Bettina Mittendorfer (left) measures Mary Akin’s height to calculate her body mass index, which is a ratio of height to body weight. Akin has been part of a study aimed at helping women lose weight and determining the effects of a high-protein diet on weight loss. The research team found that those who ate a high-protein diet to lose weight didn’t get the metabolic benefits seen in women who lost weight on a lower-protein diet. (Photo: Robert Boston/School of Medicine)
Dieters sometimes consume extra protein to stave off hunger and prevent loss of muscle tissue that often comes with weight loss.
But in a study of 34 postmenopausal women with obesity, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis found that eating too much protein eliminates an important health benefit of weight loss: improvement in insulin sensitivity, which is critical to lowering diabetes risk.
The findings are available Oct. 11 in the journal Cell Reports.
«We found that women who lost weight eating a
Insulin sensitivity is a good marker of metabolic health, one that typically improves with weight loss. In fact, the women in the study who lost weight while consuming less protein experienced a 25 to 30 percent improvement in their sensitivity to insulin.
Mittendorfer and her colleagues studied 34 women with obesity who were 50 to 65 years of age. Although all of the women had body mass indices (BMI) of at least 30 — a BMI of 30 or more indicates significant obesity — none had diabetes.
The participants were randomly placed into one of three groups for the
In the third group, the women ate a diet designed to help lose weight, but they consumed more protein, taking in 1.2 grams per kilogram of body weight, or almost 100 grams for that same
«We provided all of the meals, and all the women ate the same base diet," Mittendorfer explained. «The only thing we modified was protein content, with very minimal changes in the amount of fat or carbohydrates. We wanted to hone in on the effects of protein in weight loss.»
The researchers focused on protein because in postmenopausal women, there is a common belief that consuming extra protein can help preserve lean tissue, keeping them from losing too much muscle while they lose fat.
«When you lose weight, about
The women who ate the recommended amount of protein saw big benefits in metabolism, led by a 25 to 30 percent improvement in their insulin sensitivity. Such improvements lower the risk for diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The women on the
«Changing the protein content has very big effects," Mittendorfer said. «It’s not that the metabolic benefits of weight loss were diminished — they were completely abolished in women who consumed
It’s still not clear why insulin sensitivity didn’t improve in the
Source: https://source.wustl.edu/2016/10/high-protein-diet-curbs-metabolic-benefits-weight-loss/