News Release
May 27, 2004
CONTACT: Jeanne Stuart McVey, 202-686-2210, ext. 316,
jeannem@pcrm.org
Howard White: 202-686-2210, ext. 339, hwhite@pcrm.org
Florida Businessman Sues
Atkins after Developing Heart Disease While on Diet; Cholesterol
Skyrocketed, Needed Angioplasty and Stent
Seeks Warning Labels on Atkins Products
WASHINGTON—A Florida businessman filed suit today against
Atkins Nutritionals, Inc., and the Estate of Dr. Robert C. Atkins,
claiming that the late diet author’s controversial high-fat,
low-carbohydrate regimen caused severe heart disease, necessitating
angioplasty and a stent. He is seeking a court injunction banning
Atkins Nutritionals from marketing its products without a warning
of potential health risks and asks for compensatory damages.
Jody Gorran, 53, of Delray Beach, filed his complaint in the County
Court for Palm Beach County, Florida, charging that Atkins and Atkins
Nutritionals—the corporate empire based on the Atkins diet
and related food products—misrepresented the diet’s
dangers.
Before Gorran went on the Atkins diet, his cholesterol level was
a healthy 146 and a heart scan showed he was free of coronary artery
disease. After he went on the diet, Gorran’s cholesterol jumped
to 230. He continued on the diet because of the assurances in the
Atkins diet books and Web site. But in October 2003, Gorran developed
severe chest pain. A cardiac evaluation revealed a 99 percent blockage
in one of his coronary arteries, necessitating angioplasty to open
the blocked artery and a drug-coated stent to keep it open. His
doctors advised him to stop the diet.
The lawsuit is not about money, said Gorran. He is seeking less
than $15,000 for personal injury, plus damages under Florida’s
Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act in the amount of $40.45,
and intends to donate any money received to charity. “I hope
this lawsuit exposes the Atkins diet for what it is: a threat to
American public health,” Gorran said. “More than 20
million people are following some version of this diet. It is my
belief and hope that by coming forward, I can encourage others whose
health has been damaged by Atkins to come forward as well.”
About 30 percent of individuals on an Atkins diet experienced increases
in LDL (“bad”) cholesterol of at least 10 percent in
a study published May 18, 2004, in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
Two study participants dropped out because of elevated cholesterol
levels and a third developed chest pain and was subsequently diagnosed
with coronary heart disease. The investigators reported, “Perhaps
the biggest concern about the low-carbohydrate diet is that the
increase in fat intake will have detrimental effects on serum lipid
[i.e., cholesterol] levels.”
Their experience parallels Gorran’s. “I feel victimized
by Atkins. I feel angry and betrayed because even though this diet
has been around for years, the Atkins people have not done the long-term
studies to prove it is safe,” he said. “I am living
proof that it is not.”
The Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM) has received
more than 560 complaints of illnesses and fatalities allegedly related
to Atkins-type diets through an on-line registry (www.AtkinsDietAlert.org),
including more than two dozen reports of potentially life-threatening
cardiac arrhythmias and the reported death of a 16-year-old girl
in Missouri who was following a low-carbohydrate diet. After learning
about the registry, Gorran sought the help of PCRM, which is providing
legal counsel.
Low-carbohydrate, high-protein diets have been criticized by major
health organizations including the American Heart Association, the
American Dietetic Association, and the American Kidney Fund.
“Low-carbohydrate diets push dieters to avoid healthy foods,
like rice, beans, and pasta, while ignoring the risks of high-cholesterol,
high-fat meat and cheese,” said PCRM President Neal Barnard,
M.D. “The idea that cholesterol and saturated fat don’t
matter is a dangerous myth.” PCRM is encouraging dieters who
may have had health problems while on a low-carbohydrate diet to
register on www.AtkinsDietAlert.org.
###
Founded in 1985, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine
is a non-profit health organization that promotes preventive medicine,
especially good nutrition. PCRM also conducts clinical research
studies, opposes unethical human experimentation, and promotes alternatives
to animal research.
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