Low Carb Forums  
Attention Visitor:
You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Low Carb Forums > Main Forum > Discussions for All Things Low Carb
Register Blogs Arcade FAQ Members List Calendar Mark Forums Read

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
New plan of attack Analog6 Centurions 4 06-01-2006 05:29 PM
How do you plan to make it through the Holidays and stay on your plan? MLN2603 Discussions for All Things Low Carb 18 11-23-2005 09:36 AM
So, How do you plan to make it through Halloween while remaining on plan? cleochatra Discussions for All Things Low Carb 26 11-01-2005 12:50 PM
Flex plan or Core plan? Piasabird Discussions for All Things Low Carb 6 09-15-2005 11:01 AM
Is the plan I Want Out There???? Mindy Moves On! Discussions for All Things Low Carb 13 09-09-2005 07:02 AM

Reply
 
Thread Tools
  #1  
Old 01-21-2006, 03:48 PM
Piasabird's Avatar
Piasabird Piasabird is offline
^ Really likes it here!
 
Join Date: August 4, 2005
Location: Illinois
Posts: 978
Rep Power: 0
Piasabird is on a distinguished road
Post The SB Plan Explained By Wikipedia

Quote:
The South Beach diet, developed by Miami, Florida, area cardiologist Arthur Agatston, emphasizes the consumption of "good carbs" and "good fats." Dr. Agatston developed this diet for his cardiac patients based upon his study of scientific dieting research. The diet first appeared in a book of the same name published by Rodale Press.

The South Beach diet is often incorrectly compared to the Atkins diet (see Atkins Nutritional Approach), which is predominately a low-carbohydrate diet.

Dr. Agatston believes that excess consumption of so-called "bad carbohydrates" creates an "insulin resistance" syndrome—an impairment of the hormone insulin's ability to properly process body fat or sugar. In addition, he believes, along with most doctors, that excess consumption of "bad fats" contributes to an increase in cardiovascular disease.

To prevent these two conditions, Agatston's diet minimizes consumption of bad fats and bad carbs and encourages increased consumption of good fats and good carbs.

The diet has three phases. In all phases of the diet, Dr. Agatston recommends minimizing consumption of bad fats. In Phase I, lasting two weeks, dieters attempt to eliminate insulin resistance by avoiding moderately high- or high-glycemic carbs, such as sugar, candy, bread, potatoes, fruit, cereals, and grains. During Phase I, Dr. Agatston says the body will lose its insulin resistance, and begin to use excess body fat, causing the dieter to lose between 8 and 13 pounds.

After two weeks, Phase II begins. Whole grain foods and fruits are gradually returned to the diet, although in smaller amounts than were likely eaten before beginning the diet, and with a continued emphasis on foods with a low glycemic index. When the dieter reaches the desired weight Phase III begins. In Phase III the diet expands to include three servings of whole grains and three servings of fruit a day.

The diet distinguishes between good and bad carbohydrates, and good and bad fats.
  • Good carbs are high in fiber or high in good fats, and have a low glycemic index, that is, they are digested and absorbed slowly. Other preferred carbohydrates are those with more nutritional value than the alternatives. For instance, brown rice is allowed in moderation, but white rice is discouraged. When eating any carbohydrates, Dr. Agatston recommends also eating fiber or fat to slow digestion of the carbohydrates.
  • Good fats are polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats, especially those with omega-3 fatty acids. Saturated and trans fats are bad fats.
This diet emphasizes (1) a permanent change in one's way of eating, (2) a variety of foods, and (3) ease and flexibility. Eating whole grains and large amounts of vegetables is encouraged, along with adequate amounts of mono- and polyunsaturated fats, including omega-3 fatty acids, such as are contained in fish. It discourages the eating of overly refined foods (particularly refined flours and sugars), high fat meats, and saturated fats.

The diet does not require counting calories or limiting servings- Agatston suggests you eat until you are satisfied. Dieters are told to eat 6 meals a day - breakfast, lunch, and dinner - and small snacks between each meal.


In 2004, Kraft Foods licensed the South Beach Diet trademark for use on a line of packaged foods that would be designed to meet the requirements of the diet. There is some concern that this will lead to the situation that the Atkins Diet found itself in, with some licensed products allegedly falling outside the scope of the diet.
The Article
__________________
sw 275/cw 221 /gw 155

30 lbs. lost on Atkins
24 lbs. lost on South Beach
Never wrestle with pigs. You just get dirty and the pigs like it too much.

There's light at the end every tunnel ........ just pray its not a train.

Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may post new threads
You may post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 08:58 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.0
Copyright ©2000 - 2010, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Zoints SEO v2.3.0 by Zoints & DxLwebs.com