https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2716748/
Small number but great results and over 24 weeks.
Small number but great results and over 24 weeks.
The largest drop was in the first 8 weeks, but it looks like a milder downward trend continued after that. And standard deviations are pretty low, which indicates that the weight loss was fairly consistent for most participants, versus numbers going down due a few extreme cases. LDL, triglycerides, and blood glucose followed a similar pattern, while HDL rose in the first 16 weeks then stayed steady through week 24.The initial BMI, and the BMI after the eighth, 16th and 24th week were 37.77±0.79 kg/m2, 33.90±0.83 kg/m2, 33.24±1.00 kg/m2 and 32.06±1.13 kg/m2, respectively (Figure 2).
So carbs were added at week 12, which would explain the slowed weight loss, etc, for weeks 16 and 24.All 83 subjects received the ketogenic diet consisting of 20 g to 30 g of carbohydrate in the form of green vegetables and salad, and 80 g to 100 g of protein in the form of meat, fish, fowl, eggs, shellfish and cheese. Polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats were also included in the diet. Twelve weeks later, an additional 20 g of carbohydrate were added to the meal of the patients to total 40 g to 50 g of carbohydrate. Micronutrients (vitamins and minerals) were given to each subject in the form of one capsule per day (Table 2).
A 13 year old study, it would be more use to know if any of the subjects continued with the diet and or have managed to maintain their weight loss, other wise all this shows is that diets work in the short term.
Good Morninghttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2716748/
Small number but great results and over 24 weeks.
The impression I got is that they didn't have limitations on fat intake, so long as it was only 20% saturated.I am puzzled by the diet structure, ie 50-30g carbs, 80-100g protein (both dependent on body mass), but for fats all I can find is 20% sat and 80% PUSF+MUSF, not the total fat mass. Have I missed something?
Good Morning
Thank you for pointing that research out, very interesting and significant, I feel. Do you know why it took 13 years to be published?
I am puzzled by the diet structure, ie 50-30g carbs, 80-100g protein (both dependent on body mass), but for fats all I can find is 20% sat and 80% PUSF+MUSF, not the total fat mass. Have I missed something?
Perhaps it is a sign of the aversion to fat that is still current?