Skip to main content

What Is the Keto Diet, and Should You Be Trying It

What Is the Keto Diet 

 Everybody’s doing the keto diet. It’s a cultural craze that’s captured our imagination.

Keto Diet

 

But let’s remember that the ketogenic keto diet is a medical, or therapeutic, diet. So while it’s extremely beneficial for people with certain conditions, it’s not for everyone.

What do you eat on the keto diet?

The keto diet is essentially a high-fat diet — your meals are 70 or 80% fat; about 20% protein; and about 5% carbohydrate. It is not an Atkins high-protein diet.

The keto diet switches you from burning glucose (which carbs provide) to burning ketones (which fat produces) for energy. When you do this, interesting things happen:

Your metabolism speeds up.

Your hunger goes away.

Your muscle mass increases.

Your blood pressure and heart disease risk profile improve.

Why will eating fat help you burn fat?

Biology is smart. Historically, it allowed our bodies to adapt to times of abundance or scarcity by shifting from carbohydrate metabolism to fat metabolism.

When we found lots of wild fruit, we’d store the carbs as belly fat. Later, in lean times, we would use the fat as a backup source of fuel.

The key is this: Eating fat does not make your insulin go up, as eating carbs or protein does. So the keto does not spike your insulin, and you don’t store fat. Instead, you burn it, creating the ketones that give you an effective and efficient metabolic jolt

Should you try the keto diet?

Here are a few reasons why you might think about doing the keto diet:

Type 2 diabetes. One study found that being on the keto one year reversed diabetes for up to 60% of participants. With an average weight loss of 30 pounds, they dramatically reduced or eliminated their need for insulin and no longer needed oral hypoglycemic drugs. The keto diet is also easier to sustain than the calorie-restricted diet or the protein-sparing modified fast.

Morbid obesity. If your body mass index is over 40 — or if you have insulin resistance without type 2 diabetes — the keto can be very helpful as well. It can be used as a short-term strategy to reset your metabolism; you don’t have to be on it forever.

Clearly, the ketogenic diet is the standard of care for treatment-resistant epilepsy. But we’re also seeing its benefits in other neurological conditions. Research suggests the keto diet can bring improvements for those with Alzheimer’s disease; autism; or brain cancers such as glioblastoma.

So the keto diet can be a powerful intervention. People with type 2 diabetes and or/morbid obesity can do phenomenally well on it. (And the truth is, this describes many Americans; one in two of us are now are either prediabetic or type 2 diabetic, and 70% of us are overweight.)

But it’s vital to work with a doctor or health professional who can treat and follow you while you’re on the keto diet.

Who should not do the keto diet?

Our responses to the ketogenic diet are individualized. They’re based on our biology, our metabolism, our numbers, and the way we feel.

Some people can sustain the diet for decades. Others don’t do well on it. For example, if I eat too much fat and too few carbs, I lose too much weight.

If you happen to be very thin, if you have an eating disorder, or if you have certain metabolic issues, the keto diet will also be risky for you. I would be very careful; check with your doctor before trying this diet.

 

We also don’t want to put kids on the keto diet, unless they have type 2 diabetes and are overweight. However, I would still check with your pediatrician.

Is the ketogenic diet safe long-term?

We still don’t have enough long-term data to say that the keto diet is effective and safe over 20 to 30 years. But if you’re overweight or diabetic, this diet can help get your system out of metabolic crisis and put it in a healthier state.

One thing I want to stress: It’s vital to eat real, whole, fresh foods when you’re on the keto. This includes non-starchy vegetables (the carbs from broccoli are pretty different from the carbs in cola). Frozen food is OK but should not be processed.

So whether you’re doing the keto diet, the Mediterranean diet, or a low-fat diet, what matters most is the quality of the food you eat.

 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Bounding – How to Teach and Train This Perfect Exercise

If I had to choose two bounding exercises to assess an athlete’s overall athleticism, I would look no further than observing a 10-meter fly and 30-meter double-arm jump for distance. The 10-meter fly paints a wonderful picture of top speed and acceleration capabilities, but it’s no wild card. I have had the privilege of coaching some amazing athletes during my time as the jumps coach at Homewood-Flossmoor High School. In four years, we have had four different athletes long jump over 23 feet, and another who was just under. The interesting part of this? NONE of the five were part of our 4×100 meter relays. A huge part of this is that we have never been faster in our school’s history. Over the past three years, the relay has consisted of three or four athletes who were sub-11 seconds in the 100-meter dash. The five long jumpers mentioned were all fast (1.00-1.06 in the 10-meter fly), but none of them ever broke 1.0 like our 4×100-meter athletes. To go along with their excellent, but not ...

10 Tips to Naturally Regrow Your Hair

Regrow your hair with Naturally If you say your Cabello is your glorious suprema, and this is normal you will be better if your Cabello is not your agrado. If you are trying to get rid of the Cabello that has died or simply like the Cabello that you have, there are many natural remedies. These benefits can help ease the cravings and make the cabbage that you have. 1. Massage Massaging the scalp can help to restore hair growth and can be used in conjunction with hair oils and masks. This stimulates the scalp and can improve hair thicknessTrusted Source. Taking the time to massage your scalp each day can also help you relieve stress and tension. It’s thought that stretching forces during the massage encourage hair growth and thickness in the dermal papilla cells. 2. Aloe vera Aloe vera has long been used for treating hair loss. It also soothes the scalp and conditions hair. It can reduce dandruff and unblock hair follicles that may be blocked by excess oil. You can apply pure aloe vera g...

How To Making Homemade Kombucha in With Full Details

Step by Step Guide How to Making Homemade Kombucha   It’s a big day everyone! The day your intestinal microbiota have been begging you for. The day you say goodbye to expensive store-bought kombucha. The day you become a brewmaster as I impart on you the secrets of homemade kombucha!   The goal of this guide is to be your one-stop-shop for homemade kombucha brewage, from SCOBY-less to fermented perfection. No hopping around the interwebs. No-fuss. No confusion. Because making homemade kombucha is so simple (albeit a bit slow), and I hope after reading this you’ll give it a whirl! Let’s hop right to it.   How To Make Homemade Kombucha With Full Details: Overview This post will go into detail about each step in the process of making kombucha. For succinct instructions, scroll to the bottom where a recipe card lays out the basics of making homemade kombucha. The general order of things goes something like this (you can jump around this tutorial by c...