| Carbohydrates may cause fatty liver |
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If confirmed in humans, the findings suggest that fatty liver
disease - on the upsurge among Americans as a byproduct of the obesity
epidemic - may be preventable and possibly treatable through dietary
changes. The study appears in the September issue of the journal
Obesity. The researchers, led by David Ludwig, MD, PhD, director of the Optimal Weight for Life program at Children's Hospital Boston (http://www.childrenshospital.org/cfapps/research/data_admin/Site114/mainpageS114P0.html),
fed mice either a high- or a low-glycemic index diet. High-glycemic
index foods, including white bread, white rice, most prepared breakfast
cereals and concentrated sugar, raise blood sugar quickly. Low-glycemic
index foods, like most vegetables, fruits, beans and unprocessed
grains, raise blood sugar slowly. On the high-glycemic index diet, mice ate a type of cornstarch that
is digested quickly whereas on the low-glycemic index diet, mice ate a
type of cornstarch that is digested slowly. The diets had equal amounts
of total calories, fat, protein, and carbohydrate, and the mice were
otherwise treated identically. After six months, the mice weighed the same. However, mice on the
low-glycemic index diet were lean, with normal amounts of fat in
throughout their bodies. Mice on the high-glycemic index diet had twice
the normal amount of fat in their bodies, blood and livers. When sugar melts out of high-glycemic index food, Ludwig explains,
it drives up production of insulin, which tells the body to make and
store fat. Nowhere is this message felt more strongly than in the
liver, because the pancreas, which makes insulin, dumps the hormone
directly into the liver, where concentrations can be many times higher
than in the rest of the body. Fat buildup in the liver, or fatty liver,
is usually symptomless, but it increases the risk for liver
inflammation, which can progress to hepatitis and, in some cases, liver
failure. Fatty liver is becoming more common in Americans, especially in
children, says Ludwig. Many cases in adults can be explained by
alcoholism, but not the pediatric cases. Where just one case of fatty
liver was reported in children in 1980, now between 1 in 4 and 1 in 2
overweight American children are estimated to have the condition. As
these millions of children age, some will progress to full-blown liver
disease. "This is a silent but dangerous epidemic," says Ludwig. "Just as
type 2 diabetes exploded into our consciousness in the 1990s, so we
think fatty liver will in the coming decade." A previous study found that Italians who ate higher-glycemic index
diets had fattier livers, but the study wasn't tightly controlled. The
new study makes clear that the type of carbohydrate can cause fatty
liver in animals, independent of other elements of diet or lifestyle. "Our experiment creates a very strong argument that a high-glycemic
index diet causes, and a low-glycemic index diet prevents, fatty liver
in humans," says Ludwig. Ludwig and colleagues now hope to confirm this in a just-launched
clinical trial - and to show that a low-glycemic index diet can reverse
fatty liver in overweight children. The children, aged 8 to 17, will be
randomized to either the low-glycemic diet or a low-fat diet. Low-fat diets are currently the standard treatment, Ludwig says, but
many children with fatty liver don't respond to them. "We think it is a
misconception that the fat you're eating goes into the liver," he says.
Ludwig, author of Ending the Food Fight: Guide Your Child to a Healthy Weight in a Fast Food/Fake Food World (http://www.endingthefoodfight.com),
hypothesizes that obesity, sedentary lifestyles and increased
consumption of refined carbohydrates are "synergistically" fueling a
fatty liver epidemic in children. Ironically, low-fat diets have only
made matters worse, replacing fat with sugar or starchy foods that
actually increase fat deposition in the body. "Two low-fat Twinkies, billed as a health food, contain the same
amount of sugar as an oral glucose tolerance test - a test used to
determine how much sugar someone can digest," Ludwig says. He notes
that the French delicacy pate de fois gras - the fatty liver of a duck
or goose - is produced by over-feeding the animals with high-glycemic
index grains. http://www.childrenshospital.org/ http://www.news-medical.net/?id=30183
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