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Peds21: Fact, Fiction or Truth of Pediatric Obesity

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8.6 8.7 kg from baseline wt. Summary: High Protein/Low Carb Diets ... 'Measures the degree to which eating a particular food increases your blood sugar ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Peds21: Fact, Fiction or Truth of Pediatric Obesity


1
Peds-21Fact, Fiction or Truth of Pediatric
Obesity
  • The Role of Alternative Therapies/Fad Diets in
    Pediatric Obesity

Nancy F. Krebs, MD, MS, FAAP Co-Chair, AAP Task
Force on Obesity Professor of Pediatrics Universit
y of Colorado
2
Objective
  • Examples of 2 popular approaches
  • Low carb/high protein diets (Atkins, PSMF)
  • Low Glycemic Index (South Beach)
  • Background
  • Rationale
  • Data
  • Interpretation

3
Pros Cons of diets for kids
  • PROS
  • Provide structure that may help child family
    follow
  • May result in weight loss initiate positive
    cycle
  • Ideally should provide modeling of appropriate
    eating
  • CONS
  • Fosters the quest for the magic bullet
  • Restrictive practices parental control, risk
    of restriction/relapse cycle
  • Dieting behavior in adolescents associated w/
    higher weight (Field, J Peds 2003)

4
Target patients Who Why?
  • Severely overweight
  • BMI gtgt 95th (e.g. gt 175 IBW)
  • Co-morbidities
  • Family support compliance
  • Supervision
  • Education
  • Monitoring

5
Rationale for Low Carb Diets
  • Body is well adapted to burn fat be in ketosis
  • Its not normal to have McDonalds and a
    delicatessen around every corner. Its normal to
    starve.

6
Rationale for Low Carb Protein Sparing
Modified Fast
  • High protein ( low carb) proposed to minimize
    loss of lean body mass w/ weight loss
  • Satiety euphoria
  • Better metabolic tolerance in face of insulin
    resistance?
  • CHO ?? insulin ? ? fat burning, ?
    hypoglycemia
  • Faster weight loss jump start
  • Unrestricted in calories restricted in choices

7
Atkins Put to Test
  • 63 obese adults randomized to low carb or
    conventional (low fat) diet x 12 mo
  • Initial 20 g carb/d ? liberalized
  • Met with registered dietitian at 0, 3,6,12 mo
  • Weight metabolic outcomes

Foster, NEJM 2003
8
Low Carb vs Conventional Diet - Adults
  • RESULTS
  • Weight loss
  • 3 6 mo Greater in low carb group
  • 12 mo not different
  • Labs
  • Initial ? TC, LDL in conventional
  • ?HDL, ? TG in low carb

(30)
(17)
(21)
(33)
(18)
(28)
(24)
(20)
Foster, NEJM 2003
9
Low Carb Diet - Adolescents
  • Methods
  • Randomized, nonblinded study x 12 wk
  • 16 low carb (20 ?40 g/d) 14 low fat (lt 30)
  • Overweight (BMI gt 95th ) mean BMI 35
  • Outcomes weight, lipids

Sondike et al, J Peds, 2003
10
Low Carb Diet - Adolescents
  • Results after 12 wk intervention
  • Low Carb lost gt 2x more weight
  • - 9.9 vs - 4.1 kg (p lt 0.05)
  • Dietary Intake (subgroup)
  • LC 1830 kcal LF 1100 (p0.03)
  • Lipids
  • LC ? TG (p0.07) LF ? LDL (p0.01)

Sondike et al, J Peds, 2003
11
Low Carb Diet Denver Adolescents
  • Severely overweight (? 175 IBW)
  • Hi protein/low carb vs low fat diet
  • Monitor weight, lipids, insulin, body composition
  • Intervention x 12 wk f/u at 24 36 wk
  • Preliminary results available (n 23)

Collins et al, Pediatr Res, 2004
12
Low Carb Diet Denver Adolescents
  • Weight Low Carb lost gt 2x more
  • - 9.9 vs - 4.3 kg (p lt 0.01)
  • Caloric intake lower for low carb
  • LC 1270 vs LF 1440 kcal/d (p lt 0.02)
  • Body composition low carb lost more lean body
    mass both lost fat
  • Lipids improvements for both groups, no
    difference by diet

13
Denver Low Carb Diet Study Followup 12 wk
after intervention
(11)
(11)
Low Carb - 8.6 ? 8.7 kg from baseline wt
(8)
(12)
14
SummaryHigh Protein/Low Carb Diets
  • Greater weight loss, in short term long term?
  • Weight loss generally associated w/ lower caloric
    intake
  • Highly restrictive diet (compliance?)
  • Lipids ? TG ?HDL
  • Fat loss ? LBM
  • ?? Impact of physical activity??
  • Bravata JAMA 03 Bonow NEJM 03 Foster 03,
    Sondike 03, Collins 04


15
South Beach Diet
  • Initial brief period of CHO restricting
  • Right carbs / right fats
  • Avoid refined carbohydrates (?GI)
  • Fats olive, canola, soy oils
  • Protein ?? diet not designed for children
  • Glycemic Index

16
Glycemic Index
  • Incremental area under the glucose insulin
    response curve after a standard amount of CHO
    from a test food relative to that of a control
    food (white bread or glucose). (Ludwig, JAMA,
    2002)
  • Measures the degree to which eating a particular
    food increases your blood sugar and therefore
    contributes to weight gain. (Agatston,
    S.B. Diet, p 20)
  • decreased circulating concentrations of
    fuelsin the post-prandial periodwould be
    expected toincrease hunger and food intake

17
Glycemic Index - Examples
  • Food GI Glycemic Load
  • Instant rice 91 25
  • Baked potato 85 20
  • Carrot 71 4
  • Banana 53 13
  • Peanuts 14 1
  • Variables physical form, ripeness of fruit,
    processing, preparation, combinations of foods

18
High GI Foods, Overeating Obesity
  • 12 obese teens
  • Test meals w/ low, med, high GI
  • Plasma levels of fuels and hormones measured
  • Food intake x 5 hr after lunch
  • Intake after hi-GI meal was 53 gt med-GI meal,
    81gt low-GI
  • AUC accounted for 53 variance in food intake

Ludwig DS, Pediatrics 1999
19
Glycemic Index Treatment of Obesity
  • 16 adolescents, randomized to
  • low GI (45 kcal CHO, 30-35 of fat) or
  • conventional diet (55-60 CHO 25-30 fat)
  • Intervention x 6 mo, f/u x 6 mo
  • Results (low-GI vs conventional)
  • ? BMI 1.3 vs 0.7
  • Smaller increase in insulin resistance in
    experimental

20
Summary
  • Low carbohydrate diets result in greater weight
    loss than low fat diets
  • Long term efficacy unknown
  • Severely overweight
  • Age most experience in adolescents
  • Effects on lipids do not appear to be deleterious
  • Diets should be undertaken only w/ medical
    supervision monitoring supplements,
    electrolytes/labs, Sx
  • S.B.D. Low glycemic index complex, limited
    experience overall diet has some appeal

21
Final Thoughts
  • Guidelines for healthy eating, without strict
    dieting, remain the mainstay of treatment
  • Dieting behavior is associated w/ greater weight
    gain ? care w/ any diet is warranted
  • Research critically important to best target
    dietary ( P.A. behavior) treatments
  • Severity - Co-morbidities ( risk groups)
  • Age - Long term benefits/effects (/-)
  • Implementation (MD ??)
  • Format (group/individual)

22
(No Transcript)
23
Arguments against Atkins
  • Contrary to decades of research documenting role
    of fat, esp saturated fat, on risk of heart
    disease
  • Calories matter fat has 2x the calories of
    carbohydrate fat is fattening
  • Deprivation of a single food group ? set-up for
    relapse/rebound compliance hard for some
  • Does not teach eating habits to last a lifetime
    obesity is a chronic condition
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