1. Impaired glucose tolerance in rats fed low-carbohydrate, high-fat diets.
- Author
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Bielohuby, Maximilian, Sisley, Stephanie, Sandova, Darleen, Herbach, Nadja, Zengin, Ayse, Fischereder, Michael, Menhofer, Dominik, Stoehr, Barbara J. M., Stemmer, Kerstin, Wanke, Rüdiger, Tschöp, Matthias H., Seeley, Randy J., and Bidlingmaier, Martin
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CHILDHOOD epilepsy , *GLUCOSE tolerance tests , *LOW-carbohydrate diet , *HIGH-fat diet , *WEIGHT loss , *GLUCOSE metabolism , *LABORATORY rats - Abstract
Moderate low-carbohydrate/ high-fat (LC-HF) diets are widely used to induce weight loss in overweight subjects, whereas extreme ketogenic LC-HF diets are used to treat neurological disorders like pediatric epilepsy. Usage of LC-HF diets for improvement of glucose metabolism is highly controversial; some studies suggest that LC-HF diets ameliorate glucose tolerance, whereas other investigations could not identify positive effects of these diets or reported impaired insulin sensitivity. Here, we investigate the effects of LC-HF diets on glucose and insulin metabolism in a well-characterized animal model. Male rats were fed isoenergetic or hypocaloric amounts of standard control diet, a high-protein "Atkinsstyle" LC-HF diet, or a low-protein, ketogenic, LC-HF diet. Both LC-HF diets induced lower fasting glucose and insulin levels associated with lower pancreatic β-cell volumes. However, dynamic challenge tests (oral and intraperitoneal glucose tolerance tests, insulintolerance tests, and hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamps) revealed that LC-HF pair-fed rats exhibited impaired glucose tolerance and impaired hepatic and peripheral tissue insulin sensitivity, the latter potentially being mediated by elevated intramyocellular lipids. Adjusting visceral fat mass in LC-HF groups to that of controls by reducing the intake of LC-HF diets to 80% of the pair-fed groups did not prevent glucose intolerance. Taken together, these data show that lack of dietary carbohydrates leads to glucose intolerance and insulin resistance in rats despite causing a reduction in fasting glucose and insulin concentrations. Our results argue against a beneficial effect of LC-HF diets on glucose and insulin metabolism, at least under physiological conditions. Therefore, use of LC-HF diets for weight loss or other therapeutic purposes should be balanced against potentially harmful metabolic side effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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