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Type 2 Diabetes Prevention Focused on Normalization of Glycemia: A Two-Year Pilot Study.
McKenzie, AL, Athinarayanan, SJ, McCue, JJ, Adams, RN, Keyes, M, McCarter, JP, Volek, JS, Phinney, SD, Hallberg, SJ
Nutrients. 2021;(3)
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to assess the effects of an alternative approach to type 2 diabetes prevention. Ninety-six patients with prediabetes (age 52 (10) years; 80% female; BMI 39.2 (7.1) kg/m2) received a continuous remote care intervention focused on reducing hyperglycemia through carbohydrate restricted nutrition therapy for two years in a single arm, prospective, longitudinal pilot study. Two-year retention was 75% (72 of 96 participants). Fifty-one percent of participants (49 of 96) met carbohydrate restriction goals as assessed by blood beta-hydroxybutyrate concentrations for more than one-third of reported measurements. Estimated cumulative incidence of normoglycemia (HbA1c <5.7% without medication) and type 2 diabetes (HbA1c ≥6.5% or <6.5% with medication other than metformin) at two years were 52.3% and 3%, respectively. Prevalence of metabolic syndrome, class II or greater obesity, and suspected hepatic steatosis significantly decreased at two years. These results demonstrate the potential utility of an alternate approach to type 2 diabetes prevention, carbohydrate restricted nutrition therapy delivered through a continuous remote care model, for normalization of glycemia and improvement in related comorbidities.
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2.
Low Carbohydrate Diets and Estimated Cardiovascular and Metabolic Syndrome Risk in Prostate Cancer.
Freedland, SJ, Howard, LE, Ngo, A, Ramirez-Torres, A, Csizmadi, I, Cheng, S, Mack, A, Lin, PH
The Journal of urology. 2021;(6):1411-1419
Abstract
PURPOSE A low carbohydrate diet (LCD) was shown to suggestively slow prostate cancer (PC) growth. In noncancer patients, LCDs improve metabolic syndrome (MetS) without weight loss. However, concerns about negative impact on cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk remain. The objective of this secondary analysis is to determine the impact of an LCD on risk of MetS and estimated CVD risk in patients with PC. MATERIALS AND METHODS Pooled data were analyzed from 2 randomized trials testing LCD vs control on 1) preventing insulin resistance after starting hormone therapy (CAPS1) and 2) slowing PC growth in recurrent PC after failed primary treatment (CAPS2). Both trials included a usual care control vs LCD intervention in which patients were instructed to limit carbohydrate intake to ≤20 gm/day, and in CAPS1 only, to walk for ≥30 minutes/day for ≥5 days/week. MetS components (hypertension, high triglycerides, low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, central obesity and diabetes), 10-year CVD risk estimated using the Framingham Score with either body mass index (BMI) or lipids, and remnant cholesterol were compared between arms using mixed models adjusting for trial. RESULTS LCD resulted in a significantly reduced risk of MetS (p=0.004) and remnant cholesterol (p <0.001). Moreover, LCD resulted in significantly lower estimated CVD risk using BMI (p=0.002) over the study with no difference in estimated CVD risk using lipids (p=0.14). CONCLUSIONS LCD resulted in a significantly reduced risk of MetS and remnant cholesterol, and a significantly lower estimated CVD risk using BMI. By comparison, there was no difference in estimated CVD risk using lipids. Study limitations include small sample size, short followup, and inability to distinguish effects of carbohydrate restriction and weight loss. Long-term studies are needed to confirm this finding.
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Effect of Nutritional Habits on the Glycemic Response to Different Carbohydrate Diet in Children with Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus.
Lejk, A, Chrzanowski, J, Cieślak, A, Fendler, W, Myśliwiec, M
Nutrients. 2021;(11)
Abstract
Unhealthy eating habits are associated with obesity, metabolic syndrome, and increased insulin resistance in young patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM), and may impact the possible benefit from dietary interventions on glycaemic control. This study determines how nutritional patterns influence the quality of dietary intervention with a 30% or 50% carbohydrate diet in terms of glycaemic control measured with continuous glucose monitoring (CGM). Eating habits were obtained with a frequency-of-consumption questionnaire (FFQ-6) before the diet assessment. Altogether, we collected CGM and FFQ-6 data from 30 children (16 boys and 14 girls aged 10-17 years) with T1DM subjected to two consecutive 3-day nutritional plans. From these, 23 patients met the CGM data quality criteria for further analysis. Furthermore, high accuracy achieved in training (95.65%) and V-fold cross-validation (81.67%) suggest a significant impact of food habits in response to introduced nutritional changes. Patients who consumed more vegetables or grains (>4 times per day), more wheat products (>once per day), fewer fats (<1.5 times per day), and ranked fruit juice as the most common selection in the drinks category achieved glycaemic control more often after the introduction of a 30% carbohydrate diet, as opposed to those with different dietary patterns, whose glycaemic control was negatively impacted after switching to this diet. Additionally, the 50% carbohydrate diet was safe for all patients in the context of glycaemic control.
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4.
Low carbohydrate diet while taking dapagliflozin: A case report and review of literature.
Paul, N, Jonklaas, J
Diabetes & metabolic syndrome. 2021;(1):361-363
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Dietary therapy in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and/or left ventricular diastolic dysfunction in patients with metabolic syndrome.
von Bibra, H, Ströhle, A, St John Sutton, M, Worm, N
International journal of cardiology. 2017;:7-15
Abstract
BACKGROUND Heart failure is an ongoing epidemic of left ventricular (LV) dilatation and/or dysfunction due to the increasing prevalence of predisposing risk factors such as age, physical inactivity, (abdominal) obesity, and type-2-diabetes. Approximately half of these patients have diastolic heart failure (HFpEF). The prognosis of HFpEF is comparable to that of systolic heart failure, but without any known effective treatment. DIASTOLIC DYSFUNCTION A biomathematically corrected diagnostic approach is presented that quantifies diastolic dysfunction via the predominant age dependency of LV diastolic function and unmasks (metabolic) risk factors, that are independent of age and, therefore, potential targets for therapy. Patients with HFpEF have reduced cardiac energy reserve that is frequently caused by insulin resistance. Consequently, HFpEF and/or LV diastolic dysfunction may be regarded as a cardiac manifestation of the metabolic syndrome (MetS). DIETARY THERAPY Accordingly, a causal therapy for metabolically induced dysfunction aims at normalizing insulin sensitivity by improving postprandial glucose and lipid metabolism. The respective treatments include 1) weight loss induced by dietary energy restriction that is often not sustained long-term and 2) independent of weight loss, focus on carbohydrate modification in exchange for an increase in protein and fat, ideally combined with an aerobic exercise program. Hence, beneficial effects of different macronutrient compositions in the dietary therapy of the underlying MetS are discussed together with the most recently available publications and meta-analyses. CONCLUSION Modulation/restriction of carbohydrate intake normalizes postprandial hyperglycemic and insulinemic peaks and has been shown to improve all manifestations of the MetS and also to reduce cardiovascular risk.