US medical group claims Atkins Diet may cause heart disease

THE US: The Atkins Diet, the controversial fad for losing weight, may also cause heart disease and could have killed a teenage…

THE US: The Atkins Diet, the controversial fad for losing weight, may also cause heart disease and could have killed a teenage dieter, according to an American nutrition advocacy group.

It urged the US government to monitor the high-fat weight loss approach to see if it indeed causes heart disease.

The Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM)stressed it could not prove the diet had hurt or killed anyone. But one dieter said he believed the approach clogged his arteries and the parents of a teenager who died while on the diet also blamed her meat-heavy regimen.

The PCRM called on the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention to monitor diets and check for signs that the Atkins and other high-fat, high-protein diets may be harming people's health.

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"You can never say this diet caused this death," PCRM director Dr Neal Barnard cautioned. He said the CDC should monitor large groups over time to see if there was an association.

Atkins Nutritionals, Inc. said its diet was safe. "There is no logic and no science to support any association between these individuals and the ANA (Atkins Nutritional Approach)," said Colette Heimowitz, vice president of education and research for the company.

The Atkins Diet is based on a theory developed by Dr Robert Atkins, who died in April after a fall, that carbohydrates make people fat.

It encourages dieters to shun bread, pasta, fruit and many vegetables in favour of meat, butter and other fatty food.

"What I contend is that the Atkins diet gave me heart disease," Jody Gorran, a 53-year-old Florida businessman, said at a news conference organized by PCRM. He said his arteries clogged and cholesterol shot up while on the diet.

Paul and Lisa Huskey of Columbia, Missouri, say their 16-year-old daughter, Rachel, died of a heart arrhythmia in 2000 while on the diet.

Dr Paul Robinson, a paediatrician at the hospital where Rachel died, said the diet could have caused her death by leaching calcium and potassium from her body. - (Reuters)