Publication | Closed Access
Effect of Diet Composition on the Hyperinsulinemia of Obesity
155
Citations
25
References
1971
Year
ObesityMetabolic SyndromeNutritionBody CompositionMetabolic DisorderPhysiologyDiabetesMetabolic StateEndocrinologyBasal Plasma InsulinMetabolismMedicineIsocaloric DietsInsulin AntagonismDiet CompositionHealth Sciences
During two successive three-week periods, seven obese subjects were fed isocaloric diets, the first low, the second high in carbohydrate. In all, basal plasma insulin levels decreased 50 per cent on the low-carbohydrate diet and increased on the high-carbohydrate diet. Three obese subjects were fed, during three successive four-week periods, 1500-calorie diets with high, then low, and then high-carbohydrate content. Basal plasma insulin levels were significantly reduced on the low-carbohydrate diet. Refeeding of the high-carbohydrate diet, despite continued weight loss, resulted in markedly increased basal plasma insulin. In both protocols, most patients also exhibited a decreased insulin secretory response to oral glucose when on a low intake of carbohydrate and an increased response on a high intake. Thus the hyperinsulinemia characteristic of obesity may be a result, in part, of dietary factors rather than exclusively a consequence of the insulin antagonism associated with obesity.
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