Seven down, one to go!
As of this writing, the first post in this series has 5316 views, and part 6
has just 739. Quite a decline in readership there, so my sincerest thanks and
appreciation to anyone out there who’s still with me. (If I am extremely verbose in written media, you ’d be amazed how quiet I am in person.)
Last time, in part 6, I introduced my interpretation of the chain of causality
regarding metabolic/endocrine dysregulation and the accumulation of body fat.
Conventional medicine and nutrition hold that people get fat accumulate
excess adipose tissue because they are lazy, greedy, gluttonous, and too
sedentary. They eat too much and move too little. These shortcomings in
willpower, discipline, and good morals lead to overweight & obesity, and
overweight & obesity subsequently lead to diabetes, hypertension,
infertility, heart disease, and more.
But you’ll recall that I believe differently. I believe it works like this:
Blood glucose & insulin
dysregulation (hormonal/endocrine issues) ---> preferential use of glucose for energy + storage of excess energy (from
carbohydrates and fat) in adipose
tissue + inhibition of
lipolysis ---> accumulation of adipose tissue.
lipolysis ---> accumulation of adipose tissue.
In my theory, metabolic and
hormonal abnormalities come first,
and the accumulation of body fat is the result.
I like that much, much better than
the chain of causality that looks like this:
Laziness, greed, gluttony,
sloth, character flaws ---> accumulation of body fat ---> "diabeetus"
In my causation chain, people might even be going out of their way not to be weak-willed gluttons. See,
what they really want for breakfast
is a couple of fatty sausages with a fried egg or two, some greens sautéed in
butter, and a cup of coffee with heavy cream. But, being very disciplined and wanting
to do “the right thing” (at least, according to just about every medical and
nutrition authority they’ve ever heard from), they ignore that primal instinct,
call upon their willpower, and opt instead for a fat-free bran muffin with a
small schmear of low-fat cream cheese and strawberry jam, and a glass of orange
juice. If they’re feeling really
indulgent, instead maybe they’ll have some nonfat liquid egg substitute cooked
in a nonstick pan, which they will still coat with fat-free nonstick spray,
just in case. (They will top the non-fat egg substitute with salsa [fat-free]
and low-fat cheese.) The LCHF, Paleo, Primal, and Perfect Health Diet worlds
are full of anecdotes personal accounts of people who were not greedy, not lazy, not gluttonous, and not sedentary, yet either failed to lose weight, or more likely gained weight, in conjunction with a dutifully
followed low-fat, low-calorie diet, plenty of exercise, and morally superior, holier-than-thou avoidance of succulent, fatty animal flesh. (I
know. I was one of them.)
CICO, SICKO, PSYCHO?
In the 8th and
final installment of this series, we’ll look at some of the things that might
cause blood glucose & insulin dysregulation, because if glucose &
insulin issues are what ultimately start the entire ball rolling, then we need
to identify what triggers them. For
now, though, let’s take a magical jaunt through fantasy land on the back of our
majestic flying unicorn and talk about the phrase we all love to hate,
“Calories in, calories out.” (This is usually abbreviated to CICO, and some folks
in the LCHF crowd refer to its ardent adherents as CICOpaths or CICOphants. I’m
not saying I do this; I’m just trying
to lighten things up, since most of these insulin posts have fallen short in
the humor department.) Another acronym that emphasizes the fundamental
importance of reducing calories when weight loss is a goal is CRAP: calorie
restriction as primary. Love it, love it, LOVE
IT! (Hat tip to Dr. Jason Fung for that. I don’t know if he’s the one who coined it, but his blog is the first
place I ever saw it.)
There’s a lot to say here.
It’s hard to know where to start. I guess a good place would be a quote from Jonathan Bailor, author of
The Calorie Myth:
“Calories count, but that doesn’t mean you have to
count calories.”
The CICO model of weight
regulation boils down to this: In order to lose weight, you must take in fewer
calories than you expend.
That’s it. It says nothing
about what happens to those calories once they’re ingested, or whether or not
we even can “count calories” at all. It
also fails to explain why people can take in the exact same number of calories
and perform the exact same exercise, but their weight and body composition
might not change in exactly the same ways.
There are approximately eight-hundred-zillion
things wrong with the CICO model of weight fat loss.
We can pretend about a lot of things. That doesn’t make them real. |
BUT:
Let’s pretend, just for now,
that this is only about calories in
and calories out, and nothing else. Let’s forget about all the complicated biochemical processes happening that we have little
to no control over. (We’ll get to them in a bit, but for now, let’s pretend
they have no bearing on anything [even
though they totally do].) We can probably all agree that the only way to
get “calories in” is by eating and drinking. Okay, fine. Let’s also pretend,
just for argument’s sake, that the only
way to get “calories out” is through
physical exertion, such as running, swimming, walking, biking, hockey, weightlifting,
gymnastics, and sex. (And gymnastic sex!)
Why is it that some of us want to run, swim, walk, bike, and lift,
and others don’t? (As for sex, if you don’t want to do that, there’s probably something deeper going on than insulin
dysregulation, and you’ll have to find another blogger who specializes in
that!) Why do some people feel driven
to athletic endeavors, while others can barely muster the energy to call out
for pizza before they collapse onto the couch after work? Granted, some people
simply don’t enjoy athletic pursuits,
and that’s fine. To each their own. But what about those who do enjoy them, or even those who don’t enjoy them, but who, knowing all
the supposed benefits of exercise, would still manage to get themselves to
participate in physical activity either more intensely or more frequently, but
who lack the energy to do so? Why do some people feel motivated to do intense
exercise, and others don’t?
Why are some people bursting
with energy to the point where they almost have
to get up and move, while to others, it’s a chore just to get up off the sofa and cook dinner, or do laundry, let
alone do an uphill sprint session, or a kettlebell workout? What is the role of insulin in either
facilitating or blocking the “oomph”
that makes people want to move more?
Calories in & calories out are not
independent variables
To some extent, the type of calories in has a huge influence
on calories out. This is not an absolute, all-or-nothing scenario (human physiology almost never is), but the overall
message is this: to some extent, calories in help determine calories out. We know that in people who are insulin
resistant—we might also call them “carbohydrate intolerant”—eating a ton of
carbohydrates raises insulin, and insulin levels tend to remain high for longer than in someone who is more sensitive to the
hormone. And, as we covered in parts 4
and 5
of this series, prolonged elevated insulin inhibits the breakdown of fats. But,
as I explained way back in my series on fuel partitioning (long before anyone was reading this blog), fat is the body’s most efficient fuel, and it’s also the fuel we store the most of. So, when
insulin levels are chronically elevated, access to our body’s best and most
abundant fuel is blocked. (Like I said on the podcast I recorded with Robb Wolf, it’s as if we’ve got 10 gallons of fuel
sitting in plastic jugs on the backseat of a car. The fuel is technically
“inside” the vehicle, but it’s not in the gas
tank, where the engine can access it.)
Good luck wanting to hit the gym--or even just go for a walk--when
you are unable to access your body’s best fuel.
Bottom line: if you eat a ton
of carbs, and high insulin for a prolonged amount of time squirrels most of that
fuel away inside your adipose tissue, you will not have much energy. In fact, one
of the most commonly reported side effects of a low-carb diet is an
increase in energy levels. People in the real food world seem to have a
love/hate relationship with Gary Taubes these days, but put me squarely in the camp that loves him. (Well, maybe not him. I’ve never met him, so I can’t say, but I do certainly love his work.) His writing is where I first
came upon this idea of reversed causality when it comes to the (presumed)
relationship between exercise and weight fat loss.
Just put stuff in and take it out.
Pay no mind to what happens to it inside the box.
|
The CICO and CRAP crowds
claim it works like this: Expend more energy than you take in, and your body
weight will decrease. (Never mind that they don’t necessarily say your fat mass will decrease. Only your weight.) They believe the human body—the
complex, frustrating, beautiful, aggravating, wondrous body—is no more
complicated than a dime-store calculator, or a first-grade subtraction problem.
The body is like a cardboard box: put in less “stuff” than you take out, and
there will be less stuff remaining. Again, this says nothing about how to get someone to take more stuff out, or
why some people’s bodies are so much better at letting go of “stuff” than
others’. It also says nothing about the fact that the human body is not a cardboard box. That is, it is not simply a holding vessel for calories, and it is absolutely not a static entity. The properties of the body (box) change, depending on what we put into it. The biochemical reactions that take place in the body are influenced by the type of calories in, and we can make a decent argument that the type of calories has an even greater influence on these reactions than the total amount of them. (Even within a single macronutrient category, the source of calories has far more influence than the number. Think about 500 calories of cookies versus 500 calories of broccoli. They're both carbohydrate, but that's where the similarities end.)
Among the myriad effects of a
low-carb diet is a lowering of insulin levels. Things vary from person to
person, and for sure, many things
affect insulin besides just carb intake. (More on this next time.) But in
general, if one has a goal of reducing their overall insulin load, a low-carb
diet is a pretty damn good place to start. By lowering insulin levels, we take
the gasoline that’s been sitting on the backseat and we pour it into the tank.
When insulin and its anti-lipolytic
effects are no longer an
obstacle, all of sudden, we have access to the good stuff—the best stuff—fat.
And when we have access to our body’s
best fuel, lo and behold, all of a sudden, we have energy. And when we have
energy, we want to move. We can move. This is what Gary Taubes
elucidated so well: People
don’t burn fat because they’re moving more; they’re driven to move more because
they’re burning fat.
This brings up a good
question: Isn’t this all just a matter of discipline and willpower?
Proceeding in our romp
through the Land of Make-Believe, where fat loss boils down to nothing but
CICO, wouldn’t everyone—everyone—lose
weight if they just had enough willpower
to eat fewer calories, even when they’re very hungry, and had enough discipline to exercise, even when
they’re tired? Doesn’t this still come down to fatsos overweight folks
being lazy, greedy, and morally inferior to those who are slim? Sorry; I call
bullsh*t. No, actually, I call f*cking bullsh*t.
(Also, we need to stop for a sec, because the Pegasus we’re riding needs a carb
refeed, so let me just haul out this giant bucket of oats…)
Listen, people. Yes, there
are roles for discipline and willpower (D&W) in fat loss and improving
health. At some point, you do have to pass up some of the foods you love if they’re going to hinder your progress. And once in a while, you
do have to force yourself to get off
your fanny when you’d rather conk out. BUT: D&W are finite resources. You
can only deny your animal instincts for so long, and you can’t white knuckle
your way through every meal and every workout.
Besides, what are willpower and discipline, anyway?
When it’s the dead of winter and you put on a coat to go outside, does that
mean you’re weak-willed? Could you tolerate the cold better if you just had more
willpower? Don’t be ridiculous. (Tibetan
monks who melt ice blocks with their body heat notwithstanding.) When it’s
freezing out and you put on a coat, you’re not weak-willed. You’re following your instincts. It’s
cold out, so, as an intelligent freaking human being, you bundle up! When
you’re exhausted after a long day at work and a few meals of crappy food, and
you come home and fall onto the couch, could you go for a sprint session or
drop and do some pushups if you just had more discipline? Yeah, maybe, but come on. If you’re tired, it’s not “undisciplined” to lay on the couch. When
you have no energy, as an intelligent freaking human being, you wouldn’t do
something that requires a lot of energy!
Like I said, sure, sometimes
you do have to override these
instincts. (Doing things you don’t like is called being a grownup, and yes, it
sucks.) But you can’t live like this every
day, for your entire life. Let me
repeat: willpower & discipline are finite resources; you can only white
knuckle things for so long.
So even if fat loss comes down to nothing but CICO, as it does in
Fairy Tale Land, you can see why a low-carb diet is still a pretty good way to go. If you absolutely must “move more” in order to expend
energy and get more “calories out,” then you’re going to need as much energy as
you can get. And it seems one of the best ways to get that energy is to keep insulin low, as that will facilitate constant
access to fat, which is, again, the body’s best and most abundant fuel source. If
you’re new to this and don’t understand why
fat is such a better fuel source than carbohydrates, I encourage you to read
the following three posts I wrote a while back. If you’re pressed for time,
skip the first one, as I’ll be covering the basics in the rest of this post:
The human body is not a cardboard box,
where things get put in and taken out, and nothing happens in between
And now, it’s time to return
to the real world, where CICO and CRAP are worthless
when it comes to helping human beings—with their incredibly complex
biochemistry & physiology, and who are not
bomb calorimeters—lose body fat.
I could probably write
another 10,000 words on this subject alone, but since part 7 of what I said
will be just 8 posts is already too long, I’ll sum up the basics and then give
you some of my favorite resources for exploring things further:
We know for sure that not all foods are 100% digested and assimilated into
the body. That is, we do not absorb 100%
of their “calories.” If you’ve ever had a bowel movement and noticed whole,
intact kernels of corn, sesame seeds, or bits of leafy green things in your
stool, then that is your proof right there. In the case of that corn kernel, it’s
pretty obvious whatever calories are there weren’t absorbed; it passed through completely unchanged, for cryin’ out
loud! I’m not suggesting that a couple of corn kernels and sesame seeds here
and there would account for someone gaining or losing twenty pounds. I’m simply
making the point that “calories in” sometimes do wacky things—or nothing at all—before they become
“calories out.”
We also can’t accurately
account for the role of the gut flora, nor of small intestinal lining integrity. The microbes that inhabit our intestines
extract some of the energy from the food that passes through. People with overt
celiac disease can eat and eat and eat (lots of “calories in”), but if they
spend half the day on the toilet, they are not absorbing much of the energy those foods provide. (Lots of
“calories out.”) But come on, it’s not like they were doing a triathlon and earned an expenditure of calories; those “calories” are passing through
because, due to a damaged intestinal lining, the body can’t absorb them. Untreated type 1 diabetics are another category
of people who can eat seemingly endless amounts of food and still waste away. And no, it’s not
because they’re eating endless amounts of food while simultaneously performing
superhuman feats of athleticism. These folks’ hormonal milieu makes it such that they nearly can’t gain weight, no matter how much they eat. CICO, MY *SS. MY BIG, FAT, MARATHON-RUNNING, TWICE-A-DAY WORKOUTS *SS. (Sorry for the language in this
one, folks. This is a very personal thing for me, and even with whatever professional
knowledge I have about how this all works, I am still angry—and jealous!!—that
there are people who eat far more than I do, and who exercise far less than I
do, but who ARE THINNER THAN I AM. It really stings sometimes. Please, somebody,
make it stop. I’ve been fighting this sh*t since I was twelve years old.)
Moreover, the human body does
not “burn calories.” The body uses energy,
in the form of ATP. The body does nothing, energetically speaking, with
“calories.” It doesn’t even do anything, energetically speaking, with fats,
proteins, and carbohydrates, nor even with fatty acids, ketones, amino acids,
and glucose. The body knows only one type of energy currency, and that is ATP. The fuel that powers everything the body
does is ATP, not calories.
The body uses ATP for everything. All the processes going on
inside your body—whether you know about them or not, whether you can feel them
or not, whether you control them or not—are using ATP. For example: the pumping
of blood through your blood vessels, the expanding and contracting of your
lungs, the lowering and raising of your eyelids, and the movement of food
through your gastrointestinal tract. That’s right: your heart beating, your
lungs breathing, your eyes blinking, and you digesting food all require ATP. We don’t typically
think of any of these things when we think of “burning calories,” but that’s
what they’re doing. They are using energy.
(And no, I don’t think blinking your eyes more is a good fat loss plan.) So
we’ve got to acknowledge that “calories out” is far more complex than the number of calories we can take deliberate
measures to “burn.” This is why I get very angry when I hear the phrase "calories out" bandied about so casually, as if we can get tons and tons of calories out by running a few miles. Ain't happening, folks. Exercise doesn't burn anywhere near as many calories as we'd like to think it does.
Do this for health, if you like. But don’t expect it to be your silver bullet for fat loss. |
“Calories out” certainly includes
the overt use of energy, such as in running, walking, biking, and other
physical activities we deliberately make time for in our lives. But it also encompasses the aforementioned
physiological and biochemical processes, many of which we have no control over.
In fact, the vast majority of energy used in the body—that is, the calories
burned, or rather, the ATP consumed—happens
via the biochemical reactions going on inside us 24/7, rather than the measly
couple hundred calories—if that—burned
during a workout. (Like Dr. Aseem Malhotra, Professor Tim Noakes, and Stephen Phinney, PhD, have explained ad nauseum, exercise is great for overall health and wellness, but it is a piss-poor way to lose body fat.)
What about a sluggish thyroid? We know, right off the bat, that this reduces
the basal metabolic rate. If my thyroid is running slow, why should I have to
spend three hours at the gym every day to “burn” the same amount of calories my friend
burns sitting on her *ss in front of the TV? Let’s say we both eat the same foods—that
is, equal “calories in.” Through nothing but the virtue of her body’s
thermostat being set a couple degrees higher than mine, she has far more
“calories out,” even if she does far LESS
exercise than I do. Again, I’ve seen this time and time again: people who eat far
more than I do, and exercise far less than I do, and THEY ARE THINNER THAN I
AM. (No, this doesn’t mean they’re healthier,
but when have you ever heard a guy pass a gal on the street and say, “Look at
the low triglycerides on that one!”
Or, “Wow, I bet she’s got great HDL.”
When I am demoralized and crying in a shopping mall dressing room, my 5.0 A1c
is of basically no comfort whatsoever.)
Guess what, everyone?
It’s still
the insulin, stupid.
And as long as we’re on the CICO,
fat/carbs, eat-less-move-more jag, allow me to broach another issue related to
fat loss. Because, remember: most of us aren’t necessarily concerned with weight loss. What we are aiming for is fat loss. (Or, if you’re already at your
goal weight, or you’re happy with wherever it is you are, then the aim is to maintain that fat loss and/or prevent
fat gain, correct?) So what, pray
tell me, is the purpose of eating carbs, burning carbs, and replenishing with
carbs? When does fat ever enter into this equation?
If you eat 250 calories of
carbohydrate, and you burn 300 calories of carbohydrate, there’s still no fat
being burned. Yes, there’s a 50-calorie gap there, but it’s being filled by glucose,
not fat. That fuel gap probably came
from your muscle glycogen. And then
you refuel with a granola bar, or a bagel, or a giant bowl of cereal. The cycle
is nothing but carbohydrate. Carbohydrate in, carbohydrate out, and carbohydrate
back in again.
Note: I am not unaware that
certain athletic endeavors are more glycolytic than others, and that physical
performance in some pursuits seems to be better when muscle glycogen is full.
So yes, there is a rationale for carb
repletion under the right circumstances. (I have written about this before.) According to the experts, “Fatty acids are the main source of energy in skeletal
muscle during rest and mild-intensity exercise. As exercise intensity
increases, glucose oxidation surpasses fatty acid oxidation.”
So yes, glucose usage is important
for specific types of athletic performance. But how often do we typically
engage in high-intensity athletics? For most of us, it’s less than an hour a
day. (High-intensity means you couldn’t do it all day—not at peak intensity,
anyway.) Even so, let’s play devil’s advocate and say, for some reason, you do
intense athletics for a whopping four
hours a day. In terms of improving body composition—that is, losing fat (and
hopefully gaining some muscle)—which matters more: the calories you “burn”
during those four hours, or how your body is partitioning and using fuel the other twenty hours of the day? If “fatty
acids are the main source of energy in skeletal muscle during rest and mild-intensity
exercise”—which are the main activities we’re all engaged in when we’re not working out intensely, then it’s still a good strategy to follow a
low-insulin load diet. (With properly timed carb infusions for the purpose of driving athletic performance, not fat loss.)
If I rearrange the words from
the quote above, we get this:
“As exercise intensity
increases, glucose oxidation surpasses fatty acid oxidation. [But] Fatty acids
are the main source of energy in skeletal muscle during rest and mild-intensity
exercise.”
Even an insulin-resistant
person’s body will still use some fat
as fuel at rest and during low-intensity activity, but how much more fat would it use—and how much more
easily would that person’s body access
that fat—if the anti-lipolytic roadblock of insulin were removed? Remember: “calories
out” is not accomplished solely
through deliberate measures, such as running and swimming. We are putting “calories
out”—that is, we are using energy
(ATP) all the time, constantly, nonstop.
The mere act of being alive uses ATP.
You have no idea how many postural muscles are working to keep your head, neck,
spine, and shoulders in line when you’re sitting in a chair, doing nothing. Why
is it that some people’s bodies seem to want to use more fat for these hidden
and underappreciated processes than others’?
I don’t know the answer to
that. I suspect it has quite a lot to do with hormones, and insulin is merely
one on a long list of hormones that affect fuel partitioning and the use of “calories.”
But here’s what I do know: the extent to which any of us can
deliberately induce a caloric deficit via eating a lot less and moving a lot
more has far less impact on our body composition than the myriad biochemical processes
we have virtually no control over. (In fact, if we go about that deficit
the wrong way, we risk jettisoning our valuable muscle mass, which, over time,
will decrease our resting metabolic rate, making the problem of fat gain even
worse than when we started.)
*Continue to the 8th and final part of this series: http://www.tuitnutrition.com/2015/11/its-the-insulin-8.html
P.S. Now that I’ve written more
than anyone ever cared to read about this, in case there are some masochists
out there who’d like a bit more information on why this CICO bullsh*t is, well,
bullsh*t (not 100%, but at least 94.6% [p<0.001]), I recommend listening to
the podcast and reading the blog series linked to below:
- Bill Lagakos, PhD, interviewed on the Sigma Nutrition podcast. GREAT STUFF on this calorie nonsense. Pay attention to when he talks about the biochemical effects of consuming salmon versus rice. (Many of you probably know Bill from his blog, Calories Proper. If you don’t, he is big-time awesome. Be warned, however: if my blog is the layman’s plain English explanation of biochem & physiology, then his is the one the experts go to.)
- There is No Such Thing as a “Calorie” to Your Body: This is an 8-part series by J. Stanton, and it’s absolutely brilliant. (He writes much more succinctly than I do, so these are 8 short-ish pieces.) Each part ends with a link to the next one, but just in case, here are all of them: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. If you don’t have time for them now, do go ahead and bookmark them. The series is great for a rainy or snowy day, when you’re looking for something to set your brain on fire. (In a good way.)
Remember:
Amy Berger, M.S., NTP, is not a physician and Tuit Nutrition, LLC, is not a
medical practice. The information contained on this site is not intended to
diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any medical condition.
I recently left a comment on your published article on "type 3 diabetes." I am not sure that you are still following the comments on the article, and I don't necessarily want to repeat what I said except one thing: One person who really needs to read your blogs, is Mrs. Obama.
ReplyDeleteIn one post, you lamented the fact that everyone thinks they know good nutrition. You asked why and then answered your own query by saying that everyone knows good nutrition because we have been told by authorities what it is. Too bad they have everything ass backward. I admire the First Lady's desire to promote healthy habits to improve the health of our population but the science is so so wrong.
Thank you for your effort to provide a slice of reality, 250 grams of carbs may be moderation to many, but moderation is killing us.
Rick
Thanks for the comments. Somehow, I don't think I'll get an audience with the First Lady anytime soon. ;-) I admire the people who are trying to make changes at the top, like Adele Hite, Nina Teicholz, and others who are looking to change government policy. Sadly, I have a pretty defeatest attitude, and in the time it's going to take to get the "authorities'" heads out of their rear ends, and for things to make a big turnaround, everyday folks are going to get sicker, more overweight, and lose yet more of their quality of life. I have no interest in waiting around for the ADA, USDA, and other organizations to see the light. I'm glad *other* people are willing to tackle things at the government policy level, because that does need to be done. For me, personally, I'd rather expend energy on helping individuals.
DeleteI suspect Mrs. Obama has a hard time understanding that it's *not* about low-fat, low-calories, and exercise, because I presume she's been "in shape" all her life. I don't know her personal history, but a great many of us who learn about the science behind carbohydrate reduction do so because the "eat less, move more" paradigm failed us horribly. Stephen Guyenet may have the same trouble perceiving this. When you, personally, do just fine on a low-fat diet, it's hard to understand that it might not be the best approach for every single other individual out there. I try to be balanced on my blog -- even as I trumpet the beauty of LCHF diets, I'm usually pretty careful to stress that nothing is black & white, and different strokes for different folks...
I definitely see the balance in your blog articles. But some of the research you included pretty clearly showed that only about 20 percent of people have the natural genetics to be able to eat the SAD and not have elevated insulin levels and like you said, few doctors test for that along with A1c and blood glucose.
ReplyDeleteMy reason for being a little less balanced:
Fifteen years ago I had a heart attack at 40 years old. I was very physically active but fat at six foot 237 pounds. I immediately went on the Ornish diet and within 6 months I weighed 160 and remained very physically active. About a year after the heart attack and a year on the Ornish diet, my cardiologist had me do a “cardiolite” radioactive stress test. He immediately put me back in the hospital for another angiogram. He said there was nothing major that he could do anything about. He was not happy about that so he kept me on a short leash with appointments every 3 months (while most patients are seen every 6 months) and cardiolite stress tests every couple years. Each time the stress test results came back he would hang his head and say that he should probably do an angiogram but there would probably be nothing he could do anyway.
There is no question that you can get skinny on the Ornish diet. I remained on the diet for 10 years and my weight stayed about 165 that whole time. But my test results were always bad and quite frankly the diet is pretty much torture. My wife and I eventually started eating more fat along with the high carbs and we gained weight—still being careful so not a whole lot but about 20 pounds more than we both wanted to be.
Two years ago, a friend had lost some weight on a low carb, high fat diet. We decided to try it. Talk about a dramatic shift, a literal about face. We had always been so concerned about fat and did not care about carbs. At first we did it just to lose that 20 pounds but then we started to really research what really is in the literature about low carb/high fat compared to the low fat/high carb diet like the Ornish diet. And we realized that we had been so deceived.
Within three months we had lost the weight we wanted and it has not come back and we will never go back.
One year after going lc/hf, my cardiologist wanted another cardiolite stress test and full labs. At the appointment to go over the results, he said that my lab tests were perfect. My total cholesterol was slightly high but only because my HDL was almost the exact same number as my LDL (101 to 103). I was so afraid of the cardiolite results that I almost postponed the appointment, but I went. When he got to those results, he said “the results of the cardiolite are excellent. I’ll see you in six months.” Two things I had never heard in all those years of low fat Ornish torture.
I went home and didn’t give away but threw away all the Ornish books and all the other low fat recipe books and even the low fat recipes I had created. Nobody should be eating that way.
We have been so deceived but thank goodness there are a growing number of lc/hf dietitians bravely spreading the word.
From Ornish to LCHF...yes, that is a heck of a shift! And you are living proof of what I've emphasized in this series -- that being "thin" does not automatically mean someone is healthy -- particularly if they've followed a diet that, nearly by default, will be deficient in certain key nutrients.
DeleteAs for balance, believe me, in my own life, I'm not that balanced. It's like I wrote in a post a while back: Humans can thrive on a wide variety of diets, but that doesn't mean that *all* humans can thrive on *all* diets. So the Kitavans do well on lots of sweet potatoes and fruit. GREAT! -- *For the Kitavans.* That is not the diet *I* would do best on. Honestly, when people bring up the Kitavans, or the Inuit, it's a total cop-out. The fact that *one group* of ethnically homogeneous people can thrive on a specific diet doesn't mean that everyone else on the planet can, too. I have to shake my head sometimes. It's as if the concepts of genetics & epigenetics simply don't exist to some people.
All of this is far more nuanced than most people like to admit. I like to present the full story on things, which is probably why my posts are 100x longer than anyone else's. ;D
wow, congrats Rick -
ReplyDeleteanother positive endorsement and confirmation that you're on the mark Amy. To me, and who am I, but your best part in the series...I love it.
I have no problems with your posts being long! I much prefer having more information and read the whole story, than have a shorter post that might be missing information.
ReplyDeleteI love this article in this series. I also cringe so so soooo much when I hear people make comments along the lines of obese/fat = lazy/gluttonous/weak-willed, or that people would just be thin if they had some self control. It's just so wrong!
Great post!
-Nikki
Keep em coming Amy!!! the longer the better!!!!!
ReplyDelete:) Spoken like a true fan!
DeleteAmy - you are a true treasure! Your engaging (and funny!) writing style makes complex concepts accessible and interesting. After discovering you on Robb Wolf's podcast I came to this site and have read ALL of your posts! I also check it every day to see if you have updated it with your valuable insights! Keep up the fantastic work!
ReplyDeleteIt's too bad you posted anonymously, because I'l love to thank you by name. Alas, Ms. or Mr. Anonymous, THANK YOU! I'm going through a bit of a rough patch right now and not feeling so well (emotionally, not physically), and your comment made my day. :) Very glad you like my work -- and thanks for reading! I think you'll notice my style has evolved over time. To be honest, I still feel like I'm getting the hang of this. Sometimes I'm amazed that *anyone* is reading, and then other times, I get bummed that I don't have *more* readers. Anyway, thanks again!
DeleteFor what it's worth, I too enjoy your writing, so the more of it there is, the better my day. Thank you!
Delete(BTW, this is the first time I've gone to the trouble to leave a comment anywhere, as far as I can recall. I'm a lurker by nature.)
I have spurred you out of lurkerdom! Now *that* is an accomplishment. Thanks for taking the time. I don't know if people realize how much little things like this mean to me. (Probably to lots of other blogger, too, but definitely to me.)
DeleteMe too!!
DeleteJust finished #7. And this is my second post ever the first was on #3 just yesterday. All I can say is:- "Don't you dare change" keep on doing what you do - it's helped me understand this subject better than any site I've previously visited. And what's more if I was 30+ years younger I'd come up there & chase you!
A new Fan!
Luciano
P.S. With your sense of logic, apparent understanding of the subject matter, and ability to communicate to the lay person, you should put #1 to #8 into an E book and get yourself a few bucks for you time.
Thank you! I love that people are learning something here. That's really why I write all this stuff. I like being able to explain all the science in plain English, and to be honest, writing things out this way actually helps *me* make better sense of it, too. It's true what they say: "The more you learn, the less you know." I still learn new things about this all the time.
DeleteGood idea about making a little e-book. I would probably end up making it a freebie...pretty rotten of me to charge money for something people can get on the blog for free. ;-) But then again, maybe the convenience of having it all in once place would be worth a couple of bucks, possibly with links to more videos, low-carb recipe sites, etc.
Hah! The short posts are too short!! and where the heck is the vaunted flaunted Part 8?
ReplyDelete*impatiently tapping my foot* ;-)
:D Coming next week!
DeleteNice work, Amy. Impressive to see that you've pulled yourself out of the nutritional dogma and actually read, processed and now understand the science. A whole new world opens up, doesn't it. Welcome to the Land of Ketosis!! Keep up the great work.
ReplyDeleteThe nail in the coffin of exercising for fat loss is the fat oxidation - 0.5 grams per minute is quite high for many of us which means 900 minutes or 15 hours exercise to oxidise one pound.
ReplyDeleteHave you looked into the results of the FASTER study, led by Jeff Volek? A good summary is here (http://www.ultrarunning.com/features/health-and-nutrition/the-emerging-science-on-fat-adaptation/) and Ben Greenfield talks about his experience in some detail (http://www.bengreenfieldfitness.com/2014/05/how-much-fat-can-you-burn/ and http://www.bengreenfieldfitness.com/2014/05/how-much-fat-can-you-burn-2/).
ReplyDeleteHaven't had a chance to look at those yet, but I love Volek's work in general. And for sure, Volek, Phinney & others have shown that you can perform very impressive feats of athleticism while fat-adapted. Not *all* athletes do best with more carbs, but some do -- and really, "fat-adapted" is a relative term. People vary in the amount of CHO they can consume and still maintain their "fat burner" metabolic & mitochondrial flexibility.
DeleteOUTSTANDING!
ReplyDelete=D Thanks for reading!! I'm still pretty starstruck that you even know who I am, to be honest with ya!
DeleteHi Amy
ReplyDeleteBrilliant set of posts! You mentioned the falling numbers of readers! I am sure I am not the first to observe that a lot of people initially attracted have a health problem and looking for a quick fix rather than to be educated in medical science!! Personally, I find the whole subject absolutely fascinating. So, thank you for providing such a lot of information in a form I can understand and think about.
I have adopted a ketogenic diet inspired by the realization, (eventually!) that the peripheral neuropathy I have was linked to my increasing intake of carbohydrates/fructose. Although my blood sugar levels had come back as "normal" (and therefore nothing to worry about!) the tests didn't, and couldn't, detect the roller coaster ride of hyper to hypoglycemia that became obvious (at least to me!) was the cause of the ever bigger swings in metabolism and body temperature I was experiencing. Pre-diabetes wouldn't you say? Topic for another post, maybe - if you have not covered it already!
It seems that the diet of low protein and almost no carbohydrate might take up to a year to resolve the neuropathy, so early days yet, but what surprised me was the almost immediate effect it was having on my very long-standing oral thrush. The thick white coating on the tongue present in the morning disappears by the end of the day. However, it's back to square one the next morning! Since candida feeds on glucose it's interesting to surmise what might be going on!
Regards
David
Thanks, David! The oral thrush should have been a dead giveaway that you had an issue with sugars & starches. Shocking that no doctor ever pointed it out to you!
DeleteThe insulin thing is completely fascinating. The number of "idiopathic" conditions that we can link to hyperinsulinemia -- regardless of blood *glucose* -- is staggering. It will be a game changer when more healthcare practitioners catch on.
Actually, I first became aware of the perceived link between carbohydrate and candida thirty years ago! I say "perceived" because the countless remedies, including exclusion diets, I have tried without success (plus a lot of research!) have led me to the conclusion that carbohydrate, per se, is not the culprit! The effect the diet is having is much more likely to be due to the increased production of ketone bodies rather than the restriction of carbohydrate and as we know, ketosis only occurs if protein intake is moderated as well. My guess is that a ketogenic approach to candida may well be a fruitful line of research in the future.
Delete