Baumann Monica, Espeland Martine Z, Kværner Ane Sørlie, Bogsrud Martin Prøven, Retterstøl Kjetil
Det medisinske fakultet, Universitetet i Oslo, Norway.
Tidsskr Nor Laegeforen. 2013 Jun 11;133(11):1193-6. doi: 10.4045/tidsskr.12.0034.
Many Norwegians have embraced the low-carb trend and choose butter and bacon instead of brown bread and carrots. This entails a dramatic change in the total intake of fat and the intake of saturated fat. We have investigated how a low-carb diet can affect the lipid profile in healthy adults with a normal bodyweight.
Seven healthy female participants with normal bodyweight underwent a four-week trial of a low-carb diet (< 20-25 grams of carbohydrates/day). Daily diet registrations were made during the trial period, and diet data for three randomly selected days were included in the estimates. Blood samples and weight data were collected as fasting values prior to and after the intervention.
Standardised diet data were available for six participants. On a low-carb diet, the energy intake from carbohydrates accounted for a median of 3 (spread: 2-5) per cent of the total energy intake. The intake of fat accounted for 71 (67-78) per cent of total energy, while protein accounted for 26 (19-31) of total energy intake. At baseline, the median value of total cholesterol was 4.1 mmol/L (dispersion: 3.3-5.7) and LDL cholesterol was 2.2 (1.8-3.4) mmol/L. The values increased to 5.2 (3.7-8.8) mmol/L and 3.1 (1.9-6.2) mmol/L for total and LDL cholesterol respectively. The absolute changes correspond to a percentage increase in total cholesterol of 33 (14-71)% and in LDL cholesterol of 41 (9-84)%. Median weight change amounted to -1.2 kg (-2.8-0.6).
A diet with little carbohydrate and a great deal of protein and fat resulted in a considerably heightened level of total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol in young, healthy women with a normal bodyweight. The findings indicate that a low-carb diet may have a negative impact on individual risk profiles. However, the study is small-scale and the results must be interpreted with caution.
许多挪威人接受了低碳水化合物饮食潮流,选择黄油和培根而非黑面包和胡萝卜。这导致脂肪总摄入量和饱和脂肪摄入量发生巨大变化。我们研究了低碳水化合物饮食如何影响体重正常的健康成年人的血脂状况。
七名体重正常的健康女性参与者进行了为期四周的低碳水化合物饮食试验(每天碳水化合物摄入量<20 - 25克)。在试验期间进行每日饮食记录,估计值纳入随机选择的三天的饮食数据。干预前后收集空腹血样和体重数据。
六名参与者有标准化饮食数据。在低碳水化合物饮食中,碳水化合物的能量摄入量占总能量摄入量的中位数为3%(范围:2 - 5%)。脂肪摄入量占总能量的71%(67 - 78%),而蛋白质占总能量摄入量的26%(19 - 31%)。基线时,总胆固醇中位数为4.1毫摩尔/升(离散度:3.3 - 5.7),低密度脂蛋白胆固醇为2.2(1.8 - 3.4)毫摩尔/升。总胆固醇和低密度脂蛋白胆固醇的值分别增至5.2(3.7 - 8.8)毫摩尔/升和3.1(1.9 - 6.2)毫摩尔/升。绝对变化相当于总胆固醇增加33%(14 - 71%),低密度脂蛋白胆固醇增加41%(9 - 84%)。体重变化中位数为 - 1.2千克(-2.8 - 0.6)。
碳水化合物含量低、蛋白质和脂肪含量高的饮食导致体重正常的年轻健康女性的总胆固醇和低密度脂蛋白胆固醇水平大幅升高。研究结果表明低碳水化合物饮食可能对个体风险状况产生负面影响。然而,该研究规模较小,结果必须谨慎解读。