The diet calls for consuming high amounts of fat, a moderate amount of protein,
and a very limited amount of carbs. It’s usually broken down to 75, 20, and 5
percent of your daily calories, respectively, says Pamela Nisevich Bede, RD, a dietitian
with Abbott’s EAS Sports Nutrition in Columbus, Ohio. Compare that with the
typical American diet — which is usually 50 to 65 percent carbs — and it’s safe
to say this is a completely different way of eating, Nisevich Bede says.
After
you follow the diet for a few days, your body enters ketosis, which means it has started to use fat
for energy. Newbies on the diet find it helpful to track whether they’re in
ketosis with a urine ketone strip or a blood-prick meter, but Nisevich Bede
says you’ll eventually learn what ketosis feels like and will know whether
you’re in it.
A Glance at What Eating on the
Keto Diet Looks Like
The
keto diet is all about increasing calories from fat and going very low carb.
That means following a restrictive, keto-friendly food list.
Keto-Friendly Foods
Here
are some of the foods you may eat on keto:
·
Avocado
·
Heavy cream
·
Butter
·
Cheese
·
Leafy green vegetables (romaine, spinach, kale,
collards)
·
Nonstarchy vegetables, including zucchini, asparagus,
cucumber, broccoli,
cauliflower, and bell peppers
·
Meats (chicken,
beef, pork, lamb)
·
Fish (particularly fatty fish like salmon and sardines)
What You Can’t Eat (or Drink) on the Keto Diet
Foods
and drinks that you’ll avoid on the keto diet include many whole fruits (though some fruits are keto-friendly), dried fruits,
whole grains, cold cuts, chicken nuggets, milk, ice cream, alcohol, and
desserts.
What
a Day of Eating Looks Like on a Keto Meal Plan
Breakfast Two fried eggs, tomato
slices, coffee with heavy cream
Snack Full-fat cottage cheese topped
with pine nuts
Lunch Spinach salad with a grass-fed
burger on top, cheese and avocado
Snack Roasted, salted almonds
Dinner Grilled salmon with a side of
broccoli topped with butter
The
Proven Health Benefit of Keto: Treating Epilepsy in Children
The
keto diet has a massive fan base that has grown at least in part due to the
popular Netflix documentary The
Magic Pill, which touts a trove of promising keto health
benefits. But the fact of the matter is that most of the studies on the keto
diet are premature. Meaning: They’re in small populations of humans, or they’re
in rats. (And you are very different from a rat.)
The
only clear and proven health benefit of the keto diet is reducing epileptic
seizures in children. In fact, doctors have been using keto therapeutically for
this purpose since the 1920s.
Keto
is often suggested for children who suffer from certain disorders (like
Lennox-Gastaut syndrome or Rett syndrome) and don’t respond to seizure
medication, according to the Epilepsy Foundation. (
How
the Keto Diet May Help With Weight Loss
But the
No. 1 reason people adopt the keto diet nowadays? Weight loss.
Initially,
the weight loss comes from loss of water because you cut down on carbs in
your diet and your body uses up the carbohydrates stored in the liver, which
hold onto water. The diet results in further weight loss because it encourages
you to load up on whole, high-fat foods, Nisevich Bede says.
By
cutting carbs, you’ll also cut sugar and simple, refined carbohydrates, which
means a steadier supply of energy. (No more sugar highs and crashes!) Once
their bodies are used to the diet, “The first thing people report is, ‘Oh my
gosh, I have this steady energy and I don’t have the need to snack at 3 p.m.
because my energy is waning,’” Nisevich Bede says. Research published in
January 2015 in the journal Obesity Review showed
that the keto diet may lead to fewer hunger pangs and a lower desire to eat.
You lose weight
temporarily because “if you’re not hungry every five minutes and can work on
your willpower,” you won’t eat as much, Nisevich Bede says. But while some
research is promising — one study published in October 2013 in the British
Journal of Nutrition found that the keto diet led to
greater weight loss than a low-fat diet, for example — there is a lack of
long-term research (greater than two years) that suggests a highly restrictive
diet like keto is superior for weight loss than others, and it’s certainly not
right for everyone.
In the
2019 U.S.
News & World Report Best Diets rankings, keto lands at
number 38 of 41 diets profiled. (5) That’s because while it may lead to a
short-term weight loss, experts flag how difficult it is to follow, the lack of
nutrition, and potential health risks from cutting major food groups and eating
more saturated fat.
The
Keto Diet’s Possible Role in Disease Prevention and Treatment
·
Metabolic
Syndrome Limited research, including a study published in November
2017 in the journal Diabetes & Metabolic Syndrome:
Clinical Research & Reviews, has suggested that adults with
metabolic disease following keto shed more weight and body fat compared with
those on a standard American diet, which is heavy in processed food and added
sugars.
·
Type 2 Diabetes Research
published in September 2016 in the Journal of Obesity & Eating Disorders suggested
the diet could help people with type 2 diabetes and
can lead to improvements in HbA1c levels (though
be warned, it can also lead to hypoglycemia — that’s low blood sugar
levels — if you take medication to lower your blood sugar).e Keto
Diet Okay for People With Diabetes?
·
Bipolar
Disorder In people with type 2 bipolar disorder, keto may be a mood
stabilizer, and one early study, published in October 2012 in the journal Neurocase,
suggested the plan may be even more effective than medication.
·
Obesity Compared
with those on a typical low-calorie diet, obese individuals on a very-low-calorie
ketogenic diet lost more weight and inflammatory visceral (belly) fat in one
study, published in December 2016 in the journal Endocrine. It may also help
preserve lean body mass during weight loss, according to an article published
in February 2018 in the journal Nutrition & Metabolism.
·
Dementia and
Alzheimer’s Disease A small study published in February
2013 in the journal Neurobiology of Aging found
that older higher-risk adults on a keto diet experienced better memory
functioning after just six weeks. Some experts, like Richard Isaacson, MD, director of the
Alzheimer’s Prevention Clinic at Weill Cornell Medicine and
NewYork–Presbyterian in New York City, support low-carb diets for
patients as one way to delay brain aging and possibly Alzheimer’s disease,
the most common form of dementia.
·
Parkinson’s
Disease Because these patients are at a higher risk for dementia,
researchers like Robert
Krikorian, PhD, professor of clinical psychiatry and the
director of the division of psychology at the University of Cincinnati College
of Medicine in Ohio, are studying how inducing nutritional ketosis may be used
to preserve cognitive functioning.
·
Certain
Cancers Keto may be used in combination with chemotherapy and radiation,
some studies have suggested, including one published in November 2018 in the
journal Oncology.
But ultimately more studies are needed to determine if keto can play a role in
cancer therapy, and patients should not use it as a stand-alone treatment or
without a doctor’s consent.
·
Polycystic
Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) Because women with the
infertility condition PCOS are
at a greater risk for diabetes and obesity, some clinicians
recommend the keto diet, says Taylor
Moree, RD, LD, of Balance Fitness and Nutrition in Atlanta. But PCOS
is no different from most health conditions mentioned here: Long-term research
on the safety is needed.
What
Are the Potential Health Risks Associated With the Keto Diet?
The
possible benefits of the diet are impressive, but there are a few potential
downsides to note. One is it’s tough to stick to. In fact, in a review of
11 studies involving adults on the keto diet, which was published in January
2015 in the Journal of Clinical Neurology, researchers
calculated a 45 percent compliance rate among participants following the
approach with the aim of controlling epilepsy. (13) “The diet is pretty hard to follow because
it’s a complete shift from what you’re used to,” Nisevich Bede
says. Slashing your intake of carbs can also make you feel hungrier
than usual — a feeling that can last until you’re three weeks in.
It’s
also common for people starting the diet to experience flu-like symptoms, such
as headaches and fatigue. This side effect is so common that there’s a name for
it: the keto flu. “You shed a ton of water weight at
first, which can lead to dehydration,”
Nisevich Bede explains. This can worsen the symptoms of the keto flu. To
counter it, she recommends staying hydrated and loading up on electrolytes
through electrolyte tablets.
Other
potential risks include kidney
stones, several vitamin and mineral deficiencies, decreased bone
mineral density, and gastrointestinal distress. (7) Here’s
why: When you’re eliminating certain food groups (like fruits, legumes, and
whole grains) and severely limiting others (like many vegetables), it’s not
uncommon to experience nutritional deficiencies. A lack of fiber, for instance, can make it more likely
you’ll experience constipation.
In
order to avoid some of these risks, the diet needs to be well planned to ensure
you’re hitting all of your nutritional bases. Unfortunately, a restrictive diet
makes this planning a challenge, especially if you’re not working with a
registered dietitian who is knowledgeable in keto.
The ketogenic diet isn’t a cure-all, and it doesn’t give you
license to eat as much unhealthy fat as you want. Avoid falling for these
common misconceptions to stay safe and possibly see better results.
Should
You Try the Keto Diet for Weight Loss and Other Health Benefits?
Considering
these risks, people who have kidney damage (including those with type 2
diabetes), plus individuals with or at risk for heart disease, and pregnant or
breastfeeding women, shouldn’t try the keto diet. Also, people with type 1
diabetes shouldn’t follow the plan because of the risk for hypoglycemia (low
blood sugar), and anyone who has had their gallbladder removed should avoid it
because the diet is so high in fat.
If
you’re looking to lose weight, keep in mind that the diet likely requires a
complete overhaul to the way you normally eat. But it may be worth it if you’re
looking to lose weight or have one of the health conditions it’s been shown to
help with.
To be
on the safe side, be sure to discuss with your doctor whether the keto diet is
right for you before you drastically change your eating habits. While the diet
has roots in medicine, its widespread use is still new, and not every doctor
understands the keto diet. For more information, you can look to national
programs that are gaining steam. Two examples: Virta Health, where they are studying the
diet’s role in prediabetes and type 2 diabetes treatment, and the Cleveland Clinic’s Functional Ketogenics
Program.
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