A low-fat vegan diet may help
people with type 2 diabetes reduce physical pain related to the condition,
suggests a small new study.
"This new study gives a ray
of hope for a condition where there are no other good treatments," said
Dr. Neal Barnard, the study's lead author and president of the Physicians
Committee for Responsible Medicine, a non-profit organization that promotes a
vegan diet, preventive medicine, and alternatives to animal research.
Read: The diabetes diet debate
Diabetic neuropathy common
Most people with type 2 diabetes
will develop peripheral diabetic neuropathy, the researchers write in Nutrition
and Diabetes. People with the condition may feel pain, burning and numbness in
their body's extremities."For an individual patient, it can be miserable
and also depressing because there are no good treatments and it just gets worse
and worse," said Barnard, who is also affiliated with the George
Washington University School of Medicine in Washington, D.C.
"By setting aside animal
products and oily foods, you can become healthier, and your pain can diminish
and perhaps even go away," he told Reuters Health in an email.Type 2 is
the most common form of diabetes and is often linked to obesity. In type 2
diabetes, the body's cells are insulin resistant which means that insulin isn't
properly utilised to regulate glucose levels in the blood.The disease is
thought to interfere with the ability of nerves to signal the brain about pain,
light touch and temperature. Anti-seizure medications and antidepressants help
relieve nerve pain in some patients but may have unpleasant side effects.
Read: High-fibre diet may curb type 2 diabetes risk
How the study was conducted
For the new study, the
researchers recruited 35 adults with type 2 diabetes and painful diabetic
neuropathy.They randomly assigned 17 participants to follow a low-fat vegan
diet and take B12 supplements for 20 weeks, with weekly support classes. The
other 18 were instructed to take B12 supplements but maintain their normal
diet.
The vegan diet focused on
vegetables, fruits, grains and legumes. Overall, most participants on the vegan
diet appeared to avoid animal products and about half stuck to low-fat diets
throughout the study.
Find out: Are you eating correctly for your diabetes?
Vegan diet assists in weight loss and lower levels of pain
After 20 weeks, those on the
vegan diet lost an average of about 15 pounds, compared to about one pound
among those in the comparison group.Several other measures of health, including
blood pressure, improved among the participants on the vegan diet, compared to
the control group.Those on the vegan diet also reported a much greater drop in
pain, compared to the control group, the researchers report. A test of the
nerves in the foot also suggested that the vegan diet may have slowed or halted
nerve function decline, compared to the control group.There was also a
suggestion that the overall quality of life of those on the vegan diet
improved, compared to the control group. The difference may have been due to
chance, however.
Read: Type 2 diabetes and diet
Limitations of the study
Barnard and his team acknowledged
larger trials would still be needed to show a vegan diet helped relieve pain related
to type 2 diabetes.
Dr. Stuart Weiss, an
endocrinologist at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York, said the study was
"kind of cool," though the number of participants was small and the
length of the study was short."We always talk about diabetes and diabetes
control being about diet and exercise, but we end up prescribing a lot of
medications and don't really focus that much on diet and exercise because
that's not easy," said Weiss, who was not involved in the study.
Weiss told Reuters Health that he
typically advised patients to eat less processed and refined foods and not
overeat."It might be that eating less of that in a plant-based diet might
be helpful (in reducing inflammation), but again it was just 20 weeks and it
takes years and years for neuropathy to develop," Weiss said. "We
need to see long-term and nobody's going to pay for that."While Weiss said
it was exciting that researchers were looking for an alternative to medication,
he cautioned that not everyone would go for a vegan diet.
Source: http://www.health24.com

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