the--larch t1_j7gerl3 wrote
Reply to comment by JoeRoganSlogan in A systematic review and meta-analysis has concluded that increased consumption of dietary carbohydrate intake is associated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease, stroke, and all-cause mortality. by Meatrition
You can go high carb low fat (with natural foods and good fats), or you can go low carb and high fat/protein.
The in-between is deadly.
This is why the diabetes association pushes low fat /high carb, but people tend to find more dramatic results with keto.
Doortofreeside t1_j7he4m3 wrote
Whats so bad about the in between? Is it because it leads to overconsumption or is there something inherently bad about med-carb med-fat diets?
the--larch t1_j7hge8j wrote
It has to do with how the body responds to the release of insulin. Keto/low carb works because your blood sugar stays low, so fats (generally) become fuel rather than storing it away in your arteries.
For a more elegant and educated explanation, I highly suggest Gary Taubes: Good Calories Bad Calories (or any of his works, really).
Edit: I should add that for people without metabolic disorders, there is more wiggle room, but the principle stays true.
conventionalWisdumb t1_j7i2qz4 wrote
Building on the response from u/the—larch:
Carbs and fats are processed by two different metabolic pathways and the carb pathway is more efficient so it is used first. You can then burn up the glycogen provided by the carbs while your body is slowly converting the fats which will feel like a blood sugar crash, so you eat more carb+fats. The process keeps going through the day and the fat has no where else to go except as triglycerides in your fat cells.
This issue can be abated if you’re willing to and can ignore the carb crash as a signal of hunger or if your carb source has high fiber as part of its nutritional matrix because the fiber slows down glycolysis. I would imagine we could potentially one day design a food with the ideal matrix where the ratio of carbs/fiber/fats provides the right amount of energy at the right time, but it won’t be as tasty as a donut.
friendofoldman t1_j7nqier wrote
We have that food now. Bacon, Cheese, organ meat.
bayesian13 t1_j7j1w9h wrote
nah. the usda has been pushing high carb low fat for years now. it is a failure. it is why the US has a huge obesity problem. low car high fat/protein is the way to go.
the--larch t1_j7j3wpn wrote
It has failed because we do it poorly, but clearly there are cases where it can be effective. (Traditional asian and Mediterranean diets, for example).
For actual intervention, I agree. I've been low carb for 20 years.
WhnOctopiMrgeWithTek t1_j7jgot6 wrote
Low carb and keto have me unable to gain muscle as easily. I also cannot recover from working out as easily, such that when I eat a large amount of carbs, fat, and protein, I can exercsie every day without feeling beat up.
If I skip the protein or carbs, it gets risky, especially by day two.
I've tried going carnivore with grassfed and whole grassfed milk, there is just something miraculous about carbohyrdates when it comes to working out, running, building muscle, or producing a pump from exercise.
I think it's best to be cyclical, so you're able to easily switch between burning carbs or fat, or fasting.
the--larch t1_j7ji6bd wrote
Well, no one said skip protein, especially while lifting. Plenty of keto lifters out there, though.
If you eat a surplus and work out, even low carb, you get muscles. Is it the same result as the guys that live on boiled chicken breast and rice? IDK, but I wouldn't trade real food for an extra 2# of muscle. Ymmv.
friendofoldman t1_j7nqqoq wrote
I work out 5 Days a week. I’m not an Olympian, but certainly don’t feel beat up from working out on keto/low carb.
You may need to supplement. It’s probably a lack of electrolytes, not a lack of carbs.
[deleted] t1_j7ktsi5 wrote
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