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relliott1
Fri, May-04-07, 15:27
Low-Carb State of Mind
The low-carb diet can lead to irritability and mood swings.
By Psychology Today.com

Do the chips that don’t pass the lips of low-carb dieters weigh heavily on their shoulders instead? People who avoid certain foods or are reducing their food intake are famous for irritability, but many who are testing low-carbohydrate approaches like Atkins and the South Beach Diet are reporting unusually high feelings of anger, tension and depression. “It’s called the ‘Atkins attitude,’ ” says Judith Wurtman, director of the Women’s Health Program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Adara Weight Loss Center, both in Boston. “It’s very well-documented.”

Wurtman, who advocates a diet high in complex carbohydrates for weight loss and stress relief, says her studies on rats have shown a connection between a diet low in carbohydrates and low levels of serotonin—a neurotransmitter that promotes feelings of happiness and satisfaction. In her research, rats placed on a ketotic, or low-carbohydrate, diet for three weeks were found to have lower levels of serotonin in their brains. The same rats binged once starch was reintroduced into their diets.

Wurtman believes that same effect occurs in humans on low-carb diets and leads to pronounced feelings of depression and sadness, even rage. “People feel very angry, and their antidepressants don’t work well, either,” she says.

Granted, dieting isn’t easy no matter how one does it, but many think low-carbohydrate approaches are particularly hard on your happiness. Wurtman goes so far as to call them dangerous for those who already struggle with depression or bipolar disorder.

Other researchers disagree. In fact, Wurtman’s assertions are in direct contrast to what advocates of low-carbohydrate diets promise—an end to mood swings and fatigue. Indeed, many who have success on these diets say their moods have never been better.

“It’s a very hard effect to sort out,” says Frederick Samaha, chief of cardiology at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Philadelphia. In Samaha’s recent study in the New England Journal of Medicine he compared a low-carbohydrate diet with a low-fat diet.

“We didn’t notice any difference in mood between the two groups. What we found, overall, was that people [on either diet] felt good because they were losing weight and becoming healthier,” Samaha says. “But there was a high drop-out rate, around 40 percent, and it may be that those folks left because they didn’t see any improvement in their quality of life.”

Other researchers believe a low-carb diet may have an adverse effect only on those prone to low moods. Philip Cowen, chief of psychiatry at Oxford University in the U.K., reported in a study published in the British Journal of Psychiatry that the mood problem with low-carb diets was measurable but mild in women fighting depression.

“We routinely use a low-carbohydrate diet, which does produce evidence of changes in brain-serotonin function,” says Cowen. “In people with a history of depression—but not in those without—this diet lowers subjective ratings of ‘happy’ slightly.”

So what is a low-carber to do? Robert Thayer, professor of psychology at California State University, Long Beach, and author of Calm Energy: How People Use Food and Exercise to Regulate Mood, says the best advice is to closely monitor mood after experimenting with food. “If you don’t have enough energy to function effectively and meet the demands of your day, that’s going to create tension.”

(Original article can be found here (http://health.msn.com/centers/depression/?GT1=9998) )

foxgluvs
Fri, May-04-07, 15:30
Dunno HOW you can DARE SAY that!!!!!!! I am NOT irritable OR MOODY!!!!! I think that's just about the most idiotic post I have ever seen in my LIFE!

;)


Oh I crack myself up sometimes with how funny and happy I am

:lol::lol:

shaeintx
Fri, May-04-07, 15:38
Hubby swears I am happier and much more energetic doing lc.

doreen T
Fri, May-04-07, 15:42
...... “It’s called the ‘Atkins attitude,’ ” says Judith Wurtman, director of the Women’s Health Program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Adara Weight Loss Center, both in Boston. “It’s very well-documented.”..)
Judith Wurtman's article was originally published in 2004. We had a very lively discussion about it .. check it out here (http://forum.lowcarber.org/showthread.php?t=170114). Wurtman had previously authored an anti-lowcarb book , and is the co-owner/investor of the Adara Center.

However, I'm sure her "study" was unbiased and totally objective ...

< cough >


Doreen

Lisa N
Fri, May-04-07, 16:09
Giving up coffee, alcohol and drugs can make a person quite crabby when they are addicted to those things, too, but I'd never consider using that as an argument that they're good for us. ;)
What the author fails to mention is that once the withdrawal period is over, the vast majority of people do find that their moods stabilize, their energy improves and they sleep sounder at night.

catfishghj
Fri, May-04-07, 17:16
Where is her doccumentation?

Dodger
Fri, May-04-07, 17:21
Those who give up heroin get cranky until the addiction is broken. I'm sure that's a good reason to recommend that people take heroin every day.

LilithD
Fri, May-04-07, 19:00
Well, if you call it cheerful to be falling asleep at 3pm because I was too tired through hypoglycemic to stay awake... Having to be dragged for walks because I was too hypoglycemic to have any energy... Seeing my body become flabbier by the day and not knowing why...

Nah, couldn't have anything to do with Syndrome X, could it?

potatofree
Fri, May-04-07, 19:10
Quite a few people report feeling low or blue on drastically reduced carb levels. I did great on Atkins, but I never got that burst of energy or improved mood most other people reported. Once I was "over" my induction flu stage, I felt better because my reflux was gone and I slept better. I still tended to crash and burn and have headaches and general crankiness, though, so I would hardly have considered Atkins a wonder cure.

(And, yes. I followed the book as written. I added my five-gram increments over time and got to a whopping 25-35 grams and stopped losing.)

ojoj
Sat, May-05-07, 03:21
I'm simply a much happier person these days cos I lost weight by low carbing and I'm slim!

Jo

ElleH
Sat, May-05-07, 18:30
I have noticed no difference in my depression since I started LCing. In fact, the longer I'm on VLC, the worse it seems to get, and more unpredictable, in terms of which days I feel almost good and which days I don't. Being on a very high fat diet (80% fat helps) but it has by no means "cured me" or even radically or marginally improved my depression.

This person is not the only author who feels that LC depletes seratonin levels. Diana Schwarzbein feels the same way.

I think that if a person follows the Atkins diet as written, they wouldn't be VLC for very long...they should be moving up the ladder and adding more carbs. Which I know is what I should be doing. And now that I've pretty much given up on losing more weight, I plan to add more carbs to see if, in addition to my high fat diet, I start to feel better.

katwoman
Sat, May-05-07, 21:50
I'd say a lot depends on each individual and their personal body chemistry. Personally, I have fewer mood swings which I'm VLC--guess my moods swing with my blood sugar levels when I'm not. Stable sugar=stable moods for me.

Lisa N
Sun, May-06-07, 05:57
I'd say a lot depends on each individual and their personal body chemistry. Personally, I have fewer mood swings which I'm VLC--guess my moods swing with my blood sugar levels when I'm not. Stable sugar=stable moods for me.

You may be right. When my blood sugar was uncontrolled, I was far more irritable and moody than I am with stable blood sugars on low carb. :idea:

Daryl
Sun, May-06-07, 07:07
You may be right. When my blood sugar was uncontrolled, I was far more irritable and moody than I am with stable blood sugars on low carb. :idea:

Same here; I have a bad temper to begin with, and it had gotten terrible. I am on much more of an even keel now, and feel far better than I did, but it's not like I leap out of bed, chock full of energy now :lol: , which is okay. Feeling good, and knowing I'm doing the right things for my health is something I am deeply grateful for.

Aeon
Sun, May-06-07, 17:28
Wurtman, who advocates a diet high in complex carbohydrates for weight loss and stress relief...


You just knew there had to be an angle.

waywardsis
Mon, May-07-07, 13:54
My moods have drastically improved - no more depression, anxiety, etc - but in my case it was removing gluten grains from my diet that did it. But everyone's different - I'd hazard a guess that there are multiple causes of depression.

NalaMom
Mon, May-07-07, 14:40
My depression is fine. My irritability is through the roof. Im on VLC and I definitely attribute it to that. Im sure that my mood will stabilize once I start introducing more carbs to find my maintenance level.

bluesmoke
Mon, May-07-07, 15:07
My moods have definitely smoothed out, I only get irritable when I read ignorant bs about low carb now. Nyah Levi