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Thu, 24 Apr 2003 14:50:00 -0500

HSI - Jenny Thompson

Long Live The Revolution

 

LONG LIVE THE REVOLUTION

 

Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

 

April 24, 2003

 

**************************************************************

 

Dear Reader,

 

Around lunchtime on Thursday last week I was saddened to see

the breaking news in my e-mail inbox: Dr. Robert C. Atkins

had died that morning at Cornell University Medical Center in

New York City. After I mentioned this briefly in last

Thursday's e-Alert, I received this e-mail from an HSI member

named Jaime: " When did Atkins die, what did he die of, and

how old was he? "

 

On Tuesday, April 8, Dr. Atkins slipped on an icy sidewalk

outside his Manhattan office and suffered a head injury.

After undergoing emergency brain surgery, he remained in a

coma until his death on April 17. At age 72, Dr. Atkins still

worked full time attending to patients and overseeing the

Atkins Center for Complementary Medicine.

 

As I said in last week's e-Alert, HSI has worked closely with

Dr. Atkins in the past, and so his death was both a great

personal and professional loss. Most of the news stories I

read described him as a diet " guru, " and in the sense that he

was an influential, groundbreaking leader in the field of

complementary medicine, he was indeed something of a guru - a

trusted counselor who helped millions of people regain their

physical health with his unconventional ideas about

nutrition.

 

-----------------------------

Coming on strong

-----------------------------

 

After many years of abuse by mainstream nutritionists, there

was a sea change for Dr. Atkins and the Atkins diet last

summer. In an e-Alert I sent you in July ( " Taking a Brody "

7/10/02) I told you about a cover story in the Sunday New

York Times Magazine that showed how a steadily growing

minority of establishment researchers were beginning to take

seriously the low-carbohydrate diet made famous by the author

of " Dr. Atkins' Diet Revolution. "

 

Over the course of 30 years, Dr. Atkins never wavered from

his controversial dietary ideas. In a nutshell, the Atkins

plan advises us to eat as much meat and other high protein

and high fat foods as we care to, while avoiding starches and

refined carbohydrates such as breads, pasta, rice, and

sugars. This plan has won many millions of readers worldwide,

but has drawn numerous, often passionate attacks from the

nutrition and diet establishment.

 

The American Heart Association has long condemned the Atkins

diet as an unhealthy regimen for the cardiovascular system.

So it must have been thoroughly galling to many in the

AHA " low-fat " camp when the results of a Duke University

study were announced last November, as part of the 75th

annual AHA meeting. In all of the heart health categories in

that trial, the Atkins diet scored equal or higher marks than

the AHA's " Step 1 " low-fat diet.

 

-----------------------------

Step 1 stumbles

-----------------------------

 

In the Duke study 120 overweight subjects were put on two

diets: one half of the group followed the AHA's Step 1, low-

fat diet, and the other half followed the Atkins diet, in

which 60 percent of their daily calories came from fat, while

carbohydrates were reduced to less than 20 grams per day. The

Atkins subjects lost, on average 31 pounds each over 6 weeks,

while the AHA group lost an average of 20 pounds each. That

alone would be news. But the real news comes from three sets

of data that are touted to measure heart health.

 

The levels of LDL cholesterol (commonly called " bad

cholesterol " ) for the two groups showed almost no statistical

change. And while the numbers break even, I would guarantee

that more than a few pro-low-fat nutritionists fully expected

the Atkins diet to boost the LDL. Meanwhile, the Atkins group

showed an 11 percent increase in HDL cholesterol (the " good "

cholesterol). The AHA group recorded no rise in their HDL

levels.

 

Finally, and more importantly, the AHA group had a 22 percent

drop in triglycerides, while the Atkins group experienced a

triglycerides drop of almost 50 percent - more than double

the AHA dieters.

 

This was a major victory for Dr. Atkins - to be vindicated

with prestigious research, and to have it announced in the

camp of his most vocal detracters.

 

-----------------------------

On to Pennsylvania!

-----------------------------

 

In response to the AHA announcement, those nutritionists who

had long derided the Atkins plan were up in arms - but

certainly not backing down. In the San Francisco Chronicle,

Gail Woodward-Lopez, the associate director of the Center for

Weight and Health at the University of California, Berkeley,

compared the Atkins diet to a disease, saying, " Hepatitis C

is effective at helping people lose weight too. " And Judith

Levine, an AHA registered dietitian curtly dismissed the

results, claiming, simply, " It's such a scam. "

 

I can't help but think that their comments would have praised

the study if the results had shown the AHA diet to be

superior. After all, that's how it was SUPPOSED to turn out,

right?

 

The critics pointed out that the Duke study was funded by the

Robert C. Atkins Foundation - as if this automatically made

the results corrupt. What they don't mention is that three

other studies presented at medical conferences last year all

showed results similar to the Duke statistics. And their call

for further research has already been answered. Currently

underway is a one-year study at the University of

Pennsylvania, following 360 subjects.

 

In light of how things have been going for the Atkins diet in

the last few months, if you had to place a bet on the U. Penn

study, which side would you lay your money on? As always -

I'll keep an eye on my sources and let you know about the

Pennsylvania study results as soon as I hear.

 

In the meantime, in the wake of those successes, we mourn the

passing of the man who made the successes possible while

truly revolutionizing the world of nutritional medicine.

 

**************************************************************

....and another thing

 

In Tuesday's e-Alert I told you how high cholesterol levels

have been associated with the risk of Alzheimer's disease. Of

course, the drug industry is excited by that news - it opens

up a huge and lucrative new market for their expensive statin

drugs.

 

As we already know, however, there are effective methods to

lower cholesterol that don't carry all the dangerous side

effects of statins. For instance, research shows that reduced

cholesterol has been linked with a high intake of flavonoids -

plant pigment molecules found in fruits and vegetables, as

well as the leaves of the tea plant.

 

The May issue of the HSI Members Alert features an article

about the specific flavonoids in both green and black teas,

and how their powerful antioxidant and anti-inflammatory

qualities have helped reduce cholesterol. The problem with

getting these nutrients through tea drinking is that you

would need to drink an enormous amount of tea every day to

have any effect on your cholesterol level.

 

To Your Good Health,

 

Jenny Thompson

Health Sciences Institute

 

**************************************************************

Sources:

" Diet Dr. Robert Atkins Dies From Injuries " UPI, 4/17/03

" School Introduces National 'Meatless Monday' Health

Campaign - Campaign Aims to Cut Americans' Consumption of

Saturated Fat by 15 Percent " Press Release, The Center for a

Livable Future, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public

Health, 10/7/02

" Atkins Diet Beats Low-Fat Fare " Associated Press, 11/18/02

" Knives Drawn Over Atkins Diet Study " Kim Severson, San

Francisco Chronicle, 11/19/02

 

Copyright ©1997-2003 by www.hsibaltimore.com, L.L.C.

The e-Alert may not be posted on commercial sites without

written permission.

 

**************************************************************

Before you hit reply to send us a question or request, please

click here http://www.hsibaltimore.com/ealert/questions.html

 

**************************************************************

**************************************************************

If you'd like to participate in the HSI Forum, search past

e-Alerts and products or you're an HSI member and would like

to search past articles, visit http://www.hsibaltimore.com

 

**************************************************************

To learn more about HSI, call (203) 699-4416 or visit

http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/HSI/WHSIC313/home.cfm.

 

**************************************************************

 

 

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Or, go to our group site: Gettingwell

 

 

 

 

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