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CONTROLLING CARBS AND PREVENTING DISEASE

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Risk factors for diabetes. Obesity. Diet. Sedentary lifestyle. Heredity. Ethnicity ... ADA diet vs. controlling carbs in People with Diabetes ' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CONTROLLING CARBS AND PREVENTING DISEASE


1
CONTROLLING CARBS AND PREVENTING DISEASE
  • Low carb, obesity, cardiovascular disease and
    diabetes
  • Jacqueline A. Eberstein, R.N.

2
Obesity
  • Now effects all age groups
  • Is a global epidemic
  • Overweight is having a body mass index (BMI)
    between 25 and 29.9
  • Obesity is having a BMI of 30 or more.
  • Body Mass Index is a computation relating height
    with weight. It is a useful guideline but can be
    inaccurate for those with significant muscle
    mass.
  • To compute your BMI. Search BMI on the Internet
    and enter your numbers.
  • Do not use adult BMI charts for ages 2 to 20.

3
Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 1990
(BMI 30, or 30 lbs overweight for 5 4
person)
4
Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 1991
(BMI 30, or 30 lbs overweight for 5 4
person)
5
Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 1995
(BMI 30, or 30 lbs overweight for 5 4
person)
6
Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 1997
(BMI 30, or 30 lbs overweight for 5 4
person)
7
Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 2000
(BMI 30, or 30 lbs overweight for 5 4
person)
8
Obesity Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 2001
(BMI 30, or 30 lbs overweight for 5 4
person)
No Data lt10 1014
1519 2024 25
9
BMI gt 30, or 30 lbs. overweight for 5'4"
person 2004                                     
                                                  
                                                  
                                                  
                                                  
                                                  
                                                  
                        
10
(No Transcript)
11
Important to remember
  • Insulin- a hormone produced in the pancreas that
    carries sugar from the blood into the cells to be
    used for energy.
  • Blood sugar- the amount of glucose in the blood
    stream at any given time. It is higher after
    eating.
  • Insulin is a fat storage hormone.
  • Glucagon- a hormone to counter the blood sugar
    lowering effects of insulin. In a properly
    functioning body insulin and glucagon are in
    balance.
  • Insulin resistance- a consequence of heredity,
    excess body fat, hormone changes and even some
    medications that prevents our cells from using
    insulin to regulate blood sugar effectively.

12
  • The body attempts to keep the blood sugar within
    a fairly narrow range- insulin/glucagon balance.
  • Hyperinsulinism- an excess production of insulin.
  • Insulin in too large amounts over time damages
    the body and leads to diabetes and heart disease.
    High insulin levels can effect cancer cells.
  • Metabolic syndrome is an insulin resistance
    syndrome. It frequently leads to type 2 diabetes
    and heart disease.

13
Diabetes- a nutritional wear and tear disease
  • Stage 1-insulin resistance of cells
  • Stage 2-insulin resistance with hyperinsulinism.
  • Stage 3-insulin resistance and reactive
    hypoglycemia or unstable blood sugar.
  • Stage 4-insulin resistance, hyperinsulinism with
    impaired glucose tolerance AKA prediabetes.
  • Stage 5- diabetes with high insulin resistance
    and hyperinsulinism.
  • Stage 6-diabetes with low or virtually no insulin
    production. Burnout of the islet cells of the
    pancreas.

14
Risk factors for diabetes
  • Obesity
  • Diet
  • Sedentary lifestyle
  • Heredity
  • Ethnicity
  • History of gestational diabetes
  • Metabolic syndrome
  • Elevated blood sugar
  • Abnormal lipids
  • High blood pressure
  • Advancing age

15
Blood sugar by the numbers
  • Normal fasting blood sugar is generally 65 to
    99mg/dL.
  • Impaired fasting blood sugar or prediabetes is
    between 100 and 125 mg/dL.
  • Impaired glucose tolerance or prediabetes is a 2
    hour blood sugar between 140 and 199 mg/dL.
  • Diabetes is a fasting blood sugar of 126 mg/dL or
    greater on 2 readings or 2 hours after food a
    blood sugar reading of 200mg/dL or greater.

16
Effects of high insulin
  • Increases deposition of excess body fat
  • Increases fat in the blood in the form of
    triglycerides leading to heart disease.
  • Promotes the manufacture of LDL cholesterol by
    stimulating the enzyme HMG-CoA reductase.
  • Causes an unstable blood sugar by depressing the
    effects of glucagon.
  • Increases sodium retention and water retention
    leading to edema and high blood pressure.
  • Depresses glucogen thus preventing fat burning.
  • Negatively effects other hormones such as those
    from the adrenals and eicosanoids.

17
  • Stimulates growth of smooth muscle cells lining
    arteries.
  • Increases inflammatory markers leading to CHD
  • Increases prothrombotic markers.
  • Promotes glucose and protein to fat storage.
  • Insulin-like growth factor may stimulate cancer
    cells to grow.
  • Can increase breast cancer death rates.
  • PCOS/ infertility/ diabetes/ heart disease

18
Complications of diabetes
  • Can begin about 10 years before the diagnosis is
    made-if its made.
  • About 1/3 of diabetes cases are undiagnosed.
  • The body is damaged by glycation due to high
    blood sugars.
  • Complications are caused by damage to all blood
    vessels leading to heart disease, stroke,
    blindness, kidney failure, painful neuropathy,
    and amputations.
  • Direct and indirect costs from diabetes reached
    132 billion dollars for 2002.

19
Solution
  • Can control all but your genetics
  • Control your weight.
  • Rebalance your bodies hormones specifically
    insulin to regulate blood sugar.
  • Dietary fat has a negligible effect on insulin.
  • Protein in excess can impact insulin and glucose.
    Eat the right amount of protein.
  • Carbs are the main macronutrient that stimulates
    insulin.
  • Control both the quantity and quality of carbs.
  • Exercise to improve insulin resistance.

20
Harvard Nurses Health Study
  • Our findings suggest that a high intake of
    rapidly digested and absorbed carbohydrate
    increases the risk of CHD independent of
    conventional coronary disease risk factors. These
    data add to the concern that the current low-fat,
    high carbohydrate diet recommended in the United
    States may not be the optimal for the prevention
    of CHD and could actually increase the risk in
    individuals with high degrees of insulin
    resistance and glucose intolerance.
  • The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition,
    2000

21
The Controlled Carb Advantage
  • Physical improvements
  • Improved lean body mass to fat mass ratio.
  • Increased exercise capacity.
  • Maintain weight loss w/o negative side
    effects.
  • Prevents/ corrects hyperinsulin-related
    conditions
  • Diabetes
  • Hypertension
  • Cardiac risk factors ( high triglycerides,
    low HDL, small dense LDL particles)

22
ADA diet vs. controlling carbs in People with
Diabetes
  • High carbohydrate intake is generally
    recommended, resulting in suboptimal glycemic
    control and lipoprotein profile, gradually
    increasing insulin and/or oral hypoglycemic
    medication requirement and weight gain. On the
    other hand, restriction of dietary carbohydrate
    is associated with improvement in glycemic
    control and other parameters of insulin
    resistance including body mass and lipid
    profiles.
  • data demonstrates that the benefits of a low
    carbohydrate diet on glycemic control are
    independent of weight loss and are primarily due
    to carbohydrate restriction.

23
  • Emerging evidence suggests that low carb diets
    may actually have beneficial effects on LDL
    cholesterol by decreasing LDL particle
    concentration and increasing LDL size to less
    atherogenic forms.
  • A final irony is the report that physicians
    frequently choose low carb diets for themselves
    while recommending low fat for their patients.
  • The Case for low carbohydrate diets in
    diabetes management, Dr., Samy McFarlane,
    Nutrition and Metabolism, 2005.

24
Is a 60 carb, low fat diet working?
  • A review of patients by the ADA published in
    JAMA, January 2004 stated that only 30 of people
    with diabetes were reaching treatment goals for
    blood sugar, blood pressure and cholesterol. This
    despite the use of a number of prescription
    medications.

25
Research supports safety and efficacy of
controlling carbs
  • There have been more than 60 published studies
    and papers focusing on the benefits of a
    controlled carb lifestyle.
  • Effective in weight loss and maintenance,
    seizures, PCOS, metabolic syndrome, diabetes,
    GERD, lowering triglycerides, increasing HDL,
    improving particle size of LDL, decreasing
    inflammation markers (CRP), increasing insulin
    sensitivity and other symptoms.
  • Studies done by Duke, Harvard, University of Pa.,
    University of Conn., The American Heart
    Association, American Diabetes Association among
    others.
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