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Home » Articles » Ketosis for Health: Ketogenic Diet Benefits

Ketosis for Health: Ketogenic Diet Benefits

September 2, 2020 //  by Dr. Daniel Pompa//  Leave a Comment

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Ketosis for Health: Ketogenic Diet Benefits

ketogenic-diet-benefits

Ketosis for Health: We love bringing you ancient healing strategies that will cost you absolutely nothing. One approach is the therapeutic benefits of a ketogenic diet. You’re going to learn what it is, what it isn’t, how it works, why it works, and why I don’t believe in an all-ketogenic approach.

Ketosis for Health, What It Is?

Nutritional ketosis is a metabolic process by which your body utilizes predominantly ketones instead of glucose for energy function. In other words, your cells can use fat (ketones) or sugar (glucose) for energy. When you go into a state of ketosis, you’re decreasing your sugar (carbohydrates) intake down so much that it forces the cell to use fat for energy. The body converts fat into ketones, and the brain uses these ketones for energy instead of glucose.

The brain loves ketones because it’s a clean-burning fuel that doesn’t create a lot of oxidative stress. It is during these fat-burning periods that the body does a lot of repairs and clean up of damaged and dysfunctional cells in the brain and body.

Ketosis for Health: What It Isn’t!

There is a lot of confusion going on in the world of diet, particularly since many people are pushing a hard dogmatic (all or nothing) approach. It’s important to understand that that ketosis is not synonymous with the Paleo diet, the Carnivore diet, or the Atkins diet. Let’s explore how they vary from and are similar to ketosis.

The Paleo Diet

  • The Paleo Diet runs on the concept that you can eat anything that could be hunted or gathered in the days of our paleolithic ancestors. Meats, fish, nuts, leafy greens, local veggies, and seeds are okay. However, grains, processed foods, and sugars are not.
  • Paleo can be made to be keto, but by definition, paleo is not keto. The paleo diet does not account for macronutrient ratios.

The Carnivore Diet

  • The Carnivore Diet (also known as the all-meat diet or the carnivorous diet) entails eating almost nothing but meat (occasionally eggs and dairy) for every meal, every day.
  • Because carnivore is essentially a zero-carb diet, it can be ketogenic. However, too much protein may throw you out of a ketogenic state

The Atkins Diet

  • The Atkins Diet is a low-carb, high-fat (like the ketogenic diet), but is also high in protein
  • Atkins paved the way for keto diets research and advancements, but it is too high in protein to qualify for ketosis

The ratio varies from person to person, but when we consume low-carb and high-protein, the body can convert protein into glucose through a process called gluconeogenesis. Therefore, for a ketogenic diet to work, it has to be low-carb, low-to-moderate protein, and high-fat.

Ketosis done right is a high-fat, low- to moderate-protein, low-carb diet.

Ketosis for Health: Ketogenic Benefits:

  • Increased memory, cognition, and clarity
  • Cleans up your DNA (autophagy)
  • Down-regulation of bad genes
  • Fights certain types of cancers
  • Prevents heart disease (lower blood pressure, lower triglycerides, better cholesterol profiles)
  • Decreases inflammation (which improves acne, arthritis, eczema, psoriasis, IBS, pain, etc…)
  • Enhances energy levels and sleep
  • Keeps uric acid levels in check (helping kidney function and preventing gout)
  • Assists gastrointestinal and gallbladder health (less heartburn and acid reflux, less risk for gallstones, improved digestion, less gas and bloating)
  • Battles a wide variety of neurologic and metabolic diseases (ranging from seizures to migraines)
  • Assists women’s health (increased fertility, stabilizing hormones)
  • Promotes muscle gain and improved athletic endurance
  • Curbs diabetes, obesity, and metabolic syndrome while sparing muscle loss

Ketogenic Benefits: Disease Prevention

Ketosis is well known for its therapeutic use in healing seizures (and other inflamed brain conditions) since the 1900s. Many people rejected the diet back in the day because drugs like Neurontin we’re treating their symptoms. However, as our society shifts more towards natural medicines, a new light is being shined on ketosis not only to reverse but also prevent disease.

The Keto diet is a hot topic right now; it’s even made its way into Vogue Magazine. Like all on-trend things, people cling to it, talk about it, swear by it until eventually, it passes. The trendy nature of keto at the moment is no different, and I believe that like all diets: the obsession will give; let me tell you why.

In the short run, ketosis generates the aforementioned incredible benefits, but the science on lifetime(s) of keto-only diets is non-existent. The available science suggests that the long term use of a strict ketogenic diet is not, in fact, beneficial for humans.

Ketogenic Benefits: Metabolic Flexibility

As people stay in a state of ketosis, there is an ever minimizing return on investments. The longer you stay in ketosis, the less metabolically flexible you become. Metabolic flexibility is the capacity for an organism to adapt fuel oxidation to fuel availability. Your ability to efficiently use the food you feed your body as actual energy. One of the key ways to achieve this is by continually keeping the body guessing, and therefore adapting.

All these diets fail to stay popular because the use of any single type of eating in the long term fails. Metabolic flexibility, healthy hormones, and a growing body require diet variation to be sustainably beneficial to the body in the long run.

Ketosis for Health: Diet Variation is the Key to Success

Diet variation is much like exercise variation; when we continuously perform the same movements over and over- the body adapts very quickly. Someone who starts training in the gym will see incredible improvements very quickly, but within a month the brilliant body adapts, and a fitness and weight loss plateau settles in. The only way to break a plateau is to vary the movement patterns.

In diet, there is a similar parallel, by which the body quickly adapts to your manner of eating. Our ancestral bodies see body fat as gold since there would often be periods of famine. Today there is no more famine, and our constant overconsumption not only packs on the body fat but also damages our hormones and metabolism as a result.

Ketosis for Health: Incessant feasting is a precise mechanism.

If we continuously overeat, the body will continuously store body fat in preparation for times of famine. But the problem with calorie restriction as a solution is that a long-term sustained low-calorie diet doesn’t result in weight loss or health. In the short term, you will shed pounds on a low-calorie diet, but as it continues, the body eventually goes into starvation mode. Starvation mode causes hormonal damage and prevents starving to death. The body will hold onto every last bit of body fat. The calories are reduced so low that you can no longer function properly, creating metabolic damage. Long-term ketosis can also trigger this same “lack” mindset within the body and cause hormonal distress. The key is diet variation (i.e., feast/ famine cycles) rooted in an otherwise clean, ketogenic diet.

Ketosis for Health: Vary the Diet

Diet variation is the art of varying your diet so that it contains some days of feasting, some fasting, and some regular keto days. By including refeed days (that could be high carb or high protein), you always remind the body that it is not starving and allow the development of metabolic flexibility. The ratio of feast-to-fast-to-keto days will depend on your metabolic and overall health going into it. Someone who is hormonally damaged might consider 3 refeed (high carb/ protein/ caloric) days, one fasting day, and three keto days. As the body becomes more hormonally sensitive and healthy, you can decrease the feast days in favor of keto or fasting days. However, never drop the feast days below one time per week.

Apart from hormonal damage, another roadblock to achieving ketosis is toxicity in the body. A toxic body means the cells are not functioning correctly, which likely requires a detoxification program, possibly even guided by a healthcare practitioner. You can learn more about detoxification onDrPompa.com.

Ketosis for Health: How to Eat Keto

Other than hormonal damage and toxicity, getting into ketosis is pretty easy, and requires calculating your macronutrient intake ratio. Macronutrients include fat, carbs, and protein. Although you may initially have to calculate these ratios, it won’t be long before you intuitively know your macros.

For the average person, carbohydrates should remain under 50 grams of net carbs per day. Net carbs are simply the number of sugars minus the fiber content. Protein should hover around your body weight in pounds divided by two; so a 150-pound person would consume around 75 grams of protein. These numbers do vary slightly depending on your metabolic flexibility and how much exercise/ movement you do in a day. Someone very active and metabolically flexible can take in more protein and remain in ketosis.

Ketosis for Health: How to Properly Measure Nutritional Ketosis

Testing to confirm ketosis is based on the ketones levels in the body (measured in mmol/L). Nutritional ketosis ranges between 0.5-1.5 mmol/L on the lighter side, and around 1.5 – 3 mmol/L is in the more optimal range.

Although ketone urine tests are available, they are not reliable measures of ketones in the body. Ketone presence in the urine does not mean the ketones are appropriately utilized in the blood. Measuring ketones directly in the blood is easy with a unit like KetoMojo.

Using a testing device when you start is critical because some people can consume 80 net carbs a day and still be in ketosis. Others might have to drop down as low as 20. Knowing your own body’s response to carbs and protein will ensure you achieve your goals as fast as possible.

When is the best time to test ketone levels?

The ideal time to test your ketone levels is first thing in the morning before any food or activity. As you start, you should also check intermittently throughout the day. Checking more frequently will help you better understand how specific things impact your levels. Notably, how much protein and carbs you can tolerate, as well as the impact of caffeine.

You may be seeing levels of ketones in the blood relatively fast, but you may not feel 100% clear-minded straight away. There is a period of adaptation for your body to switch from using carbs to fat for energy. This period of adjustment applies to all people, no matter how healthy you are. You should expect 2-4 weeks for the average person, however, upwards of 3 months for someone who is more metabolically damaged. The more you incorporate diet variation into your life, the more sensitive your hormones will become.  Someone who has been practicing keto and diet variation regularly can jump in and out of ketosis in a matter of days.

Ketosis for Health: Is it Safe?

Yes, a ketogenic diet is fundamentally safe for all people.

It’s important to note that we are not talking about diabetic ketoacidosis. Diabetic ketoacidosis is a severe complication of diabetes that occurs when your body produces high levels of ketones as a result of not producing enough insulin. The keto we’re referring to is nutritional ketosis, induced willingly through diet.

More than being safe, ketosis is a very natural process for the body to undergo cyclically. Our ancestors would find themselves in periods of ketosis due to their natural tendencies to intermittent fast.

Ketosis for Health: When to Seek Guidance

If you are on medication or suffering from more severe toxicity, you should seek the guidance of a trained professional. Working with a trained professional will help to ensure the success of your keto/ diet variation journey. No matter how sick you are, you can still benefit safely from the therapeutic nature of cycling a ketogenic diet.

No matter your current health status, a multi-therapeutic approach using my ancient healing strategies is going to improve your quality of life vastly. If you already feel good, you’ll feel even better, and you will turn back your biological clock.

Learn more about ketogenic diet benefits here:  Health Hunters Episode 4: Ketosis for Health, Mind, and Body

 

References

Allen, Bryan G., Sudershan K. Bhatia, Carryn M. Anderson, Julie M. Eichenberger-Gilmore, Zita A. Sibenaller, Kranti A. Mapuskar, Joshua D. Schoenfeld, John M. Buatti, Douglas R. Spitz, and Melissa A. Fath. “Ketogenic Diets as an Adjuvant Cancer Therapy: History and Potential Mechanism.” Redox Biology2 (2014): 963–70. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2014.08.002.

Blagosklonny, M V. “Linking Calorie Restriction to Longevity through Sirtuins and Autophagy: Any Role for TOR.” Cell Death & Disease1, no. 1 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1038/cddis.2009.17.

Cox, Pete J., Tom Kirk, Tom Ashmore, Kristof Willerton, Rhys Evans, Alan Smith, Andrew J. Murray, et al. “Nutritional Ketosis Alters Fuel Preference and Thereby Endurance Performance in Athletes.” Cell Metabolism24, no. 2 (2016): 256–68. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cmet.2016.07.010.

David, Lawrence A., Corinne F. Maurice, Rachel N. Carmody, David B. Gootenberg, Julie E. Button, Benjamin E. Wolfe, Alisha V. Ling, et al. “Diet Rapidly and Reproducibly Alters the Human Gut Microbiome.” Nature505, no. 7484 (November 2013): 559–63. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature12820.

Dearlove, David. “Adaptation to Prolonged Nutritional Ketosis.” Http://Isrctn.com/, 2018. https://doi.org/10.1186/isrctn35075523.

Hansen, Malene. “Autophagy – An Emerging Anti-Aging Mechanism?” Journal of Clinical & Experimental Pathologys4, no. 01 (2012). https://doi.org/10.4172/2161-0681.s4-006.

Milder, Julie, and Manisha Patel. “Modulation of Oxidative Stress and Mitochondrial Function by the Ketogenic Diet.” Epilepsy Research100, no. 3 (2012): 295–303. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eplepsyres.2011.09.021.

Miraghajani, Maryam, Soheila Khodadadi, Nafiseh Sobhani, Somaye Mirshekar, Reza Ghiasvand, Makan Pourmasoumi, and Somayehshahraki Dehsoukhteh. “Tumor Cells Growth and Survival Time with the Ketogenic Diet in Animal Models: A Systematic Review.” International Journal of Preventive Medicine8, no. 1 (2017): 35. https://doi.org/10.4103/2008-7802.207035.

Novick, Debbie. “Nutritional Ketosis- What Does That Mean and How Can It Revolutionize Human Health and Wellness?” International Journal of Complementary & Alternative Medicine2, no. 2 (April 2015). https://doi.org/10.15406/ijcam.2015.02.00049.

Stafstrom, Carl E., and Jong M. Rho. “The Ketogenic Diet as a Treatment Paradigm for Diverse Neurological Disorders.” Frontiers in Pharmacology3 (2012). https://doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2012.00059.

Veech, Richard L. “The Therapeutic Implications of Ketone Bodies: The Effects of Ketone Bodies in Pathological Conditions: Ketosis, Ketogenic Diet, Redox States, Insulin Resistance, and Mitochondrial Metabolism.” Prostaglandins, Leukotrienes and Essential Fatty Acids70, no. 3 (2004): 309–19. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.plefa.2003.09.007.

Woolf, Eric C., and Adrienne C. Scheck. “Ketogenic Diet as Adjunctive Therapy for Malignant Brain Cancer.” Oxford Medicine Online, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190497996.003.0013.

 

 

 

 

 

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