Breaking Medical News Archive
A Vegan Diet for Diabetes Control
posted 7/27/06
A study in the August issue of Diabetes
Care,
published by the American Diabetes Association,
shows that a low-fat, vegan diet is highly
effective for blood sugar control in people
with type 2 diabetes. The
trial was conducted by the Physicians Committee
for Responsible
Medicine, under the auspices of the George
Washington University, along
with the University of Toronto, and included
99 adults with type 2
diabetes. Participants were randomly assigned
to follow either a
low-fat, vegan diet or a diet following current
ADA guidelines.
Investigators tracked hemoglobin A1c, a commonly
used index of long-term
blood glucose control which, according to the
ADA, should be less than
7%. The average participant began the study
with an A1c of 8%.
After 22 weeks, A1c had fallen by one full
point in the vegan group,
nearly twice the magnitude of the change in
the ADA group. Many
individuals in both groups reduced their medication
use in the course of
the study. Among those whose diabetes medications
remained stable, A1c
dropped by 1.2 points in the vegan group, compared
to 0.4 in the ADA
group (P = .01).
Weight loss averaged 13 pounds in the vegan
group and 9 pounds in the
ADA group. LDL cholesterol dropped by 21% in
the vegan group, compared
to 9% in the ADA group.
Prior studies have shown that a vegan diet
improves insulin sensitivity
and causes significant weight loss. Because
it imposes no limits on
calories, carbohydrates, or portion sizes,
it may be easier to follow
than an ADA diet, which limits each of these.
Barnard ND, Cohen, J, Jenkins DJ, Turner-McGrievy
G, Gloede L, Jaster B,
Seidl K, Green AA, Talpers S. A low-fat, vegan
diet improves glycemic
control and cardiovascular risk factors in
a randomized clinical trial
in individuals with type 2 diabetes. Diabetes
Care, August 2006, in
press.
Subscribe to
PCRM's Breaking Medical News.
Breaking Medical News is a service of the Physicians Committee
for Responsible Medicine, 5100 Wisconsin Avenue, Suite 400, Washington,
DC 20016, 202-686-2210. Join
PCRM and receive the quarterly magazine, Good
Medicine.
Media
Center | Health | Research
| About PCRM | Catalog
| Join Us | Search
| Site Index | Home
The site does
not provide medical or legal advice. This Web site is for information purposes
only.
Full Disclaimer | Privacy Policy
|