Hypocaloric low-carbohydrate versus low-fat diets on flowmediated dilation, blood pressure, cardiovascular biomarkers, and body composition in individuals with overweight or obesity: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials

AuthorsFatemeh Kazeminasab, Maryam Baharlooie, Reza Bagheri, Sara K Rosenkranz, Heitor O. Santos
JournalEuropean Journal of Clinical Nutrition
IFثبت نشده
Paper TypeFull Paper
Published At2025-04-25
Journal GradeScientific - research
Journal TypeElectronic
Journal CountryIran, Islamic Republic Of
Journal IndexJCR ,SCOPUS

Abstract

Obesity can impair cardiometabolism, but low-carbohydrate diets (LCDs) may be beneficial for mitigating risk. We aimed to investigate the effects of LCDs versus low-fat diets (LFDs), under hypocaloric conditions, on flow-mediated dilation (FMD) in individuals with overweight/obesity. Secondarily, we assessed other cardiovascular markers (systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, C-reactive protein [CRP], high-density lipoprotein [HDL], low-density lipoprotein [LDL], triglycerides [TG], total cholesterol [TC]), and anthropometric and body composition measurements. PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science were searched through May 2023 for studies involving hypocaloric LCDs versus LFDs on FMD. Meta-analyses were conducted for LCDs vs. LFDs to calculate weighted mean differences (WMD), including 10 studies reporting FMD (n = 475). Overall, hypocaloric LCDs resulted in a nonsignificant decrease in FMD compared with hypocaloric LFDs [WMD = −1.04% (95% CI −2.28 to 0.20), p = 0.10], while very-lowcarbohydrate diets (VLCDs) significantly reduced FMD when compared with LFDs [WMD = −2.12% (95% CI: −3.35 to −0.9) p = 0.001]. LCDs did not change anthropometric and body composition measurements, nor CRP, blood pressure, HDL, or TC when compared with LFDs. However, LCDs significantly decreased TG [WMD = −19.94 mg/dL (95% CI −31.83 to −8.06), p = 0.001] and increased LDL [WMD = 20.00 mg/dL (95% CI 14.09 to 25.90), p = 0.001] when compared with LFDs. In conclusion, LCDs did not exert superior effects on cardiovascular markers or body composition when compared with LFDs in individuals with overweight or obesity, but LCDs reduced TG and increased LDL levels more than LFDs. Yet, vascular function (FMD) was reduced primarily for VLCDs

tags: obesity, ketogenic diet, vascular function, metabolic syndrome, metabolic health.