Toucan
Forum Host
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 2
https://assets.publishing.service.g...nt_data/file/860659/Draft_diabetes_report.pdf
This is a draft document from Public Health England currently out for review by Scientific Advisory Committee on Nutrition.
It isn’t a ‘light read’ (probably useful to insomniacs). I have copied out some extracts and some of the conclusions.
The purpose of this report is to review the evidence on lower carbohydrate diets compared to current UK government advice for adults with type 2 diabetes (T2D). It was initiated in 2017, in response to a request from Public Health England (PHE), in recognition that such diets are gaining attention and increasingly being promoted.
‘There is no universally agreed definition of a low carbohydrate diet. Current UK government advice on carbohydrate intake would be considered high.’
For the purposes of this review
Low > 50 < 130g/day High >230g/day
Some of the conclusions:
The evidence considered for the following markers and clinical outcomes of T2D suggests that for adults with T2D:
• body weight — no difference between lower and higher carbohydrate diets in the longer term (shorter-term weight changes were not considered)
• HbA1c — lower carbohydrate diets have benefits over higher carbohydrate diets in the shorter term but evidence for longer-term effects are unclear
• fasting plasma glucose — lower carbohydrate diets have benefits over higher carbohydrate diets in the shorter term but there is insufficient evidence to assess longer-term effects
• serum total cholesterol — no difference between lower and higher carbohydrate diets in the shorter or longer term
• serum triacylglycerol — lower carbohydrate diets have benefits over higher carbohydrate diets in the shorter term but evidence for longer-term effects are inconsistent
• serum LDL cholesterol — no difference between lower and higher carbohydrate diets in the shorter term or longer term
• serum HDL cholesterol — evidence for shorter-term and longer-term effects is inconsistent
• serum total cholesterol:HDL cholesterol ratio — none of the SRs with MAs considered this outcome
• medication use — lower carbohydrate diets may have a beneficial effect in reducing diabetes medication but the evidence is unclear because of inconsistencies in the reporting and measurement of diabetes medications across primary studies
• diabetes-related symptoms — none of the SRs with MAs considered this outcome
This is a draft document from Public Health England currently out for review by Scientific Advisory Committee on Nutrition.
It isn’t a ‘light read’ (probably useful to insomniacs). I have copied out some extracts and some of the conclusions.
The purpose of this report is to review the evidence on lower carbohydrate diets compared to current UK government advice for adults with type 2 diabetes (T2D). It was initiated in 2017, in response to a request from Public Health England (PHE), in recognition that such diets are gaining attention and increasingly being promoted.
‘There is no universally agreed definition of a low carbohydrate diet. Current UK government advice on carbohydrate intake would be considered high.’
For the purposes of this review
Low > 50 < 130g/day High >230g/day
Some of the conclusions:
The evidence considered for the following markers and clinical outcomes of T2D suggests that for adults with T2D:
• body weight — no difference between lower and higher carbohydrate diets in the longer term (shorter-term weight changes were not considered)
• HbA1c — lower carbohydrate diets have benefits over higher carbohydrate diets in the shorter term but evidence for longer-term effects are unclear
• fasting plasma glucose — lower carbohydrate diets have benefits over higher carbohydrate diets in the shorter term but there is insufficient evidence to assess longer-term effects
• serum total cholesterol — no difference between lower and higher carbohydrate diets in the shorter or longer term
• serum triacylglycerol — lower carbohydrate diets have benefits over higher carbohydrate diets in the shorter term but evidence for longer-term effects are inconsistent
• serum LDL cholesterol — no difference between lower and higher carbohydrate diets in the shorter term or longer term
• serum HDL cholesterol — evidence for shorter-term and longer-term effects is inconsistent
• serum total cholesterol:HDL cholesterol ratio — none of the SRs with MAs considered this outcome
• medication use — lower carbohydrate diets may have a beneficial effect in reducing diabetes medication but the evidence is unclear because of inconsistencies in the reporting and measurement of diabetes medications across primary studies
• diabetes-related symptoms — none of the SRs with MAs considered this outcome