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Diabetes

Low-Calorie Diet May Cure Diabetes

December 7, 2011 By Namita Nayyar (Editor in chief)

Low-Calorie Diet May Cure Diabetes

Reported December 1, 2011

(Ivanhoe Newswire) — Lifestyle changes may cure Type 2 diabetes. Diabetes affects 25.8 million people in the U.S., and type 2 is the most common form. A new study, presented at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America, found that a low-calorie diet eliminates insulin dependence and leads to improved heart function in obese patients with type 2 diabetes.

“Our results show that 16 weeks of caloric restriction improved heart function in these patients,” said lead study author Sebastian Hammer, M.D., Ph.D., from the Department of Radiology at Leiden University Medical Center in the Netherlands. “More importantly, despite regain of weight, these beneficial cardiovascular effects were persistent over the long term.”

“Lifestyle interventions may have more powerful beneficial cardiac effects than medication in these patients,” Hammer was quoted as saying.

The researchers set out to determine the long-term effects of initial weight loss induced by caloric restriction on pericardial fat and cardiac function in obese patients with type 2 diabetes.

Pericardial fat is a visceral fat compartment around the heart that can be detrimental to cardiac function, especially in people with metabolic disease.

Using cardiac MRI, the researchers analyzed cardiac function and pericardial fat in 15 patients – including seven men and eight women – with type 2 diabetes, before and after four months of a diet consisting of 500 calories daily. Changes in body mass index were also measured.

The results showed that caloric restriction resulted in a decrease in BMI from 35.3 to 27.5 over four months. Pericardial fat decreased from 39 ml to 31 ml, and E/A ratio (a measure of diastolic heart function, improved from 0.96 to 1.2.

After an additional 14 months of follow-up on a regular diet BMI increase to 31.7, but pericardial fat only increased slightly to 32 ml. E/A ration after follow-up was 1.06.

“It is striking to see how relatively simple intervention of a very low calorie diet effectively cures type 2 diabetes mellitus. Moreover, these effects are long term, illustrating the potential of this method,” Hammer was quoted as saying.

The findings also stress the importance of including imaging strategies in these types of therapy regimens, Hammer pointed out.

“MRI clearly showed all the changes in fat compartments, structural changes in the heart and improvements in diastolic function, making it a very effective method of quantifying the effects of metabolic interventions,” he was quoted as saying.

The results are promising, but not all patients are eligible for the therapy. Patients should consult with their doctors before embarking on any type of reduced calorie diet.

“It is of utmost importance to follow such a complicated intervention under strict medial supervision,” Hammer concluded, “especially as patients may be able to stop all anti-diabetic therapy from Day 1.”

SOURCE: Radiological Society of North America, November 28, 2011

 

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