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  #1   ^
Old Thu, Aug-19-04, 09:34
LCRobbie's Avatar
LCRobbie LCRobbie is offline
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Posts: 298
 
Plan: Atkins
Stats: 389/312/250 Male 6'3"
BF:guess
Progress: 55%
Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Default More Benefits to Low-Carb Lifestyle?

Here is a news article from our local television station. Not sure how to get this on the LC home page, thought it was intersting though


More Benefits to Low-Carb Lifestyle?

Studies have shown that carbohydrates can stimulate insulin growth factor, which can stimulate cancer cells to grow

Aug 13, 2004 5:12 pm US/Eastern
Pittsburgh (KDKA)

Like many of us, Cathy Tatum has tried lots of diets to try and maintain a healthy weight; but now she's dieting for a different reason.

" I think it's a real important way for us to learn new treatments and new ways to prevent diseases, especially." -- Cathy Tatum, In Clinical Trial
Tatum volunteered to help researchers at Ohio State's Comprehensive Cancer Center answer an important question:

Can low-carb or low-fat diets help lower the risk of breast cancer?

Researchers put Tatum on a diet specifically designed for her. While she watches what she eats, scientists will watch for a hormone in her body known as insulin growth factor.

"We want to see if changing the woman's diet to lower the fat, plus exercise will reduce the insulin growth factor." -- Electra Paskett, Ph.D., Researcher
Studies have shown that carbohydrates can stimulate the insulin growth factor -- which in turn can stimulate cancer cells to grow.

So on this diet, researchers won't just focus on how much a woman weighs -- but how her body responds internally.
"We should be seeing some good things in her body as far as these bio-markers that we're looking at; so then we'll tell her how she's doing and if she's doing well, does that make her stay adherent." -- Electra Paskett, Ph.D., Researcher
Paskett says too many women are too dependent on the scale to tell them if their diet is a success or not. She's trying to find out if there are other benefits to dieting besides looking thin -- that will make more women committed to fitness.

Women who take part in the study will be on a tailor-made diet designed to help them lose two-pounds per week. They will be monitored and evaluated for a total of 18-months.
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  #2   ^
Old Thu, Aug-19-04, 11:27
tofi's Avatar
tofi tofi is offline
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Plan: Atkins
Stats: 244/220/170 Female 65.4inches
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Location: Ontario
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Could you give the link to the original report, please?
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  #3   ^
Old Thu, Aug-19-04, 12:49
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LCRobbie LCRobbie is offline
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Posts: 298
 
Plan: Atkins
Stats: 389/312/250 Male 6'3"
BF:guess
Progress: 55%
Location: Pittsburgh, PA
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  #4   ^
Old Thu, Aug-19-04, 19:43
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Angeline Angeline is offline
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Plan: Atkins (loosely)
Stats: -/-/- Female 60
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Progress: 40%
Location: Ottawa, Ontario
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This is great. This is a direct result of the shift in thinking that was brought about by the low-carb movement. First scientists, sponsored by their various commercial interests, launched studies in the hope of disproving (or proving) low-carb as a viable weight loss program. That battle still rages on. However now, because of this, some scientists are truly intrigued by the effects of low-carbing and this is where the REAL science is going to happen. Good science happens not when it's trying to prove a point, but when it's trying to learn, to observe and to understand with an open mind.
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  #5   ^
Old Fri, Aug-20-04, 10:47
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mio1996 mio1996 is offline
Glutton for Grease!
Posts: 1,338
 
Plan: Primal-VLC
Stats: 295/190/190 Male 76
BF:don't/really/care
Progress: 100%
Location: Clemson, SC
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So they are actually going to look at signs of someone's health while doing a diet study? Imagine that! If the report is written objectively and the conclusions drawn thereby are actually a logical breakdown of the results of the study, we will actually win one here!
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