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Home Nutrition Reviews Has carbohydrate-restriction been forgotten as a treatment for diabetes mellitus? A perspective
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Based on the clinical experience of others, and published clinical
trials, we use carbohydrate-restriction in clinical practice for the
treatment of diabetes mellitus [11-15].
At the end of our clinic day, we go home thinking, "The clinical
improvements are so large and obvious, why don't other doctors
understand?" Carbohydrate-restriction is easily grasped by patients:
because carbohydrates in the diet raise the blood glucose, and as
diabetes is defined by high blood glucose, it makes sense to lower the
carbohydrate in the diet. By reducing the carbohydrate in the diet, we
have been able to taper patients off as much as 150 units of insulin
per day in 8 days, with marked improvement in glycemic control-even
normalization of glycemic parameters. Due to the potent effect of
carbohydrate restriction in decreasing blood glucose levels, we must
reduce the insulin by 50% on the first day of dietary
carbohydrate-restriction to avoid hypoglycemia. As the weeks pass, most
patients achieve normoglycemia without medication, obese patients lose
weight, and patients save money because they are not paying for
medications. It is not so far-fetched to predict that these savings
will also be passed along to the health care system and self-insured
companies because there will be less expenditure on medications and the
long-term diabetic complications.
Conclusion
The inattention to potent dietary
therapy in all recent major diabetes studies, including the recent
ACCORD trial, should not lead us to forget about
carbohydrate-restriction as a means to achieve weight loss and glycemic
control without hypoglycemia. We urgently need controlled studies
comparing the newer "higher-carbohydrate diet with or without
medication" approach to the earlier "carbohydrate-restricted diet
without medication" approach for type 2 diabetes mellitus. One of the
important advantages of carbohydrate-restriction is that there is no risk of
hypoglycemia if medications are not used. We believe that
carbohydrate-restriction has come of age for the treatment of obesity
and diabetes mellitus and should be urgently translated from clinical
practice to intensive testing in studies relating to mechanism, health
services research, and public health.
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Last Updated ( Sunday, 04 May 2008 )
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