Viewpoint and commentary
The diet–heart hypothesis: a critique

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Abstract

The low-fat “diet–heart hypothesis” has been controversial for nearly 100 years. The low-fat–high-carbohydrate diet, promulgated vigorously by the National Cholesterol Education Program, National Institutes of Health, and American Heart Association since the Lipid Research Clinics-Primary Prevention Program in 1984, and earlier by the U.S. Department of Agriculture food pyramid, may well have played an unintended role in the current epidemics of obesity, lipid abnormalities, type II diabetes, and metabolic syndromes. This diet can no longer be defended by appeal to the authority of prestigious medical organizations or by rejecting clinical experience and a growing medical literature suggesting that the much-maligned low-carbohydrate–high-protein diet may have a salutary effect on the epidemics in question.

Abbreviations

AHA
American Heart Association
CAD
coronary artery disease
Carb
carbohydrate
HDL
high-density lipoprotein
LCarb-HP
low-carbohydrate–high-protein
LCR-CPPT
Lipid Research Clinics–Primary Prevention Trial
LDL
low-density lipoprotein
LF-HCarb
low-fat–high-carbohydrate
NCEP
National Cholesterol Education Program
NIH
National Institutes of Health
SC
serum cholesterol
USDA
U.S. Department of Agriculture

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