Contact: Christine Guilfoy
Office: 301-634-7253
Cell: 978-290-2400
cguilfoy@the-aps.org
Study Finds Short-Term
Lifestyle Changes Improve Health Even Without Major Weight Loss
Three-week Pritikin diet and exercise intervention reverses metabolic
syndrome, Type 2 diabetes in 50% of those with either condition
BETHESDA, Md. (Jan. 10, 2006) – Obese and overweight
individuals suffering metabolic syndrome and Type 2 diabetes showed
significant health improvements after only three weeks of diet and moderate
exercise even though the participants remained overweight.
“The study shows,
contrary to common belief, that Type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome can
be reversed solely through lifestyle changes,” according to lead
researcher Christian Roberts of
University of California, Los Angeles.
“This regimen
reversed a clinical diagnosis of Type 2 diabetes or metabolic syndrome in
about half the participants who had either of those conditions. However, the
regimen may not have reversed damage such as plaque development in the
arteries,” Roberts said. “However, if Type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome
continue to be controlled, further damage would likely be minimized and it’s
plausible that continuing to follow the program long-term may result in
reversal of atherosclerosis.”
“The results are
all the more interesting because the changes occurred in the absence of
major weight loss, challenging the commonly held belief that individuals
must normalize their weight before achieving health benefits,” Roberts said.
Participants did lose two to three pounds per week, but they were
still obese after the 3-week study.
The study, “Effect
of a diet and exercise intervention on oxidative stress, inflammation,
MMP-9, and monocyte chemotactic activity in men with metabolic syndrome
factors,” is in the online edition of the Journal of Applied
Physiology published by the American Physiological Society.
Researchers were Christian K. Roberts, Dean Won, Sandeep Pruthi, Silvia
Kurtovic, and R. James Barnard, all of UCLA; Ram K. Sindhu of Charles
R.
Drew University,
Los Angeles; and Nosratola D. Vaziri of University of California, Irvine.
The study involved 31 men who ate a high-fiber, low-fat
diet with no limit to the number of calories they could consume. The
participants also did 45-60 minutes of aerobic exercise per day on a
treadmill.
Fifteen of the men had metabolic syndrome, a condition
that is characterized by excessive abdominal fat, insulin resistance, and
blood fat disorders such as high levels of triglycerides (fat in the blood)
or low levels of HDL (high density lipoprotein, or “good” cholesterol).
Thirteen of the participants had Type 2 diabetes. There was also some
overlap between the two groups and some participants who had neither
metabolic syndrome nor Type 2 diabetes, but were overweight or obese.
“The diet, combined with moderate exercise,
improved many factors that contribute
to heart disease and that are indirect measures of plaque progression in the
arteries, including insulin resistance, high cholesterol, and markers of
developing atherosclerosis,” Roberts said. “The approach used in this
experiment of combining exercise with a diet of unlimited calories is
unusual.”
Low-calorie foods
The participants in the current study, who ranged in
age from 46 to 76 years old, took part in a 21-day residential program at
the Pritikin Longevity Center, formerly in Santa Monica, combining the
Pritikin diet and exercise program. The
daily diet was low fat (12-15% of calories), moderate protein (15-20% of
calories), and high in unrefined carbohydrates (65-70% of calories) and
fiber (more than 40 grams).
Natural foods -- whole grains (five or more servings
daily), vegetables (four or more servings), and fruits (three or more
servings) -- were the main source of daily carbohydrates. The sources of
protein were plants (such as soy, beans, and nuts), nonfat dairy (up to two
servings daily), and fish and poultry (3.5-ounce portion once a week and in
soups and casseroles twice a week). The remainder of the calories came from
fat with a polyunsaturated-to-saturated
fatty acid ratio of 2.4 to 1.
“Aside from meat and dairy, the study participants
could eat as much as they wanted,” Roberts said. “Because the food was not
as high calorie as a typical American diet, the participants ate less before
feeling full. This is a departure from most diets, which usually leave the
dieter feeling hungry,” he said.
The men also exercised daily on a treadmill, including
level and graded walking, for 45-60 minutes.
The exercise program was tailored to ensure each individual reached 70-85%
of maximum heart rate.
Next steps
Trials outside the
laboratory environment are needed to test the regimen in the general
population. “The findings are likely generalizable,
although the magnitude of change is proportional to the degree of
abnormality when the person begins the regimen,” Roberts added.
Scientists also
need to determine whether long-term lifestyle change can prevent or reverse
end-organ damage noted in those with metabolic syndrome or Type 2 diabetes,
Roberts said. These changes may be difficult to make but the payoff for
individuals and society could be enormous.
Further studies
are also needed in those who are at risk for metabolic syndrome or Type 2
diabetes. Individuals should still be tested to see if Type 2 diabetes and
metabolic syndrome can be prevented in the first place. Individuals may be
considered healthy before developing metabolic syndrome but looking healthy
does not necessarily mean being healthy, he noted.
Source and funding
“Effect of a diet
and exercise intervention on oxidative stress, inflammation, MMP-9, and
monocyte chemotactic activity in men with metabolic syndrome factors,”
by Christian K. Roberts, Dean Won, Sandeep Pruthi, Silvia Kurtovic, and R.
James Barnard, of the Department of Physiological Science at UCLA; Ram K.
Sindhu of the Division of Endocrinology, Metabolism, and Molecular Medicine
at Charles R. Drew University, Los Angeles; and Nosratola D. Vaziri of the
Division of Nephrology and Hypertension, Department of Medicine at
University of California, Irvine is in the online issue of the Journal of
Applied Physiology published by the American Physiological Society.
Research was supported by a grant from the LB Research
and Education Foundation, an independent foundation in California and a
National Research Scholarship Award postdoctoral fellowship from the NIH.
Editor’s note: The media may obtain a copy of
Roberts et al. by contacting
Christine Guilfoy, American Physiological Society, (301) 634-7253, (978)
290-2400 (cell), or
cguilfoy@the-aps.org.
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