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Weight Management: Popular Approaches

Formula Diets and Meal Replacements. Meal formats and nutritional profiles varyTotal calories range from 1000-1600 kcals day with meal replacement drinks or bars replacing two meals during weight loss or one meal for weight maintenance. Formula Diets and Meal Replacements. There is evidence that meal replacements can be as effective as standard low-calorie diets in promoting weight loss.

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Weight Management: Popular Approaches

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    1. Weight Management: Popular Approaches

    2. Formula Diets and Meal Replacements Meal formats and nutritional profiles vary Total calories range from 1000-1600 kcals day with meal replacement drinks or bars replacing two meals during weight loss or one meal for weight maintenance

    3. Formula Diets and Meal Replacements There is evidence that meal replacements can be as effective as standard low-calorie diets in promoting weight loss

    4. Evaluation of Major Commercial Weight Loss Programs Reviewed research regarding the efficacy of commercial weight loss programs including Weight Watchers, Jenny Craig, LA Weight Loss, HMR, OPTIFAST, commercial Internet programs (e-diets.com); Overeaters Anonymous and Take Off Pounds Sensibly

    5. Evaluation of Major Commercial Weight Loss Programs Weight Watchers had the strongest studies to support it Best study: participants lost 5% of their initial body weight (about 10 pounds) and kept off 3% (about 5 pounds) at 2 years No published high-quality studies of Jenny Craig or LA Weight Loss

    6. Evaluation of Major Commercial Weight Loss Programs Studies of VLCDs were of limited quality Patients who stayed on the program lost 15-20% of initial body weight in 6 months Many patients dropped out of these programs Those who completed the program regained half of lost weight in 1-2 years after treatment Studies of internet-based programs of limited quality and produced minimal weight loss

    7. Atkins Diet Premise Stabilizes insulin production by limiting carb intake. This forces the body from glucosis into lipolysis, thus ketones are burned as the primary energy source. This results in a metabolic advantage of low carbohydrate: dieters can lose weight while eating more calories

    8. Atkins Diet: Induction Phase “Induction Phase”: 2 weeks, 20 g carb/day Eliminate fruit, bread, grains, starchy vegetables, dairy products except cheese, cream, butter 20 g carb: 3 cups salad greens, or 2 cups salad plus 2/3 cups cooked vegetables such as asparagus, summer squash, green beans

    9. Atkins- Sample Menu Phase 1 B: scrambled eggs and ham, butter, decaffeinated coffee or tea L: Bacon cheeseburger, no bun, small tossed salad, selzer water D: shrimp cocktail with mustard and mayo, clear consomme, steak, roast, fish or fowl, tossed salad, diet gelatin with whipped cream, sf beverage

    10. Atkins Phase 2: OWL “Ongoing weight loss phase” or “Owl.” Add carbohydrate at a rate of 5 grams a day until weight loss stops This is the CCLL: critical carbohydrate level for losing May be 45, or 33, or 19 grams/day Continue at this level until desired weight is reached

    11. Atkins: Sample menu OWL B: Western omelet, 3 ounces tomato juice, 2 carbo grams of bran crispbread, decaf coffee or tea L: Chef’s salad with ham, cheese, chicken and egg; zero carbohydrate or oil and vinegar dressing, iced herbal tea D: Seafood salad, poached salmon, 2/3 cup vegetable from permitted list, half cup of strawberries in cream

    12. South Beach Diet Premise “Addiction” to carbs is a psychological need for comfort food and is likely a real, physiological phenomenon Eating bad carbs leads to cravings for more which is “ultimately responsible for our obesity epidemic” States that Atkins may limit carbs too severely Stresses glycemic index as the biggest determinant of a food’s potential impact on body weight

    13. South Beach Diet: Phase 1 (2 weeks) Carbs limited to low-carb vegetables, salads, 1% milk, fat-free buttermilk, nonfat yogurt. Proteins: unlimited lean meats, poultry, fish, low fat cheese, tofu Nuts included, but limited “Good” fats including olive, canola oils Sugar-free hard candies, diet gelatin, sugar subs NO fatty meats, starchy vegetables like corn, potatoes, carrots, fruits, grains, alcohol

    14. South Beach: Sample Day Phase 1 B: 6 oz tomato juice, 1/4-1/2 cup liquid egg substitute, decaf coffee or tea, non-fat milk, sugar substitute snack: 1-2 turkey roll ups L: SB chopped salad with tuna, sf gelatin snack: celery, 1 wedge Laughing Cow Light Cheese D: baked chix breast, roasted eggplant and peppers, salad, lo sugar dressing Dessert: Mocha Ricotta Creme

    15. South Beach: Sample Day Phase 2 B: 1 cup blueberries; 1 scrambled egg w/ salsa; oatmeal mixed with 1 cup nonfat milk, sprinkled with cinnamon and walnuts; coffee or tea Snack: 4 oz non-fat sugar-free yogurt L: Tuna salad w/ celery, mayo, tomato, onion in whole wheat pita Snack: 1 part-skim mozzarella cheese stick D: Pan roasted steak and onions, South Beach salad, steamed broccoli; chocolate-dipped strawberries

    16. South Beach Diet: Phase 2 Reintroduces most fruits, whole grains (sparingly) including popcorn, legumes such as pinto beans, starchy vegetables such as peas, carrots and sweet potatoes, flavored nonfat yogurt, semisweet or bittersweet chocolate, wine Still forbidden: white flour and products made from it including breads, cookies, pasta; potatoes, white rice, corn; fruits including bananas, canned fruit, pineapple, raisins, watermelon Dieters stay in this phase until goal weight achieved

    17. South Beach: Sample Day Phase 2 B: 1 cup blueberries; 1 scrambled egg w/ salsa; oatmeal mixed with 1 cup nonfat milk, sprinkled with cinnamon and walnuts; coffee or tea Snack: 4 oz non-fat sugar-free yogurt L: Tuna salad w/ celery, mayo, tomato, onion in whole wheat pita Snack: 1 part-skim mozzarella cheese stick D: Pan roasted steak and onions, South Beach salad, steamed broccoli; chocolate-dipped strawberries

    18. South Beach Diet: Phase 3 Maintenance- no foods are forbidden Continue to limit high carb, refined or heavily processed foods. Return to earlier phase if weight gain occurs

    19. South Beach vs Atkins Phase 1 Atkins Proteins: All meats, poultry, fish, shellfish, eggs, cheese are unlimited Fats: vegetable oils, butter, mayonnaise, heavy cream, bacon Vegetables: 3 cups salad or 2 cups salad and 2/3 cup low carb vegetables NO: artificial sweeteners, margarine, fruits, grains, breads, starchy vegetables, dairy, alcohol South Beach Proteins: Lean beef, pork, skinless poultry, low fat cheese, seafood, eggs Fats: Canola and olive oil Vegetables: salad greens, beans, tomatoes, cabbage, summer squash, broccoli, all low carb are unlimited Dairy: Fat free or 1% milk or yogurt NO: fatty meat, high fat cheese; fruits, grains, breads, starchy vegetables, butter, margarine, alcohol

    20. High Carbohydrate Low Fat Diets The Pritikin Weight Loss Breakthrough Eat More, Weigh Less (Dean Ornish)

    21. High Carb Low Fat Diets Rationale: diet is high in bulk and fiber, low in calorie density producing early satiety and weight loss Description: 50-75% carbohydrate calories, relatively less meat, fish, fats and oils, more grains, cereals, breads, fruits, vegetables

    22. Sample Menu: High Carb Low Fat B: 1 cup blueberries; oatmeal mixed with 1 cup nonfat milk, sprinkled with cinnamon and walnuts; coffee or tea Snack: 4 oz non-fat sugar-free yogurt L: Vegetarian vegetable soup, fresh orange, nonfat yogurt D: Grilled salmon with yogurt-dill sauce, bulgur with raisins, steamed broccoli; strawberries over angelfood cake Snack: air popped popcorn

    23. Very Low Fat Diets <10% of calories from fat May be vegetarian Includes The Pritikin Program and Dean Ornish’s Program for Reversing Heart Disease Elimination of fat makes the diet less energy dense May be difficult for some people to adhere to

    24. Research on Macronutrient Mix in Weight Loss Diets

    25. A Low- Carbohydrate, Ketogenic Diet versus a Low-Fat Diet To Treat Obesity and Hyperlipidemia Objective: Compare effects of a low-carb, ketogenic diet with those of a low-fat, low chol, reduced calorie diet Design: Randomized, controlled Subjects: 120 overweight, hyperlipidemic volunteers Intervention: Low carb diet (initially <20 g carb/day) plus nutritional supplementation, exercise recommendation, and group meetings or low-fat diet (<30% energy from fat, <300 mg chol, deficit of 500-1000 kcal/d) plus exercise recommendation and group meetings

    26. Low Carb vs Low Fat Diet Measurements: body weight, body composition, fasting serum lipid levels and group meetings Results: 76% of the low-carb group and 57% of the low-fat group completed the study. At 24 weeks weight loss was greater in the low-carb group (12.9%) than in the low-fat group (6.7%) Pts in both groups lost more fat mass (-9.4 kg low carb, -4.8 kg low-fat) than fat free mass (-3.3 kg vs -2.4 kg) Low carb diet subjects had > decreases in serum triglycerides (-74.2 mg.dL vs. -27.9 mg/dL)

    28. Low Carb vs. Low Fat Low carb group had > increases in HDL-C (5.5 mg/dL vs. -1.6 mg/dL P<0.001) Changes in LDL-C were not significant Low carb group had greater participant retention and greater weight loss over 24 weeks Minor adverse effects were more frequent in the low-carb diet group Limitations: Effects of the low-carb diet and of the nutritional supplements could not be separated. Participants were healthy and were followed for only 24 weeks.

    29. Effects of Low-Carbohydrate vs Conventional Weight Loss Diets in Severely Obese Adults: One Year Follow Up of a Randomized Trial Objective: Review the 1-year outcomes of two groups randomized to these diets 132 obese adults, BMI 35 or greater; 83% had diabetes or metabolic syndrome Participants were counseled to either restrict carb intake to < 30g/day or reduce calories by 500 cals/day with <30% of cals from fat

    31. Low carb vs. conventional 1 year follow up By 1 year, mean weight change for persons on the low carb diet was -5.1 +/- 8.7 kg compared with -3.1 +/- 8.4 kg for persons on a conventional diet. Differences were not significant (P= 0.20) Triglycerides decreased more on low carb diet, HDL levels decreased less, HbA1c improved more Changes in other lipids (LDL, total-C) and insulin sensitivity did not differ between groups Limitations: 34% drop out rate, suboptimal dietary adherence; relatively small net weight loss in both groups

    32. Low Carb vs. Conventional Diet Outcomes Between 6 months and 1 year, persons in the low carb group began to regain weight while persons on the conventional diet continued to lose weight By 6 months, there was no significant difference in weight loss between the two groups Intake data suggest that differences in weight loss, where they exist, are the result of differences in calorie intakes, not a metabolic advantage of low carb

    33. Atkins vs Zone vs Ornish vs Learn 311 overweight women ages 20 to 50 were randomized to one of four diets incrementally different in CHO Subjects were given books explaining the diet and attended weekly instruction for eight weeks; then remained on the diets for another 10 months (total = 1 year)

    34. Changes from baseline at 12 months

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