- NEW YORK (AP) - The
debate over Dr. Robert Atkins' popular high-fat, low-carb diet flared posthumously
Tuesday when it was learned that Atkins himself was a bloated 258 pounds
at his death.
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- A city medical examiner's report filed after Atkins'
2003 death from a fall showed the 6-foot doctor was at a weight normally
considered obese. A physicians group that is highly critical of the diet
released details of the report, claiming the Atkins diet led to weight
and heart troubles for its 72-year-old creator.
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- Atkins' allies immediately disputed that.
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- The Atkins Physicians Council said the carbohydrate-shunning
doctor gained more than 60 pounds through fluid retention in the eight
days he spent in a coma before dying last April. He had slipped on an icy
street and hit his head.
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- Atkins weighed 195 pounds when he was admitted, the group's
chairman said.
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- "Critically ill patients, when sustained on fluids
in the hospital, gain weight," said Dr. Stuart Trager, chairman of
the Atkins Physicians Council, a group affiliated with the Atkins diet
empire. "He was grossly swollen, so much so that his family and associates
barely recognized him."
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- The medical examiner's report also noted that Atkins
had a history of heart trouble, including congestive heart failure and
high blood pressure. The Wall Street Journal first reported on the records
on Tuesday.
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- The doctor's heart troubles had been previously known
publicly, and the council asserted Tuesday that they were a result of cardiomyopathy,
or an enlarged heart, which it said stemmed from a viral infection, not
diet.
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- "We need to set the record straight. This is a man
who managed his weight," Trager said. "Isn't it time to let this
man rest in peace?"
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- Atkins was the author of the best-selling "Dr. Atkins'
New Diet Revolution," which advocates meat, eggs and cheese and discourages
bread, rice and fruit. His books sold 15 million copies and attracted millions
of followers.
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- Physicians for Responsible Medicine, the group that released
the report and promotes a vegetarian diet, acknowledged that fluid retention
may have been responsible for some of Atkins' weight gain, but probably
not all of it. The group maintains that the Atkins diet poses weight and
health risks to the millions who follow it.
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- A healthy 6-foot man weighing 258 pounds would normally
qualify as obese, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
At 195 pounds, he would be considered overweight.
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- The medical examiner's report was not based on an autopsy
but on an external exam. Conditions such as congestive heart failure and
high blood pressure would not be observed by the medical examiner in such
a case, but would be drawn instead from previous doctors' observations
and records.
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- In April 2002, a year before he died, Atkins issued a
statement saying he was recovering from cardiac arrest related to a heart
infection he had suffered from "for a few years." He said it
was "in no way related to diet."
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- One doctor not connected to the case said extensive weight
gain can indeed occur in comatose patients, especially those with heart
trouble like Atkins.
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- "It's certainly possible that in an effort to try
to resuscitate him they keep giving more and more fluids, and essentially
he keeps them in the body," said Dr. Robert Yanagisawa of Mount Sinai
Hospital in New York.
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- For years nutrition experts and doctors have debated
the Atkins diet, which allows up to two-thirds of calories from fat, or
more than double the usual recommendation. Atkins argued that carbohydrates
generate too much insulin, which makes people hungrier and encourages them
to put on fat.
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- When Atkins' book was first published in 1972, the medical
mainstream was promoting a low-fat, high-carbohydrate diet. The American
Medical Association labeled the Atkins' diet "potentially dangerous"
and Congress summoned him to Capitol Hill to defend the plan.
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- The Atkins diet recently gained renewed popularity after
studies showed that people lost weight without compromising their health.
The studies showed that Atkins dieters' cardiovascular risk factors and
overall cholesterol readings changed for the better.
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- Last month, the doctor's widow, Veronica Atkins, demanded
an apology from Mayor Michael Bloomberg after he called her late husband
"fat." She declined comment on Tuesday's disclosure.
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- Ellen Borakove, a spokeswoman for the medical examiner,
declined to comment on the report, which she said was erroneously released
to a doctor in Nebraska who requested it and apparently gave it to the
vegetarian group.
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- It was later discovered that the doctor was not "the
treating physician" and should not have had access to the report.
Borakove said her office planned to complain to Nebraska health officials.
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- The mayor said the report "should not have been
released."
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- AP Science Writer Malcolm Ritter contributed to this
story.
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