calling for, it seemed
obvious, different diets? In the hospital, when I was first diagnosed,
I joked to the diabetes consultant, "Oh my, no more pizza!"
"Oh sure, you can have pizza," she said, "you just
can't have fatty meat toppings." It didn't add up. It seemed
to me that in pizza, so far as blood sugar was concerned, the culprit
was the crust. I was thinking along these lines, albeit with nothing
but my inclinations to back me up, before I read Dr. Bernstein's
Diabetes Solution and Dr. Atkins' New Diet Revolution.
I'm afraid I ignored the prohibitions of coffee and alcohol found
in Atkins's book. I continued to drink coffee in the morning and alcohol
in the evening, usually in moderation. Powerful habits. I did, however,
strictly observe Dr. Atkins' weight loss prescription for a progression
of carbohydrate counts, first 20 g. per day, then 30 g. daily, etc.
Indeed, with Dr. Bernstein setting a maximum of 30 g. per day for
diabetics, I remained at that level longer than Dr. Atkins requires.
In seven months, I discarded the 70 excess pounds at a pretty constant
rate of 10 pounds per month. On my "maintenance diet," I
do not "count" carbohydrates. I abjure sugar (save for the
bit in prepared foods like catsup); I eat no flour and bread (save
for lightly dredging fish and chicken to be fried in flour), no pasta
or pizza (I do miss pizza!), no rice, potatoes, root vegetables, fruits,
no foods dense in carbohydrates. My guess is I consume between 30
g. and 60 g. of carbohydrates a day. In the eight months since reaching
my target weight of 200 pounds, my weight has not fluctuated more
than a few pounds. I use quite a few vitamin and mineral supplements,
including chromium picolinate, and take 6-8 g. of psyllium fiber per
day because of a tendency to constipation when I eat a great deal
of cheese.
I cannot gauge the extent to which my low carbohydrate diet contributes
to blood sugar control because I am on diabetes medications, including
a sulfonylurea such as, for different reasons, Drs. Atkins and Bernstein
disapprove (Amaryl, 2-4 mg. daily). I also take 2000 mg. of metformin
daily. When I have reduced the Amaryl to 2 g. or none, my average
blood sugar counts rise more than10 mg/dl. I am not happy with the
fluctuations in the blood glucose numbers I get on my home tester,
but my physician says that, with a damaged pancreas, I am being unrealistic.
It occurs to me that if, as Dr. Bernstein advises, I limited my daily
carbohydrates to 30 g. every day, I might be able to improve and stabilize
these numbers, and possibly eliminate the Amaryl, which I would like
to do. I have not, to date, been able to screw up the resolve required
for so demanding a regimen. Maybe someday. My A1C is excellent: 12
when I was first diagnosed, it now ranges between 4.5 and 5.4.
I have seen other positive consequences of adopting a low carbohydrate
diet. My blood pressure, cholesterol, etc. were never a concern. During
the years of my obesity, my numbers were at the wrong end of the acceptable
range, occasionally a few points high, but usually within guidelines.
After 15 months on a high fat, low carbohydrate diet, all have improved
to desirable levels: cholesterol is 185; HDL cholesterol 100; LDL
cholesterol 78.2, VLDL 6.8; triglycerides 34; blood pressure 124/68.
An acid reflux problem that required daily medication for ten years
has disappeared.
I have several times reread Dr. Atkins' New Diet Revolution
and Dr. Bernstein's Diabetes Solution. I have also read a good
deal of material published by the "nutrition/dieting establishment"
which is highly critical of Dr. Atkins; and also many publications
of orthodox diabetologists for whom Dr. Bernstein and his successful
therapy might as well not not exist; he is a pariah. Given my personal
experience, and the anecdotal, gastroenterological and other scientific,
and historical evidence marshalled by Drs. Bernstein and Atkins, it
disturbs me that the "establishment" continues to preach
that dietary fat is the villain in diabetes, obesity, coronary problems,
etc., and that the healthy and therapeutic diet is one that is largely
carbohydrates. Perhaps the hint of hysteria with which the high carbohydrates/low
fats diets are pushed these days indicates that proponents of dietary
orthodoxy now know they are wrong? In my personal experience, people
who suspect they have been very wrong about something more often react
with outraged indignation at the very suggestion of such a thing,
rather than eat crow.
I am aware that the American Heart Association is, in small increments,
increasing the amount of dietary fat it allows, and that the American
Diabetes Association has conceded that, so far as blood sugar levels
are concerned, one consumed carbohydrate, whether it comes from asparagus
or refined sugar, acts pretty much like every other.
However, if Dr. Atkins is correct in the area of weight loss , and
Dr. Bernstein is correct about the kind of diet that lowers blood
sugar in diabetics, merely increasing the dietary fats allowance ten
or twenty percent is not going to help anyone. And, surely, one might
draw radically different conclusions from recent findings about the
effects of carbohydrates in the diet than to tell people, that it's
okay to have the 37 g. of simple carbohydrates in a Pop Tart so long
as the dieter reduces the roasted eggplant he planned to eat that
day by six cups. (Good Lord!) The key to the success of the Atkins
and Bernstein regimens, it seems to me (and I am reasoning, not writing
as a scientist, which I am not) is not increasing fats consumption
per se ; it is in slashing carbohydrates in the diet to a very small
amount and paying no attention to the increase in fat consumption
that necessarily follows. Dietary fat causes obesity and, therefore,
for some, diabetes, it seems to me (deducing again, making no claims
which I am not qualified to make), only when consumed along with large
quantities of carbohydrates. The key, as Drs. Bernstein and Atkins
say, is cutting carbohydrates to very low levels. I have been very
lucky in that, whilst my personal physician did not endorse Atkins
and Bernstein, he did not denounce them as, other diabetics have told
me, their doctors have done. (At his request, I loaned him my copy
of Dr. Bernstein's Diabetes Solution.)
The insistence of orthodox dieticians, in the face of evidence to
the contrary, on depicting dietary fat as an evil of diabolical degree,
is intriguing. Its origins surely lie in the fact that, for two hundred
years, food reformers have inclined toward vegetarianism and, if in
diluted form, their preachments have infiltrated medical and nutritional
orthodoxy. Add to that the propensity of human beings to refuse to
face evidence they are mistaken, and you have the semi-hysteria with
which Dr. Atkins is assailed and Dr. Bernstein rendered virtually
a non-person in a field in which he has had great success. The hope
is that as the evidence mounts (as it is doing!) that the ever-increasing
carbohydrate consumption of the last thirty years (and the steep decline
in fats consumption) just maybe has something to do with the precisely
contemporaneous "epidemic" in Type II diabetes and obesity,
perhaps the two of them will get their due.
J.R.C.
Bandon, Oregon
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