March 17, 2014

Ketosis

What I actually eat, part III (circa Q1 2014)

Craving vegetables.

Read Time 10 minutes

This week I had dinner at a great steakhouse in New York with a very good friend.  Like any two “normal” guys after a long day, all we could talk about was science, and on this particular night the topic du jour was NAFLD (non-alcoholic fatty liver disease for the non-cognoscenti).  We ate, we drank, and we shook our heads in disbelief at the thought of 7 million children in the United States being afflicted with NAFLD.  In the next few years NAFLD will become the number one indication for liver transplantation (not a typo).

After dinner, my friend, who I dine with almost every time I’m in NYC, made a comment about how many vegetables and how much fruit I consumed.

I had the following: a chopped salad, tuna tartare, a 12 oz filet; and we split an order of sautéed onions, brussels sprouts, and a bowl of berries.

He asked, “How are you able to stay in ketosis with all of those carbs?” I responded, basically, that for the past few months I have not been consistently in ketosis, and when I am it’s only following a long bike ride where my BHB levels may get back into the 2-3 mM range. Most days, however, I live in the 0.3 to 0.8 mM range, depending on the time of day. (In my mind, to reap the benefits of nutritional ketosis, one probably needs to consistently be in the 1-3 mM range, and for some “applications” 3-4 mM is probably ideal.)

So what gives, you may be thinking. Is Peter Attia not Mr. Ketosis? Well, my friend suggested it might be time for another one of the dreaded what-do-I-eat posts.

Anyone who knows me or who has read this blog for a while will appreciate the fact that I loathe talking about what I eat. Why? Because, it unfortunately gets interpreted by many as what they should eat. It’s like asking me what exercises I do, and inferring you should do the same. It doesn’t make sense.  I have specific genetic factors, epigenetic alterations, and goals.  These factors coalesce to shape my behavior – how I exercise, what I eat, what I supplement.

A little backstory first

In September of last year, for my wife’s birthday, we went to our favorite restaurant in San Diego, where we live. The day before I emailed the owner and general manager, both friends, and asked for them to have one of our favorite off-menu items on hand (the best sushi in San Diego).  They happily obliged and asked which of their desserts my wife would most like.  I said something to the effect of: well, they are all great, so you pick.

The next evening, after eating more sushi and sashimi than I could imagine (I ate 3 platters myself), they brought out a platter with a full size serving of each of their signature SIX desserts, each with a lit candle.  We sang Happy Birthday, blew out the candles, and my daughter and wife, themselves already stuffed, proceeded to have a small forkful of each of the six desserts.  My daughter said, “Daddy, these are so yummy! Why don’t you have a bite?” To which my wife echoed, “Yea, they really are ridiculous…”

And in that instant, I made a decision. I did something I had not done in 4 years (to the month, actually). The decision was this: about 3 or 4 times a year (I opted for my wife’s and daughter’s birthdays, Thanksgiving, and maybe something else), I would – for one meal – eat whatever the hell I wanted.

In the next 15 minutes I devoured the remaining 4/5-ths of EACH of the six culinary masterpieces in front of me.  From cheesecake, to carrot cake, to decadent ice cream, and stuff I didn’t even recognize, I ate it.  In an instant I felt both wonderful and horrible.  The look on my wife’s and daughter’s faces – alone – was worth it. Their jaws on the table the whole time. The taste was beyond what I remembered (actually, much sweeter than I remembered, probably because when you don’t eat sugar for 4 years, well, you know).

I could barely get up from the table. That night, when we got home, I had a horrible headache. 1,000 mg of Tylenol and 2 glasses of water later, I still couldn’t sleep. I eventually got a few winks of sleep. The next day I felt hung over – a feeling I had not experienced since my 26th birthday. My fasting glucose was 126 mg/dL and BHB was 0.2 mM. Clearly I was out of ketosis.

I decided to go out for a glycogen-depleting workout (multiple sets of 3 min all out intervals on the bike) and about 36 hours later, after resuming my normal diet, I was right back into ketosis and felt just fine.  I told my wife I was going to repeat this experience on Thanksgiving. As such, and despite how far in advance this was, I asked her to plan to make an extra bowl of my favorite Thanksgiving dish – candied sweet potatoes – baked sweet potatoes coated in melted marshmallows.

Thanksgiving came and went, and I repeated the same act of debauchery during the big feast. Sure enough, by the Sunday morning of Thanksgiving weekend, I felt back to my baseline.  I haven’t gone on a bender like that since, but I’m probably due for one.

I’m sure at least some of you are asking, “Does Peter still think sugar is metabolically deranging?” The answer is absolutely, at the levels it is consumed by most Americans.  If you want a refresher on my point of view on sugar, definitely give this post a re-read.

So what did I take away from this?

Somewhere between “every day” and “never” there is a tolerance I have developed to consume massive amounts of carbohydrates, and specifically sugar.  Now, there are two components to this: a purely physiologic one and a behavioral one (which I suspect is heavily influenced by my physiology).

Focusing just on the physiology, I would guess I could probably “tolerate” a binge like that every few weeks with little measurable or discernable adverse effect.  I won’t even attempt to argue whether it’s every 7 days, every 14 days, or every 30 days.  But, it’s probably somewhere in that vicinity.

What about the behavioral side? Well, I suspect there exists a different “frequency distribution function” that describes how often I could binge like this without resuming unhealthy eating habits in the long run.  If I had to guess, I think the threshold for recidivism is higher from the behavioral tipping point than it is for the physiologic one. In other words, habits matter. I can probably tolerate – physiologically – more sugar today than I can tolerate behaviorally.

One last point I’d be remiss to leave out. You should keep in mind that for a period of 4 years, my consumption of sugar (sucrose, HFCS, liquid fructose in the form of any beverage, etc.) has been less than about 5 grams per day.  The average American, depending on which stats you believe (I think they are all pretty weak), consumes somewhere in the neighborhood of 100 to 120 grams per day of sugar, NOT including the liquid fructose in juice!

So, I have to at least entertain the hypothesis that 4 years of avoiding sugar has been a sufficient enough period of time to offer me some sort of “metabolic reset.” Now, I have no intention of testing this. If I was once susceptible to insulin resistance, I’m pretty sure I will always be. But, an interesting Gedankenexperiment would have me going back to one of several different dietary patterns – vegan, but with no sugar; standard American diet with lots of sugar; modestly higher carb, but still sugar-restricted – all could offer insights into the physiology of adiposity and fuel partitioning in my metabolically reset condition. 

How has this shaped my current eating behavior?

Sometime early in the New Year, I started really craving more vegetables. I’ve always loved them. Even in ketosis I still ate one or two salads each day most days, but I was pretty restrictive about the quantity of vegetables that had much carbohydrate in them (e.g., tomatoes, carrots).  But now, I wanted even more.  Big heaping bowls of curry stir-fry. (I have to toot my horn on this one thing. I make a really good, creamy, spicy curry stir-fry.) I realized this would probably knock me out of ketosis, especially with the large amount of tofu I mix with it and the yogurt I use to make the sauce.

My lunchtime salads were getting bigger and bigger, and I was piling more and more “stuff” into them. Almost laughable by the standards of those around me.

And I noticed I was eating less meat. Not at all by “design,” but somehow by seemingly craving less.  It seemed an average week would have maybe 2 servings of red meat.  When a great steak is placed in front of me, believe me, I enjoy every bite, but I found I just wanted it less. I also started craving a bit more fruit, especially berries and even apples, the former I consumed in modest amounts in ketosis, the latter I did not at all. (Because I know someone will ask – do I think red meat is harmful? – the answer is no, I do not believe so. Certainly not based on evidence I’ve seen to date, including the recent story about protein. For those looking to brush up on the state of evidence implicating red meat, I’d recommend three posts – one I wrote many moons ago in response to one of the dozen epidemiology stories, one written by Chris Masterjohn in response to the TMAO data, and one recently by Zoe Harcombe in response to the protein epidemiology).

I don’t know what to make of this, of course, and it may be nothing at all, other than an evolution of preference. I’ve checked mineral levels in my body in search of a clue (none showed up). Maybe I’m over- or under-saturated in some key nutrient?

Now, since everyone seems to care how much carbohydrate I consume, here is my current framework.  I put carbohydrates into 5 essentially MECE categories:

  1. Those I consume daily – mostly salad stuff and other vegetables; about twice a week I make a curry stir fry with tofu, for example.
  2. Those I consume often – nuts, berries, almond butter (which I just spoon out of the jar), super starch (both as a meal replacement and post-workout drink).
  3. Those I consume intermittently – a couple spoons of rice here and there, especially when I make Indian food or when we have sushi; a piece of baked potato when it looks particularly appetizing. If my daughter “makes” spaghetti, which she loves, I’ll usually have a forkful to remind her that her dad is not a complete freak.
  4. Those I consume only on very special occasions – exceptional desserts, for example – about 2 or 3 times a year, like the ones I consumed on my wife’s birthday, or the candied yams. (NB: One thing I decided in an instant – if I’m going on a bender, it’s not going to be for “average” dessert like some lame birthday cake; it’s got to be best in class.)
  5. Those I still completely refrain from – I call these the “cheap” carbs – basically all else (including cookies, potato chips, cereals, and the candy bars they keep handing me on this flight as I type this), including any liquid form of fructose, such as juice or sports drinks.

Below is a “typical” 5 days of eating over the past few months. Keep in mind, I virtually never consume breakfast, maybe once a month (e.g., if I have a breakfast meeting). Essentially, I do all of my exercise (current routine, below) in a fasted state only consuming the BioSteel’s high performance sports drink (HPSD), which contains virtually no calories – maybe 8 kcal of BCAA per serving.  So, despite the dietary changes I’ve made, and the fact that I’m not in ketosis most of the time, I remain seemingly well fat adapted, though RQ is a bit higher than before.

I should point out that I spend much less time exercising than I have historically, due to time constraints. But, I still aim for the following schedule, which is interrupted by travel during at least 2 or 3 weeks each month. The schedule below amounts to about 14 to 16 hours per week of training.

Monday – high intensity lift, followed by swim

Tuesday – ride (tempo)

Wednesday – swim

Thursday – ride (TT practice or threshold)

Friday – high intensity lift

Saturday – ride (VO2 max intervals), followed by swim

Sunday – group ride or solo TT practice

I can’t believe I’m about to do this…I just have this horrible feeling someone is going to attempt to replicate this, bite-for-bite, for no good reason. Please refrain. Remember, this is what I eat because of how my body works.

Wednesday

Lunch – huge salad (bowl larger than my head) with romaine lettuce, kale, carrots, tomatoes, cucumbers, olives, mushrooms, chicken breast, 2 tbsp olive oil, 3 tbsp lemon juice, 1 tbsp white vinegar, 1 cup of almond slivers

Snack – a cup of macadamia nuts

Dinner – Another large salad, but no chicken or nuts in this one; 1 pound of salmon; bowl of berries to follow

Thursday

Lunch – huge salad (bowl larger than my head) with romaine lettuce, kale, carrots, tomatoes, cucumbers, olives, mushrooms, can of tuna, 2 tbsp olive oil, 3 tbsp lemon juice, 1 tbsp white vinegar, 1 cup of walnuts

Snack – 2 or 3 tbsp of almond butter (a zero sugar variety)

Dinner – Omelet made from 6 eggs (white + yellow), shredded cheddar, lots of other veggies; side of steamed broccoli in butter; 2 more spoons of almond butter after dinner

Friday

Lunch – same as Wednesday (I basically rotate salad back and forth about 3:1 in favor of chicken over tuna)

Snack – none

Dinner – Curry stir-fry containing tofu, carrots, broccoli, bell peppers, mushrooms, zucchini, and squash, in a sauce made from curry paste and Greek yogurt.  I typically consume two heaping plates of this.

Saturday (post ride and swim)

Lunch – 7 hardboiled eggs, an avocado, 2 oz of cheese

Snack – a Fuji apple covered in almond butter

Dinner – 8 oz of steak (fillet, rib-eye, or tri-tip), 8 oz of salmon, large salad (sans meat and nuts, which I only do with lunch salads).

Sunday (post longer ride)

Lunch – The “Peter Kaufman” super starch shake (heavy cream, zero-sugar almond milk, a package of chocolate super starch, 2 tbsp of almond butter, an extra 20 g of Biosteel whey protein, frozen strawberries, ice – blend to a thick shake); I’ll drink 2 liters of this. Literally.

Snack – none

Dinner – Family sushi night! I’ll have a seaweed salad or two, huge platter of sashimi, California roll, and another specialty roll.

Lastly, because I know someone will ask, the few times I now take to measure, record, and tabulate exactly what I consume, it works out to about 3,500 kcal per day.  But some days, especially when I travel, it can be as low as 2,000 kcal when I only consume one meal per day (dinner). Other days it can be as high as 5,000 kcal. But, 3,300 to 3,600 kcal per day is the typical range. 

So, there you have it – the most irrelevant information you’re likely to find on this blog (except for what’s below… this is actually valuable stuff!)

Fashion tip of the month

While in NYC I realized – about 15 minutes before leaving my hotel for a very important meeting – that I had forgotten to bring cufflinks. My heart sank. I’ve never made this mistake before. I immediately realized why.  While packing, and just about as I was going to grab a set, my phone rang and I was distracted.  But that was neither here nor there. What was I going to do?  I didn’t have time to buy a new set, and the hotel concierge didn’t have a set to lend me, so I grabbed some dental floss and tied the cuffs of my shirt together using precise surgical knots.  I was pretty self-conscious that someone would notice and ask or comment, especially on a day stacked with so many back-to-back important meetings. Amazingly, no one said anything, though I could see some people looking at them and doing the double-take. Over that lovely steak dinner I alluded to at the top of this post, I told this story to my friend (who snapped the picture, below).  His response?  “Yea, I noticed it right away. I thought it was a new style. Very cool, actually. Kind of European.” So there you have it.  Don’t say I never shared anything of value on this blog.

Photo by Toa Heftiba on Unsplash

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728 Comments

  1. Re above, agree – need to get maximum bang for your buck with time makes sense to writing excellent posts and comments rather than editing the ramblings of commenters.

    In the spirit of self-experimentation, I wondered if you would be willing to jot down an ultra brief description of some of the exercise protocols you are currently experimenting with. As a life-long couch king, am playing around with some ideas at the moment and have been (positively) surprised with the results (though have a long way to go).

    Am particularly interested in the slow lifting approach and how one might try to do this with higher volume. When I switched from John Kiefer’s shockwave to a Body by Science type protocol I felt good but lost some muscle tone. To be clear I AM NOT asking you to tell me what to do but am being nosey and am interested in some of the things you might have been trying to inspire my own experiments. Am in need of a body building muse.

    ps Have you ever tried supersets? Am a bit of a duck out of water with all this stuff but it feels amazing.

    JJ

    • I (think) have tried it all since the age of 13. I’m just wrapping up a 12 week “experiment” with a modified super slow protocol via Doug McGuff. Next experiment, which I’m the planning stages of now with Ryan Flaherty, will be the boldest of them all. Should know results by Fall.

  2. This is an interesting blog! I’m 5′ 6″ and weigh about 123 (very small boned.) I had gestational diabetes when I was pregnant with my son. While I was pregnant, I was able to control the diabetes through diet (did not need to take insulin.) It was a very low-carb diet and I checked my blood sugar 4 times per day & had to keep a food journal, as instructed by my OB-GYN.

    I learned so much from the experience. Afterwards, it was possible to lose the pregnancy weight (about 20 pounds) and I have been keeping it off pretty well… Now I understand how carbohydrates always have a big effect on insulin. Nowadays I usually only have small amounts of bread, like maybe one piece of buttered toast in the morning… and I never put sugar in my coffee, the toast is enough!! I almost can’t imagine having pancakes for breakfast ever again in my life. It just seems like that would be a weird thing to do… and there’s no protein in a meal like that.

    When I was pregnant, and constantly checking my blood sugar, I found that fruit was O.K. (even a bit of pineapple.) Potatoes were O.K. (again, a small serving.) But bread was really the killer! It’s the refined quality of bread–the fact that there somehow doesn’t seem to be any “real” fiber even in whole wheat bread. Once I cheated, and had a big bran muffin, and my blood sugar spiked. Any kind of sugary baked good is really going to have a big impact and make you fat.

    This way of thinking is a part of me now, and it has helped so much. I usually eat carbs only in small amounts. I don’t want to be in ketosis because I don’t think it’s necessary for me… But I think it is probably true that carbs are the big problem for lots of Americans. Especially the wheat, corn and corn syrup.

  3. Hi Peter — love your blog & TED talk.

    My husband is Type 1 Diabetic in excellent (apparent) physical condition, running 4-5X per week and lifting fairly heavy (rotations) those days as well. Diagnosed at age 30 (he’s 50 now) he hasn’t shown any noticeable complications of the T1D yet, but his A1Cs have been above 8 for at least the last 9 years (when I began watching them), and most recently above 9. He won’t use a pump (dislikes the idea of a permanent thing stuck in his body) and has an extremely high-stress job.

    Long story short, I’m doing what I can to help him (bought Bernstein’s book and I went Paleo last year, cooking that way him and our daughter) and he even tried going about 80% Paleo for 6 months, and “only” saw his A1C go from 9.2 to 8.5. He thought that wasn’t worth giving up morning muffins, night time pretzels, crackers, etc (I’m certain that was because he wasn’t 100% and remained on the rollercoaster, never feeling satisfied). I’ve been working on Nutritional Ketosis for myself for about a month now (via Maria Emmerich for weight that wouldn’t come off, aches, etc.) and feel VERY happy with it.

    Here’s my question: Can you direct me to some inspirational people/athletes that I could show my husband that may compel him take the step toward drastically reducing his carb intake? We have an 8-year-old daughter, and I’m fully aware, at those A1Cs, it’s only a matter of time before bad things happen. His doctor (not an endocrinologist) cautioned that “ketoacidosis” is a danger for him… which is tough when only your wife (I’m no doctor, after all) makes the point that it would be, ONLY if he stops taking insulin. He currently takes 18 units Lantus & (approx) 30 units Humalog per day. Thanks in advance for your reply!

    • I do know just the person. If you contact me via the contact page on the blog, I’ll introduce you. But, I gotta warn you, if the horse doesn’t want to drink, not a lot of good it does dragging him to even the most beautiful water basin.

  4. What are your thoughts on the “Blue Zones”? They’ve found that centenarians eat primarily a plant based diet, including lots of legumes, with 5 or less servings of meat per month. Eating primarily plant based also gives the body the essential fiber and antioxidants it needs to fight the disease (especially cancer) that so many Americans unnecessarily suffer with.

  5. Great post. I have never seen any post where the amount of food consumption is such well gelled with work.

  6. Hi Peter,

    I wanted to ask if you have any knowledge or theories when it comes to psoriasis.I know it’s not part of the subject, but just wondering with your background (medical and reading the “right” research/medical information out there )if you have come across anything that’s slightly “interesting”.

    Thank you.

  7. Can the absence of carbs cause migraine after a high intensity workout (cross fit)? I cut carbs for two weeks and often finish the workout session exhausted and sometimes I feel some nausea which one day led to a migraine crisis (which I never have) with a brief moment of aphasia. Could that be due to a sudden hypoglycemic state?

  8. Dr. Peter,
    I see you have been mostly ketogenic for 4 yrs; I have been for 1 year. I also have a similar pattern where I occasionally go out of ketosis for the sake of a birthday or good restaurant (probably a little more than you do). Overall, I like this way of eating because I feel much better and I can eat an appropriate number of calories without feeling hungry all the time. Because I like data, I got a ketone meter and started tracking glucose and BHB. Ketones were pretty much what I expected but I noticed that my fasting glucose is always on the high side when in ketosis (100-130) as compared to a “regular” diet (80-90). After doing some research, it looked like I have some degree of physiological insulin resistance (PIR), though I also read that its a benign condition, not to worry. Then I came across a piece that is essentially saying long term ketosis is bad. First you get PIR, which leads to high serum free fatty acids and super low triglycierides (<20), which sets the stage for various autoimmune conditions like Hashimotos…. Clearly, you haven't experienced any of this, and I don't think I have either aside from the elevated glucose. Would like to hear your thoughts on this. Link with a good summary is below, though I think some of this originates with the "Perfect Health Diet" (the claim being that eliminating your dietary source of glucose puts the liver under too much stress).

    https://freetheanimal.com/2014/02/ketogenic-diets-news.html

    • hello Peter

      about the same blog … did you see this?
      https://freetheanimal.com/2014/03/disrupting-carbs-prebiotics.html
      Although what you eat has nothing to do with what is described, I noticed that your 25%/20%/55% PRO/CHO/FAT looks funnily similar to the numbers given as Inuit nutrition ratios as calculated there.

      I have no idea if that way of computing the breakdown of components in the Inuit food is correct or not. I guess you know better than me.

  9. Peter – I work with youth athletes and active adults and have believed in the principles you promote for years. My question is this: Your measuring tools are very sophisticated and elaborate, not available to many practitioners or consumers. I also understand you take months to know your patients so that your treatment is personalized. Accepting that your approach is the gold standard, are you willing to offer any guidelines for nutrition that you believe will be universally beneficial? If so, what would they be or where might i find some that you support? Most of my clients are not in some disease state but rather are looking for higher levels of wellness and performance. Thank you.

  10. Hi Peter,

    Love your stuff. Been eating pretty low carb (not ketotic, though) for a long time, and generally things are very good. But, on a whim I’ve signed up for ORAMM (Off road assault on mount mitchell) – 62 miles and 11000 feet of elevation gain on a mountain bike. For this ride I’m guessing 8-9 hours in the saddle for me, and I think it’s almost impossible for me to ride in a glycogen-sparing way doing all that climbing. I’m trying hard to maintain as much reliance on the tanker (fat) rather than the gas tank (priceless analogy, BTW), but it is getting tough in practice.
    I find that I usually can ride about 2.5 hours or a bit more at a moderate + pace (a bit longer if I take it very easy on the climbs.) I can tell when I’m in a nice fat-burning mode, everything feels very easy and smooth. But, mountain biking demands a lot of heavy exertion, and after that amount of time my legs are just spent for heavy exertion, which I interpret as total glycogen depletion. I’ve experimented with super starch, but have found generally that it is not a miracle worker. (I think a pack is only 110 calories, which isn’t a lot in the context of this kind of workout) Obviously all the guys I ride with are in the goo/gatorade/sugar camp, and right now I’m in panic mode and thinking of joining them. Or I’ve been thinking about spiking super starch with a bit of the sugary stuff. In my reading, you seem to be able to avoid the hard stuff altogether and still exercise at pretty high levels. Am I missing something? Is sugar going to wreck my fat metabolism and turn me into a crazed insulin spiked mess? Recommendations?

    • Just seems to take time. The guys I ride with mainline goo and traditional sports drinks. I don’t have any problem keeping up and riding away with just BCAA +/- some super starch, as needed. But initially I really took a hit at zone 4/5/6.

    • FYI – Using any carbo load with Superstarch effectively renders Superstarch useless… Don’t be fooled by the low caloric count… You will be using fat so the calories don’t mean that much..

  11. Hi Peter,

    Long time reader, first time commenter here. First, I really appreciate the time you put into your blog and responding to the comments. I understand the dangers of emulating your diet without nutritional due diligence and understanding your own body. I have found your “what I eat posts” most helpful for new ideas on how to stay LCHF and maintain athletic performance.

    That being said…. I would liken this latest post to when my mom dictates to me one of my favorite childhood recipes. She gives me the key ingredient list, but the recipe never tastes as good. Turns out, she never measures anything and always puts in more butter and salt than called for in the recipe. She is not holding back on purpose, this is just the way she cooks. I think you have, in essence, done the same thing. You provided the key ingredients of your diet, without a few critical ingredients/strategies that make it all work.

    For Example: I too am a big salad eater. However, greens and veggies themselves create issues for me. In order to reach my caloric intake goals, I find myself ladling 3-4 Tablespoons of olive oil onto my salads (along with several ounces of cheese, hard boiled eggs, uncured bacon bits, etc).

    I suspect after reading your calorie targets above there is fat (and maybe salt) finding its way into your diet that is difficult to discern, especially if you take this post out of context of all of the others. I must admit that I am missing the venti whipping cream latte drinker in the “Praise the Lard” t-shirt. If you have had either a subtle or wholesale philosophy change on fats, please share.

    • I don’t exercise as much as I did for most of life–the problem with too many jobs. So, yes, total caloric intake averages less than 2 years ago. Also, not being particularly ketogenic, I eat more protein and carbs, and less fat. I believe I’ve alluded to this in the post and comments.
      There is a reason, as you can imagine, I don’t go into great detail of the “recipe” for my intake. See most recent post…

  12. Peter,have you ever shared your LDL-p number on this blog either when ketogenic or subsequent? Just wondering whether you think diet is actually a main driver. I eat roughly a one third percentage of each macro and lift/cardio regularly and intensively for my age ( relatively low body fat 15% at age 65) . My latest results from Accesa lab NMR analysis: HS CRP.4;Trig 60; HDL-C 54:LDL- C 118; but LDL-p 1450 (borderline high) Not sure what to make of that. Any thoughts?

  13. Peter –

    Do you ever utilize Glycomark (1,5 – Anhydroglucitol) in lieu of OGTT?
    If so , how well does it correlate with LP-IR? Now that I ask that , how well does OGTT correlate with LP-IR?
    OGTT is a lab hassle – most labs do not want to do it any longer.

  14. Peter,

    Thanks again for your work.

    I find your blog posts, as opposed to these forum answers, to be best for me to understand the science underlying the nutritional questions that we are all so interested in. So I do hope, fervently, that you choose to focus on generating another one! And my vote for your next substantive post is for the Part X of the cholesterol series.

    That said, I do have questions, and hope you have time and inclination to answer.

    1. Did your LDL-P change significantly after your diet evolution to the pattern you describe here? What about OGTT and insulin response to the glucose challenge? A1C?

    I think we are all following your personal story with interest, you are a role model for each of us trying to figure out how best to modify our diet and exercise habits.

    2. I also look forward to what you have to report about the effects of the slow strength training you tried.
    That looks like a safe way to add muscle. Does that ring true to you?

    • Jane these are important questions. Glib answers in the comments sections don’t do them justice, but unfortunately, that’s all I have time for these days. So it will have to wait.

  15. Hello Peter, I have been on a ketogenic diet for about 10 weeks now and everything is going well, however I have been experiencing more migraines since starting the diet then ever before. Is there any reason why someone would begin having more migraines after starting a ketogenic diet? I have read that this diet is supposed to help reduce migraines. Could it be that I’m not fully adapted and that things will improve, or is there something I need to change in my diet. I currently take in under 50 grams of carbs a day and have no more then 100 or so grams of protein each day.

    Thank you for any advice you have.

  16. Peter in one of your posts about the AHS meeting you mentioned learning about the possible perils of exercising as much as you were. Are you going to get to that or can you at least drop a hint? Does it have to do with endurance exercise specifically and resulting biomarkers of heart and endocrine stress etc.? Also in that post you mentioned Stephan Guyenet who clearly doesn’t buy the carbohydrate/insulin hypothesis of obesity. Ever going to explain why you think he is incorrect? I know you have only limited time but these are fascinating topics( at least to me) and I’d rather get back to them than have commenters off on a tangent debating the evolution of why we don’t generally think scientifically( which we don’t). By the way your cholesterol series is one of the best posts I’ve read( several times)!

  17. Hi Peter,

    I know you’re busy so I’ll keep it short. I’ve been on Keto for about a year and half, and it seems like my beta hydroxybutyrate levels very rarely go higher than 0.3 mM when measured with a finger prick. I know this is the very low end of ketosis, and you often talk about how full blown Keto readings are much higher than this (1.0 to even nearly 5 mM you mention in your Andreas Eenfeldt interview). How the heck do I get this number up, and does it even matter in my ongoing weight loss struggle? Thank you in advance. (PS I’m excited to see what NuSI has in store for us)

    • Hi Colt,

      With regards to getting BHB numbers up you will find Peter’s series on ketosis very helpful and for weightloss issues and ketosis have a read of Peter’s post on fat flux.

  18. Hello Peter,

    I came across your work in March when my brother was dying of pancreatic cancer age 65, I am a year younger. I found some amazing explanations for my own conditions too, and I am very grateful for your work. I have been diabetic since 1992 and on insulin for over 10 years. I would chase my sugars with insulin keeping in “control” by basically self dosing. Never was I able to get my triglycerides under control, nor did I keep my weight anywhere near normal. As long as I chased my sugars, I felt I was OK. After listening to you wonderful explanations, and others, I stopped taking my statins, but more important, went sugar free and wheat free with a high fat low carb diet. I really loved the bacon and got the results you see below in March – very early in the diet change and had stopped statins completely for about 2 weeks before the test. Doctor highly chastised me and said I was the type of person who needed statins and with that high cholesterol I was convinced to continue my 40 mg crestor and fenofibrate micronized 200 MG getting the following results in May which surprised every one but me , along with a never before reached 6.5 A1C. Another milestone I reached were triglyceride levels below 400 – NEVER before accomplished in 22 years! My first numbers back then were 3000!

    May 20, 2014
    CHOLESTEROL 115 – 200 mg/dL 140
    TRIGLYCERIDE 10 – 149 mg/dL 395
    HDL 40 – 60 mg/dL 23
    LDL, CALCULATED 50 – 130 mg/dL 38

    March 21, 2014
    CHOLESTEROL 115 – 200 mg/dL 423
    TRIGLYCERIDE 10 – 149 mg/dL 1596
    HDL 40 – 60 mg/dL 21
    LDL, CALCULATED 50 – 130 mg/dL see below
    Calculation not performed, Triglyceride >400 mg/dL.

    My doctor now wants me to reduce my crestor to 10 mg because of a danger — with low HDL or LDL — not quite sure of the details, but I am tempted to cut out the crestor all together. Can you elaborate on the dangers of too much crestor? or give me a good reference to follow up with. I really wish you could be my doctor, but I know you can’t. So I thought you might like to know about my successes.
    Other things achieved.
    Ultra sound of neck does not reveal any blockage over 50% (don’t know if or how much may be there)
    Blood pressure remains low Upper 135 – 150 lower 60 – 65 (I’m disturbed with the wide range between the two numbers)
    Lost some weight – but have to eat more vegies and cut down on the delicious fats.
    Never hungary.
    I have bad hip which cuts down my exercise – but weight loss does help with this.

    Your tears and apology on your Ted Talk really touched me where I live, and I have felt that distain in a doctors office from the time I was 16 years old. You have allowed me to learn, and now talk turkey to the doctors and they listen to me. Health care has changed so much over 60 years, my goal for my later years it to talk to as many people as possible about the effects of food on your medical bill. Also the effects of industrial agriculture and it’s effect on the future of the US health care system.

    I will be reading along with you, and hope perhaps we will cross paths some day.. Do take care.

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