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Low-Carb Diet Lowers Blood PressureLow-Carbohydrate Diet Better Than
weight loss Drug Orlistat at Lowering Blood Pressure With
weight lossBy Jennifer Warner
WebMD Health News Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD
Jan. 25, 2010 -- A low-carbohydrate diet may have health benefits that go beyond
weight loss.
A new study shows that a low-carbohydrate diet was equally good as the
weight loss drug orlistat (the active ingredient in Alli and Xenical) at helping overweight and obese people
lose weight, but people who followed the low-carb diet also experienced a healthy drop in their blood pressure levels.
"I expected the
weight loss to be considerable with both therapies but we were surprised to see blood pressure improve so much more with the low-carbohydrate diet than with orlistat," researcher William S. Yancy, Jr., MD, an associate professor of medicine at Duke University Medical Center, says in a news release. "If people have high blood pressure and a weight problem, a low-carbohydrate diet might be a better option than a
weight loss medication."
Researchers say studies have already shown that the two
weight loss methods are effective at promoting
weight loss, but it's the first time the health effects of each have been compared head to head.
"It's important to know you can try a diet instead of medication and get the same
weight loss results with fewer costs and potentially fewer side effects," Yancy says.
Low-Carb Lowers Blood Pressure
In the study, published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, 146 obese or overweight adults were randomly divided into two groups. Many of the participants also had chronic health problems, such as high blood pressure or diabetes.
The first group was advised to follow a low-carbohydrate, ketogenic diet consisting of less than 20 grams of carbohydrates per day, and the second group received the
weight loss drug orlistat three times a day, plus counseling in following a low-fat diet (less than 30% of daily calories from fat) at group meetings over 48 weeks.
The results showed
weight loss was similar in the two groups. The low-carb diet group lost an average of 9.5% of their body weight and the orlistat group lost an average of 8.5%. Both
weight loss methods were also not significantly different at improving cholesterol and glucose levels.
But when researchers looked at changes in blood pressure, they found nearly half of those who followed the low-carbohydrate group had their blood pressure medication decreased or discontinued during the study, compared to only 21% of those in the orlistat group.
Overall, systolic (the top number in a blood pressure reading) dropped an average of 5.9 points among the low-carb diet group, compared with an increase of 1.5 points in the orlistat group.
Researchers say
weight loss itself typically produces a healthy reduction in blood pressure, but it appears that a low-carbohydrate diet has an additional blood pressure-lowering effect that merits further study.