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    Appetite. 2007 Mar;48(2):135-8. Epub 2006 Dec 1.

    Low-carbohydrate diets cause obesity, low-carbohydrate diets reverse obesity: a metabolic mechanism resolving the paradox.

    Mobbs CV, Mastaitis J, Yen K, Schwartz J, Mohan V, Poplawski M, Isoda F.

    Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, Department of Neuroscience and Geriatrics, Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY 10029, USA. Charles.mobbs@mssm.edu

    High-fat diets produce obesity in part because, per calorie, glucose produces greater post-prandial thermogenesis than lipids, an effect probably mediated by glucose-sensing neurons. A very low-carbohydrate/high-fat/high-protein Atkins-type diet produces obesity but is marginally ketogenic in mice. In contrast, high-sucrose/low-fat diets, and very low-carbohydrate/high-fat/low-protein (anti-epileptic) ketogenic diets reverse diet-induced obesity independent of caloric intake. We propose that a non-ketogenic high-fat diet reduces glucose metabolism and signaling in glucose-sensing neurons, thereby reducing post-prandial thermogenesis, and that a ketogenic high-fat diet does not reduce glucose signaling, thereby preventing and/or reversing obesity.

    PMID: 17141367 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    PMCID: PMC2714161

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