October 28, 2007
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Pass Me Some Lard. Please…
Angi1972 commented me yesterday, asking if I had saved some of my birthday cake for breakfast. It made me laugh, as we had discussed the joys of having birthday cake for breakfast some time ago. It used to be one of my favorite things to indulge in the morning after a birthday, as gross as it may sound to some. I commented Angi back, and let her in on a little secret: I didn’t have birthday cake at all for my birthday.
Now, before you feel pity for me, I must tell you that this was by choice. As a matter of fact, since July 6th of this year, I haven’t touched sugar, flour, starchy vegetables, or processed foods of any kind. That’s right, no bread, potatoes, sweets, rice, tortillas, or the like for almost 4 months. Instead I’ve been eating a lot of beef/steak (with the fat), chicken (with the skin), pork, butter, heavy cream, non-starchy vegetables, and on occasion some fresh berries. I eat when I am hungry, and I never starve. And guess what? I’ve lost 25 pounds. And that’s a good thing, since I was turning into quite the heifer over the last year or so. I’m not done yet with the weight loss, but I know one thing for sure: even if I never lost another pound I would continue eating this way anyhow. Do I miss the things I do not eat now? Not once after the first two weeks of eating this way.
My sister said it the best a few days ago, “You just glow since you’ve started this eating plan!” And I do, I think. I feel so much better! No more mid-afternoon crashes where I’d have to lie down to nap because my eyes wouldn’t stay open (hypoglycemia/pre-diabetes in action). My energy level has skyrocketed. My kids have been sick, and I usually follow close behind, catching whatever ick they have. Not this time! I’m well, and I attribute my boosted immune system to the way I have been eating…this low carbohydrate lifestyle I’ve adopted.
I’ve already had people tell me that this way of eating will make me sick, possibly kill me. I just smile and tell them I know better, and that I now have a better chance of outliving my peers who eat a low fat, high carb diet. Not only that, but my triglycerides are great, my blood pressure is well within normal range (it was pushing high before), and my blood sugar has stabilized.
How can this be? Aren’t we all told that we should be basing our diets on mostly breads, cereals, and grains, and avoiding fats, according to the USDA’s Food Pyramid in order to be healthy and try to prevent this obesity epidemic that is sweeping our nation?
Yep, that’s what they tell us. But guess what? They are lying to us, and perpetuating this false information for the sake of the almighty dollars they line their pockets with, and in the meantime their sage advice is making our nation sick, and really fat. Scientists have twisted the results of their research and studies to support their hypotheses, never daring to go against the big businesses that fund their research. Sounds like a conspiracy theory, you say? Hmm, well, it would, if it were a theory.
Gary Taubes, an award winning science journalist, has recently come out with a book entitled Good Calories, Bad Calories that he spent 7 years researching. The result is an eye opening plethora of information about the (bad) science behind the Low Fat Diet advice that’s been pushed on us for the last 30 years, and the science behind a healthy low carbohydrate diet. It’s not a diet book, and it’s not light reading, but if you care about your health, and the health of your loved ones, you need to read it. Truly.
Since I have no intention of writing a book of my own right here, right now, I will close this post with the first part of a major challenge (get ready my Scurvy Dogs and Salty Wenches!) I will be announcing soon…though this will not be the last time I speak about this topic.
If you are overweight (and even if you are lean), or Type II diabetic, or are on statins to lower cholesterol, or have heart disease or high blood pressure, a low carbohydrate diet may be worth looking into. Many, many people who have changed their way of eating over to a low carb diet have found that they are able to lower their dosages of medication (under their doctor’s supervision), or are able to go off of meds entirely. Yes, even some Type II diabetics have been able to stop using insulin. Too good to be true? It’s not, trust me.
So, the first part of the challenge is to go to the following links and read. If you find the information intriguing, get to a library, or a book store, and pick up Dr. Atkins New Diet Revolution by Dr. Atkins, and Protein Power by Dr. Michael R. Eades and Dr. Mary Dan Eades.
What if It’s All Been a Big Fat Lie?
Do We Really Know What Makes Us Healthy?
Does Exercise Make Us Thinner?
The Soft Science of Dietary Fat
And below is a representation of the things I eat now, replacing the USDA Food Pyramid with this new and improved version:
Do you have any questions, concerns, or anything you’d like to debate with me about low carb diets? If so, please leave it in a comment, and I will answer you in my next post (or in my comments here, so check back).
Next time I’ll tell you what the turning point was for me to start following this way of eating. Stay tuned!
ETA: I’d just like to address a comment from franksabunch here (my responses in red):
I commend you on your determination to lose weight (I would be in ecstatic if just 5% of my patients lost weight when I asked them to).
Thanks so much! Patients? Are you a doctor, or what, if I may ask?
The problem with low carb diets is–as with all “fad” diets–that they are difficult to sustain.
A low carbohydrate diet is not a fad diet. Low carb was around long before the idea that dietary fat and cholesterol had anything to do with heart disease (which it does not). If you have not heard of William Banting and his Letter on Corpulance from the mid 19th century, you should look him up. Here’s a link. Actually, I find this way of eating very satisfying and very easy to maintain, as do many others.
If the average American would take ownership of their health and just simply cut out 10% of their portions and exercise, then as a whole we would be better off as a nation.
Been there, done that. I sacrificed my gallbladder to it, actually. I was a very thin 113 pounds on my 5’ 2 ½” frame – very thin. I found the miniscule amount of food that I could ingest in order to keep my weight there to be unsustainable. I also worked out 6-7 days a week, both with weights and aerobics. I have lost this 25 pounds without much physical effort, though my energy level has increased and I have become more active because of my diet. Exercise does not make one thinner. Gary Taubes in his book Good Calories, Bad Calories deals very well with this myth – and of the tendency of people (yes, even doctors) to lay moral blame on those with weight issues. The words “glutton” and “slothful” do not describe me, nor the majority of those with weight issues.
Some of the physiology behind the Atkins diet is similar to that with diabetic ketoacidosis, if I am not mistaken. And that is worrisome.
You are mistaken. Ketoacidosis and Ketosis are not the same thing. Ketosis is merely a natural occurrence, where ketones are the byproduct of the lypolysis which occurs during the breakdown of fats in the body, when the body uses ketones instead of glucose for fuel. Specifically, ketosis is a metabolic state where your body switches from primarily using glucose for energy to primarily using fat for energy. The fat used for energy will come from both dietary fat sources and body fat. Ketosis is the natural result of limiting carbohydrates in your diet to a low enough level that your body can’t meet its energy needs primarily from glucose, so it burns fat instead.
In the minds of most laypeople & even some ill informed doctors ketosis is often confused with Diabetic Ketoacidosis.Ketoacidosis is the consequence of insulin deficient individuals (Type I diabetics) having out-of-control blood sugar levels.
Ketosis & Ketoacidosis may sound alike but the actual conditions are practically polar opposites. Ketoacidosis is distinguished by the fact that the Type 1 Diabetic in this state has been consuming excess carbohydrates & has extremely high blood sugar which is the exact opposite of Ketosis where the person has been consuming practically no carbohydrates.
It is a scientific fact that the human brain runs most efficiently on ketones, rather than glucose. It is also a fact that a Ketogenic diet is what is best for those who have epileptic seizures, but that is really neither here nor there for this discussion.
There is evidence that a diet that is too high in protein is associated with kidney disease in the long run (glomerulosclerosis, to be more specific).Glomerulosclerosis is not associated with a low carb diet.
I don’t think money has anything to do with why certain diets are popular. Look at Atkins. He made a killing on his theory.
Dr. Atkins was a cardiologist with a practice in New York, even after his book was published. He was an underappreciated genius, and I don’t begrudge him making money from the sales of his book.
When funding for research is provided by companies with an interest in the outcome, I think money has a lot to do with it.
Speaking of Atkins, he developed cardiomyopathy before he died. Coincidence?
He did not die from cardiomyopathy. See How Did Atkins Die?
And the last generation that embraced the high protein, low carb diet was that of the cavemen, who had a life expectancy of 3 decades. (That’s just a joke.)
Heh. Well, I’m past that already anyway.
But I do commend you on your weight loss. I would hope that you will be able to sustain it.
Thank you! I shall.
Comments (113)
25 pounds is a bunch to lose. That is great.
i loves me my carbs, dude.
i’ve done atkins… need to go back. my body recognizes it now, though, according to my doc. *sigh* congratulations.
You have done so well with this.
I just got home from the chick trip…I will call you to say Happy Birthday!
wish i could – tried it for a bit –ketosis kicked my butt – didn’t have the energy to get through the day…
i agree with you…the copanies would gop out of business…im a diabetic..i follow the glycemic diet…it makes the diabtes go wayyyyyyyyy down, i dont have to take all the meds..plus i have lost 106 lbs…i feel great and have so much energy…you go girl!!
I will not debate. I say do what works for you and since I’m 40 lbs over weight I obviously haven’t found that yet. Good for you – I may try it your way.
Good job! I can’t wait to hear more of your progress!
My question is: WHERE’S THE CHOCOLATE???
just kidding.
I did the Zone for a while… I felt like I was eating healthier than ever, but I gained all the weight back the second I slacked off.
I wish you the best of luck to sticking with it!!
and the truth shall set you free……………………………good for you
been a follower of Dr. Atkins for years ………………
thousands of years of evolution turned on it’s head in the last 50 years with processed foods
I could eat this….25 lbs…cool [pass the swiss]
Sugar, lol, calling you sugar, anyhow I hope I was your inspiration as I lost 40 and holding steady!
No there is nothing natural about a high carb diet. I would bet that your diet is not all that high fat as some would think it is. That plus the fact the hydrogenated vegetable oils are by far the worst of th worst, a vegetarian could easily have major circulatory problems while you are healthy as a horse.
But sugar or no sugar, you’re still sweet
I kinda miss your old layout…but this one looks better. Yes, B-Day cake for breakfast is terribly wondrous.
Where is cake on the pyramid now? I eat cake a lot.
Good for you! Great news.
I am a http://www.sparkpeople.com member and even though i am not in it to lose weight, i use it (when i can remember) to track everything i do and consume. You ought to try it, it’s free!
so when do we get to see the before and after shots, Lisa?
Truly Interesting!!!
Wishing you an exquisite day…(((Angel Hugs!)))
~The Island Concierge~.
I don’t follow the regular pyramid and I won’t follow this one, however appealing it is to me that MEAT is the biggest portion. I’ll eat what I want and, when my heart is in trouble, then I will worry more…
Well, I am glad to report that I have not followed USDA’s advice or anyone else’s for that matter. My diet consists of plenty of soda, twinkies, Ruffles, Funyuns, Pork rinds, pork chops, Zingers, ice cream, pizza, Burgers, tacos, crispy chicken and plenty of chocolate. I feel great. As a matter of fact, I go to sleep after consuming such things. And recently I’ve developed huge pectoral muscles…okay, maybe they are man boobs…but still, I will die happy.
I’m glad that you’re feeling better, and even more happy that you’re updating more these days. I’m proud of your weight loss.
EAT EVERYTHING!
just exercise.
I commend you on your determination to lose weight (I would be in ecstatic if just 5% of my patients lost weight when I asked them to). The problem with low carb diets is–as with all “fad” diets–that they are difficult to sustain.
If the average American would take ownership of their health and just simply cut out 10% of their portions and exercise, then as a whole we would be better off as a nation.
Some of the physiology behind the Atkins diet is similar to that with diabetic ketoacidosis, if I am not mistaken. And that is worrisome.
There is evidence that a diet that is too high in protein is associated with kidney disease in the long run (glomerulosclerosis, to be more specific).
I don’t think money has anything to do with why certain diets are popular. Look at Atkins. He made a killing on his theory.
Speaking of Atkins, he developed cardiomyopathy before he died. Coincidence?
And the last generation that embraced the high protein, low carb diet was that of the cavemen, who had a life expectancy of 3 decades. (That’s just a joke.)
But I do commend you on your weight loss. I would hope that you will be able to sustain it.
Sorry about the typo in the 1st sentence!
That’s great, congrats!
What’s like a sample of it?
Question: Won’t this diet lead to problems in your digestion? Something about being more at risk for polyps growing in the colon?
that almost sound like Atkins’ diet… well I think you already know to some degree of “eating what can cause what… and the reaction” People will tell you all kinds of stuff to sell… I even joke that my race will eat shit if someone told them that it’s good for you…
because some people write books on things mean that they know everything… it’s one sided and also they also got a sponsors that gives them lot of money to take their side… such as coffee…
okay… your body needs few basic thing, carb (energy)& protein (building blocks), fats (storage energy, need for absorbing vitamin A,D,E,K) Atkins diet works this way,.. Eating lot of protein and you lose weight… which it works for a while but it’s not good to prolong it… your putting you body into distress… so the body have to compensate and break protein down to be made into carb… not a bad ideal right? Well, protein will depleted and made into carb, which is not a easy process. Hence it put body into distress and making work two to three times more work then it is suppose to… (I guess it’s kinda like smoking, putting body under dis-stress) so the fat cell have to back up the protein cell to keep the energy level up… so the fat cell is depleting… and this does not apply… eat fat to replace fat… LoL,.. Fat cells on your body is left over glucose that is not needed for the body and stored as glucagons to be used later.
And the glowing could be from many different things including estrogen from fat. Yea.. You heard me right… fat produces little bit a of estrogen for the body… kinda funny thing about this is, man boobs are caused by this… LoL and of course there are also people who inherit the gene…
This is not from any Doctor, nor from a single author, or some reach search team, but from all medical book, use to study the body for doctors, nurses, and other medical personal… please be careful in what you are doing… the food pyramid was made for a reason… By the way… check your HDL& LDL… and maybe urine test… just for kicks…
that is absolutely amazing… @_@
Just thought I would leave a comment, saw you blog from the front page! I just found it amazing that you wrote about the Atkins diet, I’m actually starting that diet today and it’s great to see that it’s worked for someone!!! Great writing, have a great week!
ive seen the benefits of the atkins diet and applaud you for your control. best birthday wishes and good luck
Nice entry. I eat whatever fill my stomach. Heheh. I actually never follow the diet thing the whole country seem to be following. It never occurred to me to follow it. Whatever good I eat.
WOA! A diet blog go featured on Xanga! Not only that, but she’s dieting intelligently and isn’t a self-loathing, deluded, teenager! On Xanga no less! Satan better buy some sweaters.
i always leave some of my bday cake for breakfast the next morning
PS: The new pyramid is not healthier. Will it help you lose weight? Yes. Does this make it healtheir or more balanced? Not at all. Take basic microbiology or even a low level cellular nutrition course.
These kinds of diets are only faster at losing weight because people are simply not active enough. Carbohydrates only turn to fat because people dont’ use them. Diets that are formulated to help you lose weight will ONLY do that–not make you healthy! Basics people; basics.
so what if a person likes to indulge himself with 1,200 calories of chocolate-y goodness?
people should be able to eat whatever they want.
i hate people who blame mcdonald’s for their obesity. no one forced them to eat there. people should try being the victim less, and being an adult responsible for his actions more.
(i’m not accusing you of being one of these people – it’s a comment.)
more power to ya on your fantabulous diet!
don’t turn into one of those persons who like to shove their ideals down everyone else’s throat.
-alfred
MackyM:
“PS:
The new pyramid is not healthier. Will it help you lose weight? Yes.
Does this make it healtheir or more balanced? Not at all. Take basic
microbiology or even a low level cellular nutrition course.”
Yes, it’s WAY healthier! I am well versed in nutrition and I absolutely LOVED my Micro classes in college.
“These kinds of diets are only faster at losing weight because people
are simply not active enough. Carbohydrates only turn to fat because
people dont’ use them. Diets that are formulated to help you lose
weight will ONLY do that–not make you healthy! Basics people; basics.”
Huh? I’m so much more active now that I’m low carbing, you can’t even imagine. Carbohydrates turn into fat because of the hormone insulin. But, thanks for your comment and concern!
Cool Profile pic ( off topic and totally unrelated!)
I think alcohol makes the majority of my diet…. hahaha
By the way, happy belated birthday.
I don’t eat any meat other than fish once or twice a week, and go heavy on the whole grains, vegetables, and fruits. I am extremely active and work out *almost* every day. While I think that maybe the kind of diet you’re suggesting may work for some people, it is probably unhealthy for most of the population. I’m no scientist, but I do have experience. I come from a long line of meat lovers (the first time I turned down brisket… you would have thought I shot my grandma!) and I was a huge fan of carne asada burritos. I’ve always been active. But after a few months, I started feeling better than ever. I’ve been like this for about a year now (and am in good physical shape).
Maybe it’s just adjusting your diet to see what works for you. Everybody’s body is different. But I have a feeling that eating meat all the time may not be that great for most people’s long term health.
Congrats on the weight loss, though.
yeah, agree w/ above. meat makes me feel icky after eating it. eating more meat than veggies gives me stomachaches. maybe diff types of diets for diff types of people. also, how about for vegans/ vegetarians? according to that pyramid, they would only be able to eat nuts and nonstarchy veggies, which is not even near the bottom. And how about all those poor animals?
Millet is your friend.
IchigoBunny, my favorite animal is steak.
To each their own, though. My personal belief is that God put some animals on this earth to eat and use their hides.
It is possible for a vegetarian to low carb, it’s just not as easy as it is for someone who is not a vegetarian.
This almost makes me want to go back on the protein diet. I’m just a bit nervous about all the hormones and other things that are fed to most meat animals. That and I’m lactose intolerant. Ah well. I guess it’s me and the green leafys.
So glad its working so well for you. Congratulations!
Great job on the weight loss! The low carb makes so much sense in our society of over-processed, refined and prepackaged food products. I don’t see how you can go wrong by eliminating those items from your diet. I can’t wait to read Gary Taubes new book, because he offers the science for the reader to review and draw their own conclusions, instead of being force feed what the USDA wants us to believe. As an added bonus Gary Taubes is handsome in the way that confident, intelligent men are, so I get to have a school girl crush and all the giggling has to burn some extra calories too.
KUTGW
HoneyBee G.T.
Quite an informative post. People really should research first before pursuing any diet recommended by mere testimonies.
the atkins diet is the ONLY way i can lose weight (without going on drugs.) good for you!
just a little reminder that the atkin’s diet isn’t good for everyone. If your an athlete, the removal of carbs from your body can cause you to crash and burn because carbs are your main energy source, for the most part. as a 16 year old, if i tried this, i would surely not be able to function. But, because you said you had children, i’m sure your a bit older. =] regardless, i’m glad this is working for you. it’s always really hard to get back into shape, it’s nice to see someone actually sticking to a plan.
xx
Great to hear this diet works for you, and thanks for providing the links for further reading on this issue. In addition, I strongly suggest other readers to seek more information (preferably from professional sources) before attempting to follow the low-carb diet, which may very well not be the “one size fits all” weight loss solution for everyone. Yes, the scientific debate has been going on for decades, and there is
certainly no “right” or “wrong” foods to eat, just consume whatever
suits you and makes you feel good. From one of my biochemistry lectures in college, the professor convinced me that it is unwise to force your body to undergo gluconeogenesis (by completely avoiding the consumption of carbohydrates) to provide the glucose your body needs. Amino acids are broken down to derive the substrates needed for this pathway, with a net increase in urea production, and additional stress on your kidneys to remove the urea from your bloodstream. Though you may not feel the immediate impact after a few months of low-carb diet, I suggest that you proceed with caution since this artificially induced biochemical imbalance may have unprecedented effects that scientists still have no idea about. Talk to your doctor if in doubt, and try to find studies about the long term effects of a low-carb diet (maybe animal studies have been done in mice?). Just my 2 cents. Take care! =)
without whole grains, nutrution becomes a problem particularly that of the B vitamins including folic acid
I’m really impressed.
It’s an atkins sort of lo-carb thing that you’re doing, right?
I enjoyed your edit to the original post………….keep running!
Wow, Featured! Sorry, I don’t have time to read the post as I’m running late this morning. I’ll be sure to swing by after work and read what I’m commenting on.
Also a book worthy of mentioning – Sugar Shock by Connie Bennett. Ever since I stopped eating so much sugar and switched to 100% whole wheat instead of white, I don’t crash as much.
You may not even see this comment after so many others. I have been hot on the heels of this type of eating plan, reading what I can, and I’ve heard lots about that book. I don’t need convincing that the food pyramind is wrong for weight loss – I need to know how to do it. There are so few things I can eat now (no dairy for example), I’m not sure where to begin. WHAT do you eat? You said steak – steak for breakfast, lunch, dinner? Do you cook it fresh, or microwave it later? Do you ever have to make things portable? Have you mortgaged your house a 2nd time to afford it? I do not want to live a life of boiled eggs, almonds, and lunch meat in a baggie – but that’s what I feel like I’ll be condemned to if I go the way you have (and I so want to eat low-carb, always felt much better). Any advice is appreciated. Thanks for sharing this, btw.
I’m a big believer in eating only when you’re hungry and stopping when you’re full. Keep up the good work!
Fair Seas! Pirate Queen *misses the little pirates but still loves you’re layout*
Great post. I might have to read up more on this. I have planned to majorly cut back on carbs and sugars mainly because I do have issues with hypoglycemia and I know that I function better on a higher protein diet. I did well for about a month in the summer, but then I got swept back up into the old ways. It is easier to just eat whatever is put in front of you, so I just got lazy.
great that you lost 25 pounds. But you do need carbs. it fuels ur brain. Do lots of exerise it will be more effective and balance ur meals
Asking in the off-chance you might actually respond: one of my children and I have a condition that causes us to NEED high fiber foods in our diets. Does Adkins address such issues? I would imagine that fiber supplementation would cause the diet not to work as it should. We’ll be interested, if you have opportunity to respond. Thanks.
I agree with someone who posted higher up. Low carb is definitely not good for everyone. I have an extremely active, athletic lifestyle, and it’s very difficult for me to try and lose weight (yeah, that’s right). It’s difficult because with all the exercising I do (20 miles a week running at least, plus strength training), my body constantly needs fuel and I crash if I don’t have enough of it. It’s tough to find the balance where I’m getting the carbs I need without overdoing the overprocessed stuff. I’ve tried low carb and my body simply did not have the energy to operate at the level I need it to.
The fact is though, when it comes down to it, you lose weight by burning more calories than you consume. Some people have a different baseline than others… meaning they burn calories differently while resting, body maintenance kinda stuff. So obviously the same diet won’t work for everyone. I have friends who eat 3,000 calories a day at least and watch tv all day, but they’re skinny as poles. If I actually eat about 2,000, even with as much as I exercise, I don’t lose weight. You have to figure out how to get your body to burn calories that you’re not eating… whether that means changing your diet or your exercise routine, or both. The healthiest way to do it is a reasonable combination. If your lifestyle affords you the luxury of low carb, then go for it, but you also should get some decent workouts in too. Strength training will help stave off osteoporosis and muscle loss as you age, and cardio will help keep your heart and lungs working exactly like they were designed to.
This entry made me hungry. I think I’ll go have a big, juicy (greasy) burger for lunch, sans bun.
Low carbing is the bomb! No doubt. I’m down almost 50lbs. from June ’07 doing low carb. I feel so much better and don’t get that afternoon slump like I used to. Sticking with feeling so much better…well, it ain’t a problem!
Even your profile picture looks better these days.
Very interesting. For another nutritional point of view that has parallels with the diet you are currently eating, check out The Weston A. Price Foundation. They do not necessarily advocate a low-carb diet, but they do advocate for a diet made up of nutrient dense foods, such as meat, and for animal fats playing a vital role in remaining healthy.
Good for you! I know I feel lots better without white foods, sugars, and carbs.
I did the same thing for a while and loved it! I felt so good all the time! Keep it up!
I’m more of a “moderation-in-all-things” kind of gal, but congratulations of your weight loss. I have to disagree with the exercise notion, though. I have found, through experience, that if I run (I’m a runner, and I love it) 3-5 miles five or six times each week (well under an hour each time), I can eat damned near whatever I please and neither gain weight nor feel badly. I’ve lost about 15-20 pounds in the last year with little effort other than the running. Actually, I’ve started eating quite a bit more in the last five months or so because my body basically tells me what I need now that I am in a good exercise routine. Is my weight coming back? Nope. I’m not losing any more either, but I don’t need to any more. I’m just a big believer in getting off the couch, I guess! I’m also a really good baker, so there’s almost always cake or cookies or something in my house (not that those are things I need to eat, but they sure are good)!
With all due respect, I honorably must disagree with you and say low-carb diets are the devil and that if you want to lose weight and burn fat, you should freaking exercise. The reason the FDA created the food pyramid the way they did wasn’t to make money, it was because they assumed people were going to be engaged in some form of exercise, and therefore, would need a steady income of carbohydrates.
::waving:: Hi CJane!
Hi CYaraJane–
Glad to hear that you’ve done so well on your low-carb diet although I’m not surprised. I’ve been in clinical practice for many years and have treated thousands of overweight and diabetic patients by having them restrict carbohydrates. The results have been nothing short of phenomenal.
You’re answer to franksabunch is pretty much on the money. The idea that low-carb diets cause kidney problems, osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, liver failure and all the other disorders for which they’ve been blamed are what I call Vampire Myths because they refuse to die no matter how much scientific light is shined on them.
Keep up the good work.
Michael R. Eades, M.D.
http://www.proteinpower.com/drmike/
Good for you! It’s not for everyone – as in ME. I tried it for two weeks and passed out twice, had no energy, slurred my words, couldn’t drive, etc. But it works for some.
yea health is a good thing many people do not keep up with there self medical technology im into as well
You should also read “Nourishing Traditions” by Sally Fallon, a fantastic book/cookbook that encourages a diet based on more traditional methods of food production and processing. Low on carbs, high on animal fats, but also with a focus on making vegetables better for the digestion, with fermentation and sprouting. If you eat a lot of protein, you should definitely not skimp with the fermented veggies (i.e. sauerkraut, kimchi, etc).
How does a the USDA profit from you eating carbs? A low carb diet doesn’t go against the traditional concept of weight loss. It is just another way of consuming less calories than you burn. The important thing is to control one’s diet, and get the nutrients one needs. How many people actually follow the food pyramid ? Not just the concept of lots of grains and low fat. Besides the one you showed is outdated.
good job working your Atkins both the eating and the exercise part.
Since you already adressed the false kidney /high protein issue statement here is an article containing a study done to back up your statements. eating high protein does not damage healthy kidneys. http://www.webmd.com/news/20030317/high-protein-diets-can-hurt-kidneys
Your pryamid needs another layer for the healthy fresh fruits, legumes and veggies we get to add back after those 14 days of induction eating during our Ongoing Weight Loss.
keep up the good work
congrats on your weight loss!
However, I recall (from my biochemistry course last year) my prof saying that consumption of fatty acids in place of glucose for energy results in the formation of ketone bodies in the blood.
While some of these ketone bodies are ‘reused’ for fuel, a high concentration of ketone bodies in the blood can also damage your liver.
I’m not sure if this is the ketosis/ketoacidosis you addressed previously, but it may be something for you to look into. =)
As for me, I am a 5’2 female with a weight b/w 95 and 100 lbs, and I love my veggies and steak! <3
No potatoes!? Woman, how do you survive!
Congrats on your weight loss, although, 25 pounds in 4 months, at your age (I assume you’re around 30 or 40) isn’t going to stick for long unless you do this forever. That can’t be much fun.
I’m glad I don’t know you personally…I bake for almost everyone I know, and it’d be hell not to be able to bake for you.
Meat and eggs, WE EAT!
-Borborgymos
Hey Lisa,
Just being nosey and checking in. You know, blogging about diets is somewhat like religion! I say whatever works. Again great going and keep it up. *wink*
im proud of you
Nice pyramid! Low-carb diets are also a great way for getting rid of candida problems. I need to do it again.
Another thing to note is consuming the /right/ fats & oils. Makes a big difference.
okay, so what do you drink?
I have to have a bunch of carbs since my thyroid enjoys destroying itself =) Happy belated birthday!
Congratulations on the weight loss, it’s always exciting.
All i know is that since I’ve started exercising I’ve felt better, happier, stronger, and my body just looks more toned. My dad started working out about a year ago, and he had a beer-belly, and since then he’s lost maybe 5 pounds, but has lost so many inches all over his body that he looks half the size he used to, not to mention he’s much happier now, and feels healthier.
I guess it all depends if you care about your actual weight or about what your body looks like,and what your body and muscles are able to do.
All i know is chocolate tastes good, and i think it’s crazy to give it up, and that the feelings i get from working out never occur after eating a big steak.
* * * * * (5stars!)
Miss you, CJ. Congrats on the svelte new you!
The stress is making me eat myself alive… I may need the CJ pyramid.
Lisa, you never struck me as a girl wanting to even lose 10 lbs. Are you the only one in your family participating? If so, is it difficult when it comes to eat time?
Have a nice evening.
The link to the article you gave said that he did in fact have cardiomyopathy and made no mention of a congenital heart defect. The cardiomyopathy, it states, was not diet related however. In addition, About.com is hardly the most reliable source. Also I took issue with the fact that many of your responses did not directly address his. Just because low carb diets have had a long history does not exempt it from being a fad. A fad is anything that has a large, usually short lived, explosion in popularity in a very short amount of time. Presumably if it sticks around long enough it will assimilate into the culture. The response you gave to his exercise and cutting out 10% of food consumption implies to me that you went to extremes, always a bad idea in any kind of lifestyle change. Ketoacidosis is extreme ketosis due to diabetes (or sometimes alcohol consumption). While the two should not be confused, they reason why they ARE frequently confused it because they are similar, and although ketosis is much more benign, the fact that they are so similar is cause for concern and controversy. Glomerulosclerosis he is correct about. There have been many studies that show high protein diets lead to renal scarring. And although I don’t know about your particular diet habits, most low carb diets are high protein (and your pyramid looks rather high protein.) I have seen some other low carb diet pyramids that have fruit and veggies at the bottom. If it is giving you energy and you have lost a lot of weight, more power to you. I just abhor a fallacious argument.
Live_2_rite, it’s not a fallacious argument. Granted, the about.com article didn’t mention that his heart problem was caused by a congenital heart defect, but I was short on time and didn’t find all the proper links. My apologies. That information about his congenital heart problem was taken from information given by Dr. Atkin’s wife, and I believe the interview with her can be found at http://livinlavidalocarb.blogspot.com/. Have at it, if you have the time.
I am not on a high protein diet. My diet is actually high fat, moderate protein, and low carb. Please cite the studies, because I haven’t been able to find one that said that low carb diets cause anything like this, and that’s what we’re talking about – low carb – low carb does not equal high protein, sorry.
Congrats on losing the weight, I hope you continue to do well. While I see a lot of your points, I think I am more reserved in my view of the debate. While the agriculture industry does play a role in the food pyramid, the idea of basing our diet on grains also came from observing the Mediterranean diet, which has a lot of grains in it. But, their grains and the bread/rice in the American diet are much different. Also, their diet has a large amount of oil, fish and non-starchy vegetables as well. So our food pyramid is way over-simplified and a poor extrapolation of all carbs being equal. I.e. the Mediterranean diet does not have sugary sodas (of which the average high schooler drinks about 1-2, 20oz sodas a day!), cakes, potato chips, french fries, etc. And the traditional food pyramid you posted has now been sacked. The replacement I find confusing and not all that useful, but at least they recognized the error of their ways and reneged their prior model.
Regarding diabetic ketoacidosis, your description of the pathophysiology is off. It’s actually due to a lack of insulin, not an excess of sugar/carbs (in a simplified view – other stressors like heart attacks and infection can put diabetics into ketoacidosis). A type I diabetic could eat zero carbs and go into ketoacidosis if they didn’t take their insulin because insulin not only regulates sugar, but does many other things, including regulating ketosis in the liver. Without insulin, the liver produces way too many ketones and although the brain can use ketones for energy, ketones in excess are extremely toxic.
Also, regarding your reply to franksabunch about glomerulosclerosis, you said a low-carb diet was not associated with GS and his comment was that a high-protein diet was. The two are not necessarily equal. There is also the world of non-starchy veggies. But I don’t know the data regarding GS and high protein diets. However, I think the more important factor about that is if someone already had kidney disease, than they need to be on a low protein diet – in other words, if you have a medical condition, I think you should check things with your doctor before making a radical switch in your diet.
How do you mean you lost your gallbladder to eating less and exercising? If you lose a large amount of weight quickly, that can increase the risk of gallstones, but low fat diets and exercise are not risk factors for gallbladder disease. Actually, the opposite is true. And exercise can lead to weight loss, it’s just that you have to burn more calories than you take in, and that can be tough to do. So exercise without dietary changes will be a slow process to try and lose weight. But exercise benefits many, many medical conditions, so it’s good regardless of whether or not it leads to weight loss.
And I don’t know that I would contribute the low-carb diet directly to being able to lower blood pressure and cholesterol medications. Weight loss, however accomplished, will help both of those conditions, not just weight loss through a low-carb diet. But if a low-carb diet works for you, than go for it!
I guess I’m wary of making very strong statements about radical changes in diet because it’s difficult to tease out all the details. So neither will I argue that you should stop your current diet, nor will I proclaim that everyone should adopt it. I think that a balanced diet is better. What IS a balanced diet? I don’t have a perfect answer. If I did, maybe I’d write a book I do think the typical American diet is heavy on carbs and much lower on protein and non-starchy vegetables than it should be. But I don’t think I would go so far as to design a pyramid like yours. You don’t have any carbs in your pyramid (except for a few fruits), and I don’t think all carbs are soo bad. Anyhow, those are some of my thoughts on the issue (or rather a lot of thoughts on the issue…)
ryc – yeah – i’d probably have to take 2 wks off of work and just veg…or–meat
hmm – may be worth it…
what do you carry around for snacks? or grab out on the go?
I’m fine, I mean I eat until I’m full, then I go out and play sports until I’m tired. This will probably change once I’m 21. Happy Halloween. Don’t eat too much candy!
love your site. in the lightest and least-articulate words, you have so many articulate things to express. i respect your opinion.
~jenny
Yes, THANK YOU. I lean toward this way of eating (I cheat horrifically, but the principle is sound), and it is wonderful. I have been a sugar addict all my life, and just cannot seem to quit cold turkey (Or, I can, and have – several times). However, my family and I eat healthy, all natural, low carb, high fat, organic and local – No easy balancing act – and we’ve never felt bettter. We’re all losing weight, loving life, feeling more alive.
My mom lost 75 pounds on Weight Watchers and has kept it off, which basically just helps you balance your diet, though there is some emphasis on a low fat diet. Fiber is a plus, and I believe more protein is, too. Anyhoo, grats on the weight loss.
B-But what about us vegetarians? D:
This is interesting, because I have heard many bad things about low carb diets, but your experience is hard to disagree with. I haven’t tried a low carb diet, but personally, I have lost 35 pounds of fat in about 6 months only with exercise, and about 90 percent of it being weight lifting. I knew I was losing fat because my muscles were larger and more defined. I definitely did not change my diet to cut carbohydrates, but advice from my weight lifting friends convinced me to increased carbs and protein to recover. So my experience is that it is possible to lose weight by exercise, but it might be different because as a male I have different metabolism, testosterone, and other things.
A response, I feel honored.
To respond to your comments:
1. I’m finishing up my nephrology (kidneys) training right now. *yawn* Need more sleep!
2. I’ll meet you halfway about the fad diet/ not a fad diet thing. Though the low carb diet has been around for a long time, a lot of people these days are caught up in the craze of it, more like a “hey, Jack and Jill lost 10 pounds with this, let’s try it!” reasoning rather than really researching it and making an informed decision.
3. I think of it as being a simple mathematical equation. You have to end the day with less calories than more. That means taking in less or expending more calories with exercise. For proof all I need to do is watch the “The Biggest Loser” show. Obese individuals that many had written off lost hundreds of pounds just by exercising more and eating better. For most Americans, trying to follow complex algorithms in their diet would frustrate them and they would stop. Simpler is better, in my opinion. I may be biased because the population I encounter are pretty advanced in their illness(es), but Americans just don’t put in the effort. It’s much easier to go to McD than to chop a salad and parents need to start EARLY with educating their kids about taking care of themselves.
4. I was merely saying that there are similarities. You can get ketoacidosis from multiple things…starvation ketoacidosis, diabetic ketoacidosis, alcoholic ketoacidosis, etc. What is similar is that with the Atkins diet you produce a chronic acidemia (more acid than usual in the blood), just not as pronounced and acute as DKA, which is a medical emergency. Acidemia can cause problems.
5. High protein diets are associated in some studies with the development of glomerulosclerosis. Low carb diets consist of a lot of protein, no? (Or at least the version of the Atkins diet that many lay people follow does.)
6. Skip!
7. I remember reading about Atkin’s death that year. It was troublesome to find out that he was so volume overloaded at the time of his death. A brain hemorrhage/epidural hematoma in and of itself is not going to cause you to be volume overloaded. Typically it’s from kidney, heart or liver failure. But that’s generally speaking, since I have no access to his medical record. And just because someone had “normal” coronary arteries does not necessarily mean that everything was hunky dory. There is microvascular angina (where the main arteries are patent but smaller ones not readily visible on angiograms are occluded), and there is no way to prove or disprove if the chronic metabolic changes from his diet could have contributed to his cardiomyopathy development. A viral cardiomyopathy is a diagnosis of exclusion and history of a preceding viral illness (which we all get from time to time). Not many people get heart biopsies these days. (I don’t even know if he followed that diet. I once read that Heimlich never used his “maneuver” on a live person before. haha)
In no way am I villifying Atkins. Like many, he started with good intentions to try to help people lose weight. There is certainly nothing wrong and much to be admired about that. The problem I have with the Atkins–and South Beach and any other–diet movement is that many people do not go into it with the proper research to make an informed decision. People should be aware that the inital fast weight loss is mostly water, so they shouldn’t be disappointed/discouraged when the rate of weight loss slows down, and that there are possible complications from this diet long term. One has to weight the potential risks and benefits of any diet or exercise program they embark on. And that it is not a silver bullet. Like RuPaul said…you better work!
Good luck! Again, I applaud that you’re taking ownership of your health and encouraging others to do so.
Grats on losing the weight. While it’s not a dietary path I would choose myself I think that as long as it works for you (and isn’t bad for you) then that’s awesome. I’m quite fat myself and would also like to lose some weight.
Personally, though, if I had to give up carbs I would die. Well, not really but I would want to. Well, keep up the good work!
I like that you took the time to refute that one person’s comment, but I think your argument would be a lot more effective if you posted your sources. You’re not an expert, so why should anyone believe you if you don’t post the scientific research proving your points?
It’s always encouraging when people stick to a diet that works. Congrats! Good post!
Eh, I had the same thing go for me before, but I exercised like mad (90 minutes of cardio a day, 4-6 days a week), no bread or rice, noodles, pasta, etc (any complex carbs for that matter) and lost like 20 pounds in 2 months. My only source of carb was probably from potatoes and fruits and vegetables. dont think your diet is healthy though, I’d probably put the fruits and veggie on the 2nd-last bottom part of the pyramid and switch between the nuts and fats. The whole low-carb diet wont work after a while though, trust me. Cutting out a whole food group isnt very healthy I think, I dont eat much carbs now either but it all goes down to moderation. I may sound like Im preaching but losing 25 pounds in less 4 months without any exercise sounds like it would have repercussions (hahaha, hypocritical of me, yes but that 20 pounds in 2 months thing happened YEARS ago, and i gained like 10 pounds right after when i stopped the diet and going to the gym. Lost it all back and then some though, just through being more active, not that i was a glutton to begin with anyway..heh Hope that you’ll take care though. All I could say is that I hope you do it for your health instead of just wanting to lose weight. Losing weight is a good motivation for starters but I find that if you go for a long term plan (keeping healthy) then you wont have to repeat the ordeal of yo-yo dieting.
Have a good day and take care!
-Fira
Congrats on the weight loss! It is awesome that you are doing things the healthy way~! You are an inspiration!
hmm… I think they key is just balance, personally, and reducing carbs, while not eliminating them. All the same, I’m glad for your success… I lost 20 lbs by just adding exercise over the past 2 years or so… and I’m not trying to lose the other 10, yet I seem to be stuck. Maybe low carb is the answer.
I’m glad you’ve lost the weight, i myself dieted and exercise and lost about 40 pounds. However, i wouldn’t fully agree with the way you’re eating. I guess we’re all different, and whatever works for you, stick with it. I cut back on carbs as well, however I really started to eat a lot of leafy greens, vegetables, and fruit. For loosing weight, eating a lot of fatty things isn’t exactly the smartest thing in my opinion. If I ate cheese and heavy meats i’d probably of lost less weight. I ate a lot of grilled chicken and fish, with a handful of nuts here and there to get my b12, omega 3′s, and all that good stuff. But this high red meat diet you are on, eh, not the best for digestion or overall health. I commend you on the cutting out of sugar, potatoes, and all that. though I think a single serving of organic whole wheat cereal is what your body needs sometimes. However, i’m not here to debate, and know i probably couldn’t change your mind, but i’m just thinking more of your health then of how much weight your loosing. Ah well, again, whatever works for you. congrats on loosing the weight though, i know the feeling, and it feels good .
Wait a minute though, there is a difference in low and high GI carbs! (glycemic index) processed grains like white rice or white flour are more quickly turned into sugar, but actual whole grains and brown rice are VERY good for you. unfortunately we’re used to refined and processed EVERYTHING. so to say that you should avoid bread and rice and some of those altered things is wrong. you should avoid processed carbs! here’s dr. weil’s site for more info:
http://www.drweil.com/drw/u/id/QAA367357
Every pyramidal scheme attempts to restrict and file foods into different categories. I’d rather diversify with foods of a multitude of nationalities – that way I have no idea what I’m eating from where.
Except the water – I make sure it’s from an iceberg, or at least a somewhat decent reservoir.
I support the American diet of hamburgers and milk – Donald Trump hasn’t given up this diet for decades.
im taking bio at school right now, its really really interesting
we have only just begun really, but heres what i know
some cholesterol is good (becuase it makes our cell membranes more liquid and allows more sugar in)
some carbs are bad-simple carbs, these are contained in white-white rice, white potatoes, white apple, white sugar, white bread
this is because the simple carbs take less time to break down
and so the sugar gets into our blood stream quickly-and our insulin has to rise at the same level
but then it crashes
and so does the insulin (and this is bad for the pancreas that makes it, because its like a car-highway miles are good, going to the store and back bad (complex carbs found in whole wheat, brown rice ect, is the cruise drive, becuase the actual molecular formula for its crabs is longer-making it take longer to break down-and so cruise drive))
yeah
we just go to protien (found in the meat and such)
but one again-not really used to build muscle unless you have excess
used in little cell functions.
sorry, im finding bio terribly interesting
hope it all works out
oh and if you dont have enough of somthing
your body eats your muscle
thats why some diabetics loose weight
they cant get their carbs through body (diet)
so that you are loosing weight might be very very bad
becuase you are not getting carbs, and your body might be getting it from you.
very interesting
I agree with what jmonkeyAKA above wrote. I rarely eat meat or dairy anymore. There was just too much fat in it. I eat a lot of fruits, veggies, and grains now. And ever since I’ve started doing that I’ve lost about 30 pounds, WITHOUT exercising.
I do like meat, but it makes me feel heavy after eating it. I’m thrilled that this is working for you. But I find it hard to believe that eating lots of fat can be good for you in the long run.
Keep posting on how your diet is going! I’d like to see how it works out in the end. :]
i have epilepsy, and the medication i take for it makes me so tired that i can’t get through the day most of the time and have to take a nap mid-day.
i’ve also gained weight lately, nonrelated to the medication, but it still affects my self esteem on top of the epilepsy.
i lovvve my carbs, but if this diet really works, and it’s as simple as just cutting out certain foods…i might try it. is that really all there is to it?
Lisa, congratulations on your weight loss! I did really well on Atkins, also, and would have been able to maintain the weight loss and the eating style if not for my Scottish, potatoes and gravy loving husband, who chose to do the cooking for the last year.I would love to get back into this habit, as I also felt better when I wasn’t eating all those carbs! I do have higher cholesterol now, tho, and wonder how much of that has to do with the higher fat diet?
I am going to have to look into this further. Especially now that I am working with a personal trainer. Might as well get the most for my $$
Thank you for this. My grandfather recently died of complications from high blood pressure–he had either an ischemic stroke (blood vessel burst) or he had an aneurysm (which is exacerbated by HBP), and he had been diabetic for a few years before that, which I’m positive was related. My family is Cajun, with a very carby diet. Lots of them are obese, lots of them are diabetic and they can all look forward to a sickly old age if they don’t cut the carbs, and some of them are already there.
My grandfather was lucky in that he had enough physical activity in his old age–which doesn’t necessarily help with weight loss but does help with insulin sensitivity–that he developed diabetes later in life than his wife had, so he was fairly active up to the end. He had a good life.
I’m struggling with staying on low carb, which I fully recognize is my own willpower at stake. I think that “it’s too hard to stay on the diet” is a stupid reason to condemn an entire way of eating. Eating Kosher or halal is incredibly hard as well, but nobody suggests Jews or Muslims should eat like the rest of us. (God forbid.) Eating low-fat is even harder than eating low-carb if you only look at the foods allowed, but that doesn’t stop doctors and nutritionists from recommending it. I continue to be amazed at the efforts involved in developing a drug that would induce satiety in human beings when all I have to do is eat a high-fat diet and I become full very easily. Talk about a waste of research talent.
Dr. Atkins did have cardiomyopathy but it isn’t what killed him. The media had already remarked on his heart problems but Veronica Atkins says it was viral in nature and not caused by diet. I don’t think *any* diet could overcome a fatal head injury, though, so I don’t know why people still debate this. (There has been some commentary on his weight when he died, but he suffered a lot of edema while he was in his coma. Just the regular kind of water retention that comes with women’s menstrual cycles is enough to make us pack on five to ten pounds of WATER normally–imagine if your body is comatose and in shock and you’re on an IV!)
I’ve been reading stuff by a guy who calls himself Bear and who used to be on the road crew for the Grateful Dead. He’s been following an all-meat diet for the past forty years or so. He’s in his seventies but people tell him he looks thirtyish. He says he’s deviated slightly a few times, maybe eaten vegetables or something, but sticks with meat and eggs and dairy (cheese) otherwise. Healthy as a horse, too. I couldn’t sustain a diet like that, peer pressure is too strong, but it sure raises questions for me about how human beings are supposed to eat. The traditional diets of the Inuit and the Maasai are animal-food-only as well, and while they stuck to those ways of eating you could not find heart disease, diabetes, or cancer among their ranks. Now they’re adopting grains and fruits and vegetables into their diets and they’re getting sick. It’s also been documented in paleopathology, a really fascinating new field of study, that when humankind adopted agriculture we became shorter on average and more inclined to all sorts of degenerative diseases, including osteoporosis. The latter is particularly funny considering that militant vegans insist osteoporosis is caused by meat-eating.
Eating excess protein actually has not been conclusively linked with kidney disease but I suppose it’s indirectly possible. Even some low-carbers say that eating too much protein is a terrible idea–if you don’t eat the right proportion of fats. Ideally you would eat at least twice as much fat as protein to stay healthy. Protein’s supposed to be the last resort for making energy for the body, and should be preserved for building body structures, so you only want enough to maintain muscle mass and other organ groups.
But I’ve experimented with that and found that I’m fine not getting as much protein if I get enough fat–which also kickstarts ketosis for me, makes me full faster, and keeps my blood sugar nice and even. (Only ten percent of the fat we eat becomes glucose, and only if needed–while 58 percent of protein can be turned into glucose, if you eat it in excess.) I also find that with the higher calorie count in fat, I can easily consume 2000 to 3000 calories a day. And I still drop weight! It’s very, very difficult to store dietary fat as body fat, and if you’ve turned body fat into ketones you can’t then turn around and re-store ketones as fat. They must be flushed out by the body.
And finally, I’m so annoyed at the medical establishment invoking ketoacidosis. Do you know why people throw ketones when they’re in ketoacidosis? It’s because they can’t respond to all that glucose in their systems. As far as the body’s concerned, then, it’s starving, so it must burn off its fat stores. Ketones have nothing to do with the causes of ketoacidosis. They are only a coincidental symptom. And doctors should be glad to see such a patient making ketones because it’d be a fine thing for the patient to starve to death right alongside being in metabolic distress. Geez.
Oh, and just because a doctor comes along and tells you ketones cause ketoacidosis, doesn’t mean he’s right. I’m reading all sorts of mainstream info about ketoacidosis right now, and I think most mainstream experts are missing the boat and confused about cause and effect. An example–look at this Wikipedia entry:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diabetic_ketoacidosis
It buys into the whole “ketones cause ketoacidosis” bit, but then offers this:
“
Normally, ketone bodies are produced in minuscule quantities, feeding only part of the energy needs of the heart
and brain. In DKA, the body enters a starving state. Eventually,
neurons (and so the brain) switch from using glucose as a primary fuel
source to using ketone bodies.
As a result, the bloodstream is filled with an increasing amount of glucose that it cannot use (as the liver continues gluconeogenesis and exporting the glucose so made). This significantly increases its osmolality. At the same time, massive amounts of ketone bodies are produced, which, in addition to increasing the osmolar load of the blood, are acidic. As a result, the pH
of the blood begins to move downward towards an acidotic state. The
normal pH of human blood is 7.35-7.45, in acidosis the pH dips below
7.35. Very severe acidosis may be as low as 6.9-7.1. The acidic shift
in the blood is significant because the proteins (i.e. body tissues,
enzymes, etc.) in the body will be permanently denatured by a pH that
is either too high or too low, thereby leading to widespread tissue
damage, organ failure, and eventually death.
Glucose begins to spill into the urine as the proteins responsible for reclaiming it from urine (the SGLT family) reach maximum capacity (the renal threshold
for glucose). As glucose is excreted in the urine, it takes a great
deal of body water with it, resulting in dehydration. Dehydration
further concentrates the blood and worsens the increased osmolality of
the blood. Severe dehydration forces water out of cells and into the
bloodstream to keep vital organs
perfused. This shift of intracellular water into the bloodstream occurs
at a cost as the cells themselves need the water to complete chemical
reactions that allow the cells to function.”
You will notice several references to increased osmolality in the blood. pH is important, but I suspect just from this information that the increase in osmolality lays the foundation for pH getting out of control. It otherwise does not make sense that Atkins dieters can be in ketosis and throwing lots of ketone bodies but don’t generally go into ketoacidosis.
You will also notice that glucose is heavily implicated in the above quote. Over and over again it is made apparent that having lots of glucose in your bloodstream starts the cascading process into lower pH and therefore organ damage. First it increases osmolality, then it causes dehydration–another risk factor in ketoacidosis and a contributing factor to lower pH.
And they try saying that only type 1s get this thing but I don’t buy it. If you’re so insulin-resistant you can’t respond to your insulin anymore, it might as well not be in your body–same end result. It’s telling that only in the last ten to fifteen years have doctors FINALLY acknowledged that the primary issue with type 2 is that patients have a lowered response to insulin rather than not having insulin, and you STILL see doctors prescribing it to diabetics who are not deficient in it. The first line of response to type 2 aside from lowering carb intake should be to put the patient on a drug that increases insulin sensitivity and yet you still have docs prescribing insulin instead. This happened to another family member of mine even though she makes lots of insulin, and she complained to me that she is gaining weight–no wonder! Doctors need to pay more attention to the insulin sensitivity issue. But I’m digressing majorly here…
Bottom line is that the human body is adapted to doing without major dietary sources of glucose. Period. What in the world are those fat stores for if we can’t turn around and use them for fuel? It makes no sense that the metabolic response to lower glucose levels would make us sick, absent the existence of some health problem.
And that bit about good carbs and bad carbs just makes me laugh. All carbohydrates are sugars. Even fiber is a sugar. The only reason it doesn’t make us fat is that it is a sugar we can’t digest. Sugar alcohols have a low-carb or no-carb effect for the same reason–but if you take Beano before eating a sugar alcohol, your body is able to digest it. Anything that is not a fiber might as well be a sugar to the body. The complex vs. simple carbohydrate dichotomy is a false one. And it’s interesting how starches used to be the complex carbohydrate but now nutritionists and doctors are changing their tune and saying it’s fiber instead. Even they have to admit that starches become sugar in the body–and it doesn’t matter how fast, it all causes an insulin release.
I look forward to the day when medicine becomes a science rather than a dogma. Did you ever read Robert Heinlein’s Stranger in a Strange Land? It’s set in the future, and in the future there are people called Fair Witnesses who are specially trained in observation. A Fair Witness will only remark on what he actually sees–no guesses, no deductions, no nothing. We need more of that mindset in medicine, and in the sciences in general. There is too much guesswork going on and some of it is killing people.
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