A ketogenic diet is a low-carb,
high-fat, adequate protein diet that was initially developed in the ’20s to help people with neurological diseases such as epilepsy. On a ketogenic diet, you’re attempting to get your body into ketosis,
which is a metabolic state where you begin to use fat as your primary source of
fuel.
What Is Ketosis?
Usually, our bodies rely on carbs as
the first source of energy. Carbs are broken down into sugar when you eat them,
leading to the production of insulin, a hormone that tells your cells to use
the sugar for energy now or store it for use later.
“When you only eat a very limited
amount of carbs, your body breaks down fatty acids from fat stores and forms
ketones, which are released into the bloodstream by the liver,” says Alissa Rumsey M.S., R.D., C.S.C.S., and spokesperson for the Academy of
Nutrition and Dietetics. “Ketosis occurs when blood ketones are higher than
normal.”
Ketosis is basically a side effect of
fasting. To trigger ketosis, you must fast for about three days, and a proven
way to do that is to decrease the amount of carbohydrates in your diet and
increase the amount of fat, says Rumsey. So a ketogenic diet — one that is very
high in fat with some protein and very little carbohydrates — can be used to
get your body into ketosis. To start ketosis and keep it going, you’ll have to
eat less than 30 to 40 grams of carbohydrate per day, which is about 5 percent
of your overall calories for the day.
There are three main types of
ketogenic diets:
·
Standard ketogenic diet: Macronutrient breakdown: 75 percent fat, 20 percent protein, 5
percent carbs.
·
Cyclical ketogenic diet: Cycles between higher-carb “re-feed” days and standard ketogenic
days. Example: Five days of keto followed by two days of higher carbs.
·
Targeted ketogenic diet: Add carbs around workouts; follow standard keto the rest of the
time.
What Foods You Can Eat on a Ketogenic Diet
The majority of meals on the
ketogenic diet should be built around the following staples:
·
Fat: Nuts and seeds, butter, avocado, ghee, olive oil, coconut oil,
mayonnaise, beef tallow
·
Protein: Fatty fish, chicken, turkey, ham, bacon, pork loin, pork chops,
steak, veal, goat, lamb, eggs, peanut butter, sausage, shellfish, full-fat
dairy
·
Low-carb vegetables: asparagus, broccoli, carrots, cauliflower, celery, cucumber,
garlic, onion, green beans, mushrooms, bell peppers, pickles, romaine lettuce,
shallots, butter lettuce, spinach, snow peas, tomato, fall/winter squash (such
as butternut, acorn, spaghetti)
What Happens to Your Body on a Ketogenic Diet?
“The first few weeks are the toughest
as your body tries to adapt to a different fuel source,” says Rumsey, “Your
workouts may suffer during those first weeks, with many people reporting a loss
of strength and endurance until their bodies become more efficient at using
fats for fuel.”
But it can take several months for
your body to adapt to increasing the use of fat as a fuel source, so if you are
looking for a change in performance, you will have to keep the diet up for a
while. And if you are an athlete or very active, you’ll need to be doubly sure
that you are getting enough nutrients because keto diets cut out a lot of
aforementioned food groups — fruit, dairy, grains, and many vegetables — so you
have to make sure you aren’t falling short on key vitamins and minerals.
Do Ketogenic Diets Work for Weight Loss?
In a word: yes. Of course, there’s a
but…
“But, people who go on the ketogenic
diet often report large amounts of weight loss in a short period of time;
however, there is no evidence that this is from being in ketosis,” she says.
Carbohydrates hold onto water in the body, so if you cut out carbohydrates, you
end up losing that water weight pretty quickly — and it’s also easier to eat
less when all you can eat is protein and fat, which are satiating.
“The problem is that this diet is not
sustainable for most people,” says Rumsey. “Once they start eating ‘normally’
again, the weight goes back on.”
It’s also important to remember that
very low-carb diets can affect people differently, she says, and you need to
listen to your body. If after a few weeks you feel worse than before, you may
want to reconsider if the diet is right for you.
Though you can see dramatic results,
it’s essential to realize that the keto diet it tough to support for the long
term. It’s great as a lesson to understand the role that carbs can play in
weight gain, helping you to learn how to better control your intake in the future.
For the long haul, stick with a solid
diet that revolves around whole foods like protein from lean meats and beans, a
colorful variety of fruits and veggies, whole and ancient grains, and healthy
plant fats such as olive oil. Eat like that and keep up a consistent exercise
effort and you’ll eventually see the results you want.
No comments:
Post a Comment