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Published - Wednesday, January 30, 2008

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Doctor behind South Beach Diet revamps his life, series


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It’s a new year, and Dr. Arthur Agatston, the man behind the ubiquitous South Beach Diet books, is putting himself back on his diet.

His son, Evan, 23, was home from law school for the holidays, watching football bowl games with him, and the doctor packed on a few pounds from “those dark chocolate things my wife brings home from Epicure for guests even though I ask her not to.” He adds: “Then Sari (his wife) tells me that if I don’t take off those pounds, I’ll only be able to promote my book on the radio.”
His new book, “The South Beach Heart Health Revolution” (St. Martin’s Griffin, $14.95), is out. It goes well beyond his “good-carb, good-fat” diet books, promoting a four-point plan he says can create a major change in Americans’ heart health.

He asserts: “I believe we have reached a point where the great majority of heart attacks and strokes can be prevented.”

“Prevented?” Heart disease is the No. 1 killer, accounting for one in five deaths in the U.S.; strokes, No. 3.

Yes, he knows that. The problem?

A faulty model in treating heart disease, he says, a model based on treating heart disease after it occurs through angioplasties and bypass operations, rather than on preventing it in the first place. It’s a hard model to break, he notes, as it requires rethinking traditional medical practices, focusing on prevention instead of surgery. Changing the model also would drastically cut lucrative income sources — bypass surgeries and angioplasties — for doctors and hospitals.

“There’s a lot of inertia in medicine,” he says. “People have been doing things for years and are slow to change. And if there is a financial disincentive, that adds to the inertia.”

Not so fast, say other cardiologists.

Heart disease is still “a problem of epidemic portions,” says Dr. William O’Neill, executive dean of clinical affairs at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine. “The reason that there are so many cardiologists is not because it’s lucrative, but because there are so many patients to treat.”

And while diet, exercise and smoking all contribute to heart

disease, so does genetics, he notes.

Dr. Marion Nestle, professor and former chairwoman of the Department of Nutrition, Food Studies and Public Health at New York University, challenges Agatston’s assertion that “a great majority” of heart attacks and strokes can be prevented.

“Great majority? I’d like to see the evidence,” she said. “If calories and saturated fat are reduced, the risk of heart disease and stroke should decline. But I’m not convinced that most people can cut calories this way.”

Agatston, who recently turned 60, was raised on the north shore of Long Island, the son and grandson of doctors, attended medical school and practiced briefly at New York University. He came to Mount Sinai Medical Center in Miami Beach in 1979, where he is director of the Non-Invasive Cardiac Lab and of Cardiac Rehabilitation.

At Mount Sinai he helped develop an ultrafast CT scan for measuring calcium in coronary arteries as a predictor of heart attack and stroke — scans that today are measured on the “Agatston Scale.”

But as he treated patients, he saw that their attempts to lose weight on the low-fat, high-carb diet recommended by the American Heart Association were failing.

“It was frustrating. In the ’80s and early ’90s, cardiologists were not counseling patients to diet because the guidelines didn’t work,” he said. He decided to experiment with his own diet, with the help of nutritionists.

“I’ve always been a cardiologist, not a diet doctor,” he said. “But I’ve learned a lot about nutrition.”

Agatston concluded that America’s high obesity rates were caused by over-processed foods that rate high on the glycemic scale, and so were digested too quickly, raising blood-sugar levels, creating insulin swings and making people hungry again too soon.

So the premise of Agatston’s first book, “The South Beach Diet (Rodale Press, 2003),” was simple: Avoid “bad” carbs and “bad” fats in favor of “good” carbs and “good” fats, plus eat lean protein.

Good carbs, the complex carbohydrates in whole-wheat bread and unprocessed fruits and vegetables, digest slowly and keep one feeling full. Good fats, the monounsaturated ones like canola and olive oil and especially omega-3-rich fish oils, improve the flexibility of arteries rather than clogging them.

It clicked. “The South Beach Diet” became a No. 1 New York Times bestseller and the six books in the series have sold 22 million copies.

With Agatston’s new book, experts’ views are mixed.

Dr. Michael Ozner, a cardiologist at Baptist Health South Florida and author of “The Miami Mediterranean Diet” (2005, Greenleaf Book Group), criticizes Agatston’s diet as too high in saturated fat.

“There’s no clinical trial evidence that the South Beach Diet will reduce the risk of heart attack or stroke,” says Ozner. “I can drown you in studies that show that the Mediterranean diet will decrease heart attack, stroke, diabetes, even Alzheimer’s.”

Other experts laud Agatston’s diet.

“The South Beach Diet is better than Atkins,” says Claudia Gonzalez, a registered dietitian and spokesperson for the American Heart Association. “It has more whole grains, vegetables and fruits, and it’s careful in terms of the fats it recommends.”

The diet has boomed. Bill and Hillary Clinton speak of having lost weight on it. Oprah praises it.

With 22 million copies in print, an Online Diet Club at $5 a month with 100,000 subscribers and a South Beach Diet newsletter at $29.95 for the first five issues, Agatston could retire and live on the proceeds.

“Yeah, I guess,” he says. “But I enjoy practicing and research, and this has given me the freedom to do it the way I want.”

FOUR KEY STEPS TO HEART ATTACK AND STROKE PREVENTION

In Dr. Arthur Agatston’s new book, “The South Beach Heart Health Revolution,” prevention of heart attacks and stroke is centered on four key steps:

Diet: By maintaining a healthy weight, you can lower your cholesterol, trigly-ceride levels and blood pressure — the key factors that contribute to heart disease. Of course, he says, his diet is the place to start.

Workout: A comprehensive aerobic, stretching and strengthening workout program will lower your risk of heart disease; his earlier books had said that, while exercise is beneficial, it isn’t essential to weight loss under his diet.

Diagnostic tests: Even healthy patients should consider CT heart scans and advanced blood tests to check for arterial plaque, which Agatston calls the strongest signal of pending heart trouble.

Medications: Too often, he says, medications to lower cholesterol and blood pressure levels are not prescribed — only about 50 percent of Americans at high risk for heart disease who could benefit from a cholesterol-lowering medicine are actually receiving one. Doctors, under pressure to see patients quickly, he says, don’t always ask the questions to determine whether drugs are needed.
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