Should Low- or Very Low-Carbohydrate Diets be Recommended for Healthy Adults with Higher Weights?
The Question
What are the effects of low carbohydrate diets (LCDs), including very low carbohydrate ketogenic diets (VLCD, <50g/day), on body weight and cardiovascular disease risk factors among healthy adults with higher weights?
Recommendation
There is probably little to no difference in body weight or cardiovascular risk factors in adults with higher weights who follow a weight-reducing low carbohydrate diet (LCD) compared to a weight-reducing balanced carbohydrate (CHO) diet for up to two years. Although small differences in body weight and blood lipid levels were observed, these are unlikely to be clinically important.
Following a very low carbohydrate ketogenic diet (VLCD) for up to 12 months in adults without chronic disease may result in reductions in body weight, blood pressure, triglyceride levels and glycemic control but may increase total cholesterol and LDL-C levels compared to a non-ketogenic diet.
Adverse effects of LCDs and VLCDs were poorly reported. Individuals following a LCD or VLCD should be monitored for possible adverse effects (e.g. gastrointestinal, headache, fatigue, anxiety, mood disturbances, depressive symptoms).
Remarks
The definition of lower carbohydrate diets vary. The macronutrient composition of the most common diets included in the studies were:
Ketogenic diet: <10% energy from CHO or <50 g/day CHO; unspecified fat, protein and energy intake.
Non ketogenic diet: >10% energy from CHO or >50 g/day CHO; unspecified fat, protein and energy intake.
VLCD: <10% of energy from CHO, unspecified fat and protein.
LCD: <45% of energy from CHO, balanced fat (20-35% of energy) and high protein (>20% of protein).
Control: balanced for CHO (45-65% of energy), fat (20-35% of energy) and protein (10-20% of energy).
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