The effect of a low-carbohydrate, ketogenic diet versus a low-glycemic index diet on glycemic control in type 2 diabetes mellitus
Westman EC, Yancy WS Jr, Mavropoulos JC, Marquart M, McDuffie JR · 2008 · Nutrition & Metabolism
DOI: 10.1186/1743-7075-5-36View source ↗
“The diet lower in carbohydrate led to greater improvements in glycemic control, and more frequent medication reduction/elimination than the low glycemic index diet.”
Summary
This 24-week randomized controlled trial enrolled 84 adults with obesity and type-2 diabetes, randomly assigning them to either a low-carbohydrate ketogenic diet (under 20 g of carbs per day, ad-libitum protein and fat) or a low-glycemic-index reduced-calorie diet (a 500 kcal/day deficit, ordinary macronutrient distribution). Of 84 enrolled, 49 completed the protocol — typical attrition for an outpatient diet trial. The headline results favored ketogenic restriction. HbA1c dropped 1.5 percentage points on the ketogenic diet versus 0.5 points on the low-GI diet (p=0.03). Weight loss was 11.1 kg on the ketogenic arm versus 6.9 kg on the low-GI arm (p=0.008). The most striking endpoint was medication change: 95 percent of ketogenic-arm participants either reduced or eliminated their diabetes medications, compared to 62 percent on the low-GI arm (p less than 0.01). HDL cholesterol improved on the ketogenic diet (+5.6 mg/dL) and was unchanged on low-GI. The trial is one of the foundational small RCTs that established sustained nutritional ketosis as a viable T2D management strategy.
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Not medical advice. This page summarizes primary research. It is not a substitute for consultation with a qualified clinician. See safety for exclusion criteria.