TG/HDL = 1.0 as at July last year
I expect it to be better next time
TG/HDL = 1.0 as at July last year
I expect it to be better next time
I recall that a1c reads high for zero carb people with the cells living longer
The home glucose test seems a reasonable solution
Under keto I couldn't do nearly as much. I'm progressing well on the resistance exercises, and I'm faster each time I ride
On keto I didn't advance and I was tired all the time. I think it's because I wasn't eating enough
Yeah this guy is the business. His Alzheimer's experiment was two groups 12 weeks on dietician designed low fat for one group and 12 weeks on keto for the other group
Then both groups go on normal diet for 12 weeks to clear any effects from the previous part
Then they swap. The first group does keto for 12 weeks and the second follows the dietician's low fat diet
So each person had both treatments
Note that there is no current treatment so you couldn't really compare to the current standard of care
Is dr Matt Phillips the one producing all those low carb papers? Motor neuron disease, MS, and the rest?
And yes he is that person, he talks about it about 10 mins in
One thing I like about his studies is they're not keto vs. standard diet, it's keto vs dietician designed perfect low fat diet
So everyone does better, and the keto people do best
Do you know if my 6.1 is within bounds for dawn phenomenon?
6.1 mM/L is 110 mg/dL
Ed. Per Wikipedia in excess of +1.1mM/L or 20mg/dL
There seems to be a correlation between years in academia and research and inability to design a good presentation
I wonder if the rock industry person, who was a family friend when I was a kid in the 80s, had tinnitus. I didn't know him well enough to hear such complaints, but he had lost quite a bit of hearing due to his job.
Meanwhile and incidentally I have had my highest blood glucose result (6.1mM/L) on a blood test on zero carb, with a first thing in the morning test a year and a half into that way of eating. Apparently there's an effect called the dawn phenomenon where blood glucose peaks around dawn, presumably to help us get moving, but the lack of demand in fat adapted people means there's no demand, so a bit later it's mopped up. It nearly had me get a home glucose tester.
Am I reading fig 6 correctly:
The population of the study were more likely to survive the more cholesterol* they had
*actually lipoproteins - and given the date of the original data "total cholesterol" with no differentiation between HDL and the various sizes of LDL
Aside: Do you know why we call the lipoproteins "cholesterol", is it that they were originally thought to be free cholesterol?
I’m not sure why they are talking about ketoacidosis at all, is it relevant?
I think it's because many people still, especially those working with diabetes, hear ketone and think of the uncontrolled diabetes crisis. I suppose it's also vaguely useful to point out that an excess so very much in excess that it breaks the body's ability to maintain correct acidity isn't helpful. As if we don't already know that everything is a poison, what matters is the dose.
That last bit about how poorly tolerated the keto diet is sounds very much like the first two weeks with poor guidance, or a badly designed ketogenic diet using foods some participants were intolerant to
I couldn't do internet keto or Atkins keto for long. I didn't tolerate it well. But zero carb is easy I have been doing it for 2 and a bit years.
The bit that really grabbed me that I didn't know was that it's actually more efficient to feed our grain crops to cattle than to turn that grain to bread if what we want is the complete collection of amino acids we need in the balance we need.
I doubt it's more efficient when reckoned on energy, I mean it can't possibly be, but what use is energy when it isn't also nourishing?
Keto for me had quite a bit of low carb veg. I think some of those didn't agree with me given how much better I feel on zero carb
I never did the keto fake foods, I think I have been doing low carb on and off since I was 20, I'm now 47
My carnivore diet has been scotch fillet steak (rib eye), eaten until satisfied, and often about 4 eggs a day. My "too much fat" thing I think was because I had fallen into a one meal a day pattern, and it's hard to process a day's fat in a single dose
While I was fat I ate leaner cuts
I buy my meat as whole prime cuts, I need to up my frozen storage space so I can instead get a whole cow