Very high-calorie diets show how overeating may lead to diabetes

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Another study showing that eating a standard American high-calorie diet (and hence high-carb) leads the body into a "pre-diabetic" state by inducing insulin resistance. The study focuses on the link between insulin resistance and oxidative stress, which triggers changes in a glucose transport protein GLUT4, impairing its ability to take up glucose when faced with rising insulin levels.

http://medicalxpress.com/news/2015-09-high-calorie-diets-overeating-diabetes.html


Everyone knows that high-calorie diets are tied to obesity and, too often, to type 2 diabetes. Now, a small study suggests that gorging on food can quickly tip the body into a "pre-diabetic" state.

The research involved six healthy men who were either of normal weight or overweight. The research team asked the men to consume 6,000 calories of a typical American diet every day for one week.

That's a huge boost in food intake: According to the Institute of Medicine, a healthy diet for the average sedentary male aged 30 to 50 years should average around 2,200 calories per day.

The six men were monitored closely in a hospital as they engaged in the high-calorie diet. The men were also not allowed to engage in any physical activity during this time.

Reporting Sept. 9 in Science Translational Medicine, a team led by Dr. Guenther Boden, from Temple University in Philadelphia, said that all of the men gained an average of about eight pounds in just a week.

In addition, in as little as two days after starting the diet, all of the men reached a metabolic state known as insulin resistance—often a precursor to diabetes. Insulin resistance occurs when the body produces the hormone, but cannot use it efficiently.

What exactly is happening?

According to Boden's team, fatty acids, inflammation and cellular stress have all been pointed to as possible culprits linking high-calorie diets, obesity and insulin resistance.

However, the new study suggests that the oxidative stress on cells
—stemming from eating excessive amounts of food—may be the missing link. Oxidative stress involves the overproduction of oxygen byproducts that are toxic to cells, the researchers explained in a university news release.

After analyzing the men's urine and fat tissue, the researchers spotted a rise in proteins associated with oxidative stress.

Oxidative stress appeared to trigger changes to a glucose transporter protein, known as GLUT4. These changes may have affected the protein's ability take up glucose in response to insulin, leading to insulin resistance, Boden's team theorized.

According to the researchers, the findings suggest an antioxidant treatment, or a therapy designed to target GLUT4, might someday help control obesity-linked insulin resistance.

One expert believes the study is an important one.

"The results of this study are valuable considering so many Americans tend to take in excessive amounts of calories on a daily basis," said Dana Angelo White, a dietitian and professor of sports medicine at Quinnipiac University in Hamden, Conn.

While the study was small and relatively brief, it "certainly does reinforce recommendations for folks to be mindful about their intake of calories and to exercise more," she said.

White also believes that "a diet high in antioxidants from healthy, lower-calorie foods, like fruits and vegetables, may also help to cut calories and impact increased oxidative stress."
 

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