Effect of Amount and Type of Dietary Carbohydrates on Risk for Cardiovascular Heart Disease and Diabetes



Status:Completed
Conditions:Obesity Weight Loss, Peripheral Vascular Disease
Therapuetic Areas:Cardiology / Vascular Diseases, Endocrinology
Healthy:No
Age Range:30 - Any
Updated:7/7/2016
Start Date:February 2008
End Date:February 2011

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Optimal Macronutrient Intake - Carbohydrate

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) and diabetes are health conditions that are strongly influenced
by a person's diet. Although the best diet to prevent CVD and diabetes is uncertain,
reducing intake of saturated and transunsaturated fats is known to help lower cardiovascular
risk. However, even diets low in these fats can vary widely in other energy providing
nutrients, particularly carbohydrates. This study will determine the effects of a higher
versus lower carbohydrate diet, each with a high or low glycemic index (GI) composition, on
risk factors for CVD and diabetes.

A healthy diet can have a remarkable effect on a person's overall health. Research has
consistently confirmed the association between diet and serious health problems, including
heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, and gastrointestinal disorders. Most healthy
diets aimed at disease prevention promote a low intake of fats, but the optimal diet to
prevent CVD and related disorders is uncertain. Recent emphasis has turned to the influence
of carbohydrate consumption on risk of CVD and diabetes. Carbohydrates comprise a wide range
of foods, which are categorized by their absorption rate, also known as glycemic index (GI).
There is much current debate over how the level and type of dietary carbohydrates affect
cardiovascular health. This study will determine the effects of a higher versus lower
carbohydrate diet, each with a high or low GI composition, on risk factors for CVD and
diabetes.

Potential participants will attend three screening visits that will include questionnaires,
clinical measurements, and blood and urine tests. Participants will then undergo an 8-day
run-in phase to become familiar with the feeding patterns of four different diets: high
carbohydrate with high GI, high carbohydrate with low GI, low carbohydrate with high GI, or
low carbohydrate with low GI. During the run-in, participants will be provided all of their
food, snacks, and calorie-containing beverages. Participants will also complete a daily food
diary, symptoms questionnaire, medical and social history, and daily weigh-in. After meeting
with a dietician to review progress, eligible participants will be randomly assigned to one
of eight sequences of the four diet plans.

Participants will follow each of the four diet plans for 5 weeks, with a period of at least
2 weeks separating each plan. During each dieting period, participants will be provided all
of their food and snacks and most beverages. All participants will be required to eat at
least one on-site meal per day, 5 days per week. Participants will keep a daily food diary
and will undergo weekly blood pressure measurements for the first 3 weeks of each dieting
period. Assessments will occur in the fifth week of each of the four dieting periods and
will include symptoms and satiety questionnaires, blood pressure measurements, and a blood
draw. One month following the completion of the last dieting period, participants will
receive nutritional counseling on the prevention of CVD.

Inclusion Criteria:

- SBP of 120 to 159 mmHg and DBP less than 100 mmHg at study entry (mean over three
screening visits) (note: participants with stage 2 hypertension [SBP greater than 160
mmHg or DBP greater than 100 mmHg] based on the mean over three screening visits will
be excluded, as will participants with a mean SBP greater than 170 mmHg or DBP
greater than 105 mmHg at any one visit)

- Overweight or obese, as defined by a body mass index (BMI) greater than 25 kg/m2

- Willing to eat at least one on-site meal per day, 5 days per week, and willing to eat
study diets and nothing else during controlled feeding periods

Medication Exclusion Criteria:

- Symptomatic ischemic heart disease (e.g., angina pectoris)

- Regular use of medications that raise or lower BP during the 2 months prior to study
entry

- Use of a lipid lowering agent in the 3 weeks prior to study entry

- Unstable dose of hormone replacement therapy, thyroid hormone replacement therapy,
and psychotropic medications known to cause weight gain or affect the outcome
variables (unstable is defined as a change in dose within 2 months of study entry)

- Use of insulin, oral hypoglycemic agent, lithium, oral corticosteroid, anti-psychotic
drugs, weight loss medications, nitrate, or digitalis

Medical History Exclusion Criteria:

- Active or prior CVD (e.g., stroke, heart attack, percutaneous transluminal coronary
angioplasty, coronary artery bypass graft, congestive heart failure, symptomatic
ischemic heart disease [angina], or arteriosclerotic cardiovascular disease-related
therapeutic procedure)

- Diabetes mellitus

- Cancer diagnosis or treatment in the 2 years prior to study entry (note: people with
non-melanoma skin cancer, localized breast cancer, or localized prostate cancer can
enroll if they did not require systemic chemotherapy)

- Active inflammatory bowel disease, malabsorption, or major gastrointestinal resection

- Renal insufficiency as determined by a serum creatinine greater than 1.2 mg/dL for
women or greater than 1.4 mg/dL for men (these participants can enroll if their
estimated glomerular filtration rate is greater than 40 mL/min by either the
Cockcroft-Gault equation or the simplified Modification of Diet in Renal Disease
equation)

- Emergency room visit or hospital stay for asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease in the 6 months prior to study entry

- Any serious illness not otherwise specified that would interfere with participation

Laboratory Exclusion Criteria:

- Fasting LDL cholesterol greater than 220 mg/dL and triglycerides greater than 750
mg/dL

- Fasting blood glucose greater than 125 mg/dL

- Serum transaminase greater than 2 times the upper range of normal, or a clinical
diagnosis of hepatitis
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Baltimore, Maryland 21287
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Boston, Massachusetts 02215
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Boston, MA
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