prickle,
>Modified ketogenic diets are the best diets. Period.<
Ok. That settles the matter. Everyone in the world should always eat low carb. How could I have been so dense? :)
rakishly,
> Concede that no matter who you are excess hi glycemic index carbs get stored as fat and your blood sugar drops and you need to eat again.<
I agree. Excess is the key word. Excessive calories, whether from carbs, protein or fat, will increase weight. If you burn 2500 kcal and consume 3000, that leaves a surplus of 500. It doesn’t matter which macronutrient provides the extra calories.
Eating only high glycemic carbs without a buffer of protein or fat to smooth out the sugar spike usually results in a sugar crash and hunger pangs. Solution: don’t eat high glycemic carbs alone. Try to eat mainly lower glycemic carbs.
> For the typical insulin resistant person reducgin apetite IS MAGIC.<
And, no doubt an important consideration.
Frankly, I found it a chore to eat enough everyday when I went LC. Adequate protein and fat - and staying away from eating too many high glycemic carbs alone - blunts my appetite enough that I don’t feel terribly compelled to binge. For me, it isn’t a choice between eating cake all day or severely restricting carbs. There is a happy medium.
Perhaps a working definition of LC is needed. When I tried LC 2 years ago I started at about 30 grams per day and then slowly crept up to about 100. I’d say 100 or less is LC for people of average activity and build.
Yesterday I had about 2300 kcal, and after a quick label reading and count, probably about 250-300 grams of carbs (1000 - 1200 kcal). Figure 50% kcal from carbs. (13g carbs in 8 oz. of skim milk - guess the LCers can’t have much of this excellent source of protein.) My diet varies a great deal. Sometimes it works out to Zoneish proportions, but often the carbs are higher. I don’t worry about the exact composition. Adequate protein, adequate EFAs, let the rest come from wherever. If I want pasta I eat pasta. Same goes for cheeseburgers (with buns :) ) or whatever else sounds good or is readily available.
RB,
>Hobby, are you serious when you say carbs are not evil? I agree not all carbs are. But surely the excess consumption of sugar and refined flour in this society and the rapid rise in diabetes and heart disease leads me to believe that these two carbs are indeed very evil and should be avoided like the plague.<
Of course I’m serious. 20 years ago fat was "evil." Now carbs and/or insulin is the demon of the day. Being overweight and inactive increases the risk for diabetes and heart disease. The problem is people eat too much and move too little.
LC will curb your appetite. Eat less and/or exercise more and you’ll lose weight regardless of the macronutrient ratios. If you feel good eating LC, have at it. Not everyone does.
>As far as a metabolic advantage by not counting calories, If I ignore the cited studies, if I ignore Dr. Atkins case studies presented in the book based on actual CARDIAC patients or any other anecdotal evidence, I can’t ignore my own experience. Originally starting Atkins, I ate a TON of fat, well over my daily need, and the fat melted off.<
You mean you pissed out the water weight. There is no "metabolic advantage." Research has repeatedly demonstrated real changes in weight (not water loss) scale with caloric intake alone. Macronutrient ratios do not matter. See this for a quick recent summary. If you eat more than you burn, where praytell, does the excess energy go? Do pixies come in the night and whisk it away?
Even Dr. Atkins can’t violate the laws of thermodynamics.
1) The absorption rate of protein carbs and fat is something like 95%-98% (equal for all). It’s not as if you’re shitting out undigested fat or protein. The calories you eat are taken in by the body.
2) Keto diets are not more thermogenic than other diets - your body temp isn’t going up and burning off more calories.
3) Excretion of unused keytones only accounts for a maximum of 100 kcal per day - hardly enough to cause significant weight loss.
>For people like myself, this way of eating is a godsend, it really teaches you how to avoid the roller coaster <
If you like eating LC, go for it. But it’s not magic. ;)
> I think if you would read the book his book and fully understand his approach, you would be totally shocked to find out that the diet you listed above is exactly what Dr. Atkins promotes<
I have read his book. More importantly, I’ve read Lyle’s book which actually explains how the body responds to LC without the Atkins lies about some mythical ketogenic advantage. My diet is not LC. Some days, depending on my total caloric intake, I may get as much as 75% of my calories from carbs. Other days, maybe only 30%. It’s the calories that matter. Above maintenance, you gain weight. Below maintenace you lose weight. One caution though: if you create too much of a deficit your body will adjust metabolism to compensate. If/when that happens, it’s time for a refeed to bump up leptin, thyroid, etc.
TT,
Google "paleolithic diet."