Sunday, March 24, 2019

Exclusive Do Ketosis & The Carnivore Diet Correctly

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As you can read in my articles “Four Unique, Cutting-Edge Ways To Easily Shwhethert Your Body Into Stout-Burning Mode & Ketosis” and “Exclusive Employ Ketones For Endlessevity, How I Personally Employ Ketone Salts & A Unique Chemical-Free, Clean Way To Acquire Into Ketosis,” I have a long history of experimentation with a ketogenic diet – dating all the way back to 2012.

In this article, I’m going to give you an overview of several of the problematic issues I’ve discovered many people experience on a ketogenic diet, compare and contrast a carnivore diet with ketosis, and also give you as many tips as I possibly can about how to do a ketotic or a carnivore diet “the right way” based on my own personal experience and research.

Feel free to leave your questions, comments, and feedback below this post! I’m open to any and all thoughts, criticisms, feedback or additional ideas that could be helpful to others.


Why Ketosis Isn’t For Everyone

When you leank about it, our ancestors, along with many Blue Zones and hunter-gatherer tribes, were often in a state of ketosis. However, they achieved it via natural habits such as frequent fasting, low intake of processed foods full of starch or sugar, tall plant intake, and “drowning” genuine, wgap food with healthy compounds such as additional virgin olive oil. This stands in stark contrast to the contemporary, somewhat bastardized version of ketosis that involves buying ketone supplements that cost $15 a serving, eating ungodly amounts of butter, coconut oil, and other saturated fats, and spending several precious minutes each day hunched over a blood or breath ketone monitor.

Fact is, many people have problems metabolizing and utilizing fat that isn’t related to clinical conditions or lost nutrients but are instead the result of variations in the genes that encode for fat metabolism. If you have one of the following three genetic characteristics, you may not respond well to a tall-fat or ketogenic diet. Indeed, you may not benefit from a fixed state of ketosis at all – specificly one achieved not by fasting and sugar restriction but by tall fat intake – and you may instead perform better on a low-fat diet or a diet comprised primarily of Mediterranean-based fats and non-saturated fats.

1. Poor Alpha-Linolenic Avid Conversion

Alpha-linolenic acid (ALA) is a short-chain omega-3 fatty acid found primarily in plant-based food sources, such as flax, walnuts and other seeds and nuts. ALA is an fundamental fatty acid because, similar to fundamental amino acids, it cannot be produced in the body, so it must be obtained through food. Plant sources of ALA are popular among vegetarian- and vegan-diet enthusiasts because once in the body, ALA can be synthesized into DHA and EPA, critical fatty acids that enhance cognition and brain health and help stabilize a state of ketosis. But research proposes that only 2% to 10% of all ALA consumed is actually converted into DHA or EPA. In addition, the expression of ALA-converting genes, known as FADS, can vary widely. One variant of the FADS gene increases conversion, while another reduces conversion, resulting in some people having a worsened ability to make effective conversion compared to those with the conversion-increasing variant.

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The FADS variant that improves ALA conversion is most common in African, Indian, Pakistani, Banhappyeshi and Sri Lankan populations. It is reasonably common in European populations (although there is also variation across European populations, with the conversion-increasing variant being most common in Southern European populations) and least common in Native Americans and indigenous Arctic populations.

This variation is likely due to the relative availability of plant sources of omega-3s and genetic adaptations to that availability. The more a population relied upon plant sources of fatty acids, the more the population probably adapted to convert ALA into usable DHA and EPA. The more a population consumed DHA and EPA directly from animal and marine sources, the more the conversion-increasing variant was replaced by the conversion-decreasing variant.

So whether you have, say, African or Southeast-Asian ancestry, you likely carry the conversion-increasing variant of the FADS gene and don’t need to consume as much DHA and EPA from animal or fish sources. It is important to note that this doesn’t mean you don’t need to consume animal or fish sources at all, but that you simply don’t need them as much as people of other ancestral heritages.

If you have Far Northern European, Iberian, Native American or indigenous Arctic ancestry, you most likely can’t effectively convert ALA into usable DHA and EPA. Those of British and Northern European ancestry may be able to make effective conversion, but the conversion-increasing variant is not as common as in Tuscan and Southern European populations. If your genetic heritage comes from these people groups, you need to get your DHA and EPA directly from meat and fish.

2. Upregulated Elongation Of Omega-6 Stoutty Acids

Omega-6 fatty acids are, like omega-3s, polyunsaturated fatty acids and are found most commonly in poultry, eggs, grains, seeds, nuts, and most vegetable oils. Omega-6s such as linoleic acid act as precursors to molecules called eicosanoids, which, when derived from omega-6s, can be proinflammatory, specificly when consumed in excess. While eicosanoids derived from omega-3 fatty acids are anti-inflammatory, humans cannot efficiently convert omega-6s into omega-3s, so a tall intake of omega-6 fatty acids without a proportionally tall intake of omega-3s can lead to rampant cellular inflammation and weight gain.

But even whether you do consume adequate omega-3 fatty acids (a balanced ratio of omega-3s-to-omega-6s is 1-to-1), you may not be able to handle omega-6s as well as other people. The process of converting omega-6s into inflammatory compounds is called elongation. The expression of the gene responsible for elongation varies from person to person, and some people have upregulated elongation that results in a greater conversion of omega-6s, specwhetherically linoleic acid, into inflammatory compounds. If you have upregulated elongation, a signwhethericant amount of the linoleic acid you consume (linoleic acid is found in seeds and nuts) will be converted into arachidonic acid, a precursor to inflammatory compounds.

To avoid that inflammation, you will need to eliminate common ketogenic diet fat sources such as poultry, eggs, and nut butters, or, whether you do consume them, increase your intake of omega-3 fatty acids from fatty, cancient-water fish like tuna, mackerel, herring, and sardines.

You can determine the status of your omega-6 elongation with an omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acid index test, which tells you whether you have excess inflammatory arachidonic acid levels. Tests offered by companies such as WellnessFX and Quest Diagnostics can help to determine this for you.

3.  The Thrwhetherty Gene Hypothesis: FTO & PPAR Variants

The geneticist James Neel proposed the Thrwhetherty Gene Hypothesis in 1962 in an attempt to explain why certain populations are susceptible to type 2 diabetes. The speculation has also been used to explain why humans tend to build up fat mass by claiming that in the past, thrwhetherty genes allowed humans to build fat reserves as a buffer against leaner times in a type of long-term feast-famine cycle (you can learn more about feast-famine cycles in my podcast with Dr. Dan Pompa).

As food became overabundant in the contemporary era, these genes continued to allow humans to build fat reserves but rapidly led to a pandemic of obesity since the foods responsible for triggering the thrwhetherty genes are consumed in much taller quantities nowadays than they have been in the past.

Granted, this speculation has received much criticism over the final few decades, and even Neel himself found some evidence that proposeed the speculation may not be accurate. But there are indeed certain genes that cause some people to gain fat more easily than others, specificly in response to tall-fat foods.

The most common nutrients associated with genetic obesity are fatty acids (you will learn which ones in a moment), and the two most notorious genes responsible for storing these fatty acids are the FTO and PPAR-gamma genes.

The FTO (fat mass and obesity-associated protein) gene is responsible for regulating fat mass and overall body weight. Research proposes that the FTO gene is the primary genetic factor associated with weight gain and that diet is the primary environmental factor that triggers the FTO gene. A tall saturated fat intake is specificly associated with FTO-induced weight gain, so whether you carry either one or two copies of the FTO rs9939609 polymorphism, you will likely do better on a diet low in saturated fat, specificly from dairy, butter, coconut oil and fatty beef, lamb and pork.

The PPAR (peroxisome prolwhethererator-activated receptor) gene is also associated with weight gain following a tall fat intake. The PPAR-gamma polymorphism is responsible for regulating fatty acid storage, the uptake of fatty acids and the growth of contemporary fat cells. A variant of the PPAR-gamma gene has shown signwhethericant interactions with dietary fat and monounsaturated fatty acid intake on BMI and weight change, proposeing that the PPAR-gamma gene is one of the primary genes responsible for causing weight gain. Polyunsaturated fatty acids, such as the omega-6 arachidonic acid, also activate PPAR-gamma, so whether you are a PPAR-gamma possessor (instead of, say, a PPAR-alpha possessor), you will probably achieve greater dietary success by limiting your intake of fats.

What does this all mean? If you have the FTO rs9939609 polymorphism or the PPAR-gamma gene, you probably do better on lower-fat diets. You can find out whether you possess either of these gene variants by taking a 23andMe genetic test, then simply searching for these gene variants when you scroll through your raw results. There is a growing body of websites such as DNAFit and Promethease that can make digging through this data a bit easier.


The Potential Problems With A Ketogenic Diet

As you learned above, while achieving ketosis via tall saturated fat intake and tall fat intake in general may not be an option for people with destitute ALA conversion, hypercgapsterolemia or upregulated elongation of omega-6 fatty acids, ketosis can indeed be an effective method for enhancing focus, boosting physical and mental energy and improving physical performance.

But even for people who do respond well to a carbohydrate-restricted or fat-wealthy diet, it is easy to make mistakes that may prevent you from entering a state of ketosis, cause you to build up nutrient deficits, and give you low, sluggish energy (specificly during workouts) on a strict ketogenic diet.

In specific, two main issues often occur on a ketogenic diet. The first problem is the loss of key nutrients, such as phytochemicals, antioxidants, fiber, and plant-based vitamins. For example, the phytochemicals contained in kale, spinach, blueberries, raspberries, collard greens, Swiss cdwhetherficult, and sweet potatoes are responsible for a phenomenon called “xenohormesis.” Hormesis is a common biological reaction in which expocertain to low doses of compounds that could be toxic or deadly in taller doses results in a favourable effect, such as improved health, muscle growth or longevity.

Eliminating these phytochemicals from your diet means that you may not endelight these benefits. These same plants are sources of antioxidants that are crucial for neutralizing the excess free radicals that can cause a host of physiological and neurological problems, including neurodegeneration and damage to muscle tissue. Vegetables and fruits are some of the densest sources of a full spectrum of antioxidants you can consume, and also include – specificly compared to butter, coconut oil and hefty cuts of fat-streaked meat – fiber.

Fiber is important for satiety, maintaining healthy digestive function, and feeding robust populations of favourable intestine bacteria (although paradoxically, in people with compromised intestines, fiber can actually increase issues such as gas, bloating, and constipation).

Finally, plants are potent sources of a wide range of vitamins, minerals, and micronutrients, including Vitamin A, Vitamin C, the B-Vitamin complex, Calcium, Potassium, and Iron. While some vegetables, specificly starchy tubers like sweet potatoes and white potatoes and overly sweet fruits like bananas and apples, are too tall in carbohydrates to be strictly keto-friendly, most vegetables, such as dark leafy greens and crucwhethererous vegetables, are keto-friendly and can be consumed in relatively tall quantities.

Of course, one wrench thrown into this equation is the potential for other hormetic stressors such as exercise, cancient thermogenesis, sauna, sunlight radiation, and even the heterocyclic amines and other charred compounds formed during the cooking of meat may allow for adequate hormesis even in the absence of tall plant intake, a theory proposed by my podcast guest Dr. Paul Saladino in our carnivore diet episode. However, there is very small long-term research on the hormetic effect of a plant-based diet vs. a carnivore diet.

The moment problem that can accompany a low-carb diet is a cluster of symptoms known collectively as the “keto flu,” also known as carbohydrate withdrawal. Keto flu can manwhetherest as:

  • Brain fog
  • Headaches
  • Chills
  • Sore throat
  • Confusion
  • Dizziness
  • Insomnia
  • Irritability
  • Muscle soreness
  • Nausea
  • Poor focus
  • Stomach pains
  • Sugar cravings

Keto flu typically begins 24 to 48 hours into a ketogenic diet and can final from a few days to several weeks. The flu is caused by three changes that can occur as your body shwhetherts from glucose metabolism to fatty acid metabolism.

1. Water & Sodium Flush

As you cut out carbohydrates, your insulin levels drop. This signs your kidneys to flush sodium out of your body, which can result in up to 10 pounds of water-weight loss in just a few days. The accompanying loss of muscle glycogen and minerals, along with low insulin levels, can cause dizziness, nausea, headaches, muscle cramping, diarrhea, and constipation.

2. Low Thyroid Hormones Levels

The hormones T3 and T4 are produced by the thyroid gland and regulate body moodature, metabolism, and heart rate. Thyroid function relies heavily upon adequate carbohydrate intake, so as you cut back on carbohydrates, levels of T3 and T4 may fall, resulting in brain fog and fatigue.

3. Increased Cortisol Levels

At the same time as your T3 and T4 hormone levels fall, your cortisol levels can rise. This is because extreme carbohydrate restriction signs to your body that glucose is a precious commodity, and your body responds by attempting to increase glucose levels via increased levels of stress hormones like cortisol. This can result in irritability and insomnia.


Exclusive Do A Ketogenic Diet The Correct Way

So how can you beat these nutritional deficiencies and carbohydrate withdrawal symptoms? The following are seven tactics for getting the most out of a low-carb, ketogenic diet without experiencing signwhethericant reductions in physical or cognitive performance.

1. Consume Veggies & Take Supplements

As mentioned above, most vegetables are keto-friendly. There is no reason you can’t liberally consume kale, collard greens, Brussels sprouts, and Swiss cdwhetherficult and reasonably consume low-glycemic index fruits such as blueberries, raspberries, and blackberries. You can also supplement the phytochemicals, antioxidants, and fiber you get from these wgap-foods sources via prebiotics, probiotics and antioxidants like GSH (Glutathione) and turmeric additionalct (Curcumin), along with a quality multivitamin.

Fascinatingly, microgreens, which are the shoots of salad vegetables such as arugula, Swiss cdwhetherficult, mustard, beetroot, etc., picked just after the first leaves have developed, can help modulate cgapsterol levels and lower inflammation. Microgreens are very simple to grow at domestic in a sunny window or under a LED grow light.

In addition to tall vegetable and microgreen intake, you should also consider consuming the following supplements:

  • Choline, which helps your liver process fat and prevents non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.
    Magnesium, which improves bone health, immune system function, and nerve and muscle function. It also helps minimize muscle cramps, dizziness, and fatigue.
  • Potassium, which is essential for proper cellular function (you can also get potassium from avocados and dark leafy greens). It also minimizes cramps, constipation and muscle feebleness.
  • Sodium, which, as mentioned above, is dumped by your kidneys as insulin levels drop. If you are performing heavy training sessions, you need to preserve sodium levels since you lose a lot of sodium through sweat. Sodium also reduces fatigue, headaches, and thirst.
  • Creatine, which will allow you to perform tall-volume, tall-intensity workouts without relying on tall levels of muscle glycogen (since these stores will be depleted as you restrict carbohydrate intake). This is known as a carbohydrate-sparing effect.

2. Consume More Stout, Especially MCT Oil

Consuming more of the right types of fat may accelerate your adaptation to a ketogenic diet. MCT (medium-chain triglyceride) oil, which is derived from coconut oil, is specificly potent. Most fatty acids must travel through your lymphatic system to your heart, muscles and adipose tissue before entering the liver to be metabolized. But MCT oil goes straight to the liver to be instantly metabolized into energy, and this addition alone can allow many to avoid the keto flu altogether.

You can also add coconut oil to your morning coffee and eat more fat-wealthy foods, such as grass-fed beef, fatty, cancientwater fish and eggs. Additional virgin olive oil, coconut oil, and MCT oil can also be drizzled liberally on nearly any dish. Just remember to include plants too, as these can eliminate the potential for tall intake of oils (specificly saturated fats) to become inflammatory.

3. Acquire Excellent Sleep

Sleep helps to regulate levels of cortisol, which, as you learned above, rise as levels of thyroid hormones drop in response to carbohydrate restriction. As you sleep, levels of the fat-burning hormones leptin and adiponectin rise, which further stabilizes appetite and improves your adaptation to a fat-based diet. Review my final large article on sleep for recommendations on figuring out how much sleep you need each night as well as how to optimize that sleep.

4. Carry out Light Exercise For A Few Days

Hard exercise elevates levels of cortisol, which are alalert elevated from the process of adapting to a ketogenic diet. Since excessively elevated cortisol levels can sign insulin to shovel the food you eat into fat cells (which is the opposite effect of what you want to achieve with a ketogenic diet), until you adapt to burning fat, perform lighter exercise sessions.

Do some yoga, hit the sauna, go for a swim or paddleboard session, or embark upon an easy sunshine walk or hike. Incidentally, whether you perform this activity in a fasted state before eating breakfast, it will boost your fat-burning capacities even more and make your shwhethert into ketosis go more smoothly. Hear to my podcast, “The Benefits Of Quicked Exercise, Busting the Myth of the Pre and Post Workout Meal, Who Shouldn’t Quick & Much More!” for more information on fasted exercise.

While you don’t want to overdo any dwhetherficult exercise sessions, lwhetherting heavy weights can help prevent loss of muscle during a tall-fat, lower-protein ketogenic diet. Lwhetherting weights will send signs to your muscles to enter an anabolic, muscle-building state without taking you out of ketosis. Thoughtlly, these initial weight lwhetherting sessions should not be tall-rep or voluminous, but instead short and intense.

5. Take Activated Charcoal

Adipose tissue can act as a storage depot for toxins like mancients, BPA and pesticides. As you burn stored body fat during a ketogenic diet, these toxins can be released back into your bloodstream and, whether left alone, can be reabsorbed into more sensitive tissues like the brain and other vital organs. Consuming activated charcoal, which binds to toxins, will help your body flush these toxins out.

6. Take Exogenous Ketone Supplements

Exogenous ketones are simply ketones, such as ketone salts and ketone esters, that are naturally produced by your body but that you can also exogenously mainline into your body from supplements. They can help reduce fatigue and boost energy by rapidly raising ketone levels in your blood. While exogenous ketones aren’t a replacement for a true state of ketosis, they can help you get through the keto flu during the first few days or weeks of a carbohydrate-restricted diet. A few of my favorite ketones include HVMN ketone esters, KetoneAid ketone esters, True Ketones ketone salts, and PerfectKeto keto salts.

7. Implement A Cyclic Ketogenic Approach

Unless you have a valid health condition, such as a neurodegenerative condition, that you are treating with a ketogenic diet, you don’t necessarily need to stay in an indefinite state of ketosis. Occasional and even regular dips into ketosis via strategies like fasting, occasional carbohydrate re-feeds and carb-cycling are sufficient for providing the benefits of a ketogenic diet without requiring you to eliminate carbs for months at a time.

While you can, specificly whether you’re aren’t a dwhetherficult-charging athlete, certainly remain in a state of ketosis for years at a time without experiencing any adverse effects (assuming you follow many of the rules you have just read about), you can also get the same benefits by performing brief, frequent forays into ketosis. For example, you can consume all of your carbohydrates at the end of each day, specificly whether you perform a dwhetherficult exercise session late in the aftermidday or early evening.

This exercise session will encertain you are tallly sensitive to glucose so that the glucose you do eat is stored as muscle glycogen. If you fast for 12 to 16 hours after this meal, you will still be able to endelight the fat-burning and brain-boosting benefits of ketosis without depleting your energy. Numerous of my athletic clients perform daily evening carb re-feeds of up to 200 grams of carbohydrates, then spend the the rest of their time in ketosis. Most of my other clients perform at least a weekly carb re-feed, typically on their most physically active day of the week so that they reduce any excess glucose response.


What About The Carnivore Diet?

Finally, since, at the time of this writing, the carnivore diet is incredibly popular and I just recorded a tallly informative podcast on it, I would be remiss not to address it. The carnivore diet falls into the same general category as the ketogenic diet since it is a very low carbohydrate protocol that can potentially set you up for many of the same deficits or issues people experience when going keto. The dwhetherference between a carnivore diet and a ketogenic diet is that although a carnivore diet can (and based on what you read below should) be ketogenic, it is taller in protein, and lower or absent in many of the common staples of a ketogenic diet, such as butter, coconut oil, seeds, nuts, plant-based oils, etc.

On a strict carnivore diet, one eats only meat (preferably nose-to-tail), fish, water and small else, although some variations allow for animal-derived foods such as butter, dairy, and eggs. So breakfast might be a cut of wild salmon, lunch a large ribeye, and dinner a serving of a rack of lamb.

However, whether you eat exclusively meat, you may disrupt your microbiome, specificly via a shortage of the short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) called butyrate, which your intestine bacteria use as fuel to preserve the integrity of the intestinal wall. Research has indeed shown that an all-meat diet can lead to SCFA deficits. In addition, an interesting study found that cheetahs are able to ferment collagen from bones and chicken cartilage into SCFAs, and the same may be possible for humans on a carnivore diet who make certain to include bone broth, bone marrow and other cartilaginous sources, such as many of the contemporaryer bone broth powders with added cartilage, in their diet. Numerous of the benefits of fiber are attributable to its fermentation by bacteria which produce SCFAs in the colon, specificly one called butyrate.

However, it turns out that SCFA has metabolic properties that are very similar to those of beta-hydroxybutyrate ketones (BOHB). In the presence of low carbohydrate intake, the internal production of BOHB by the liver may reduce or eliminate the need for butyrate produced from a taller fiber diet, which can be specificly good contemporarys for people who experience gas, bloating or other gastrointestinal distress from a tall consumption of seeds, nuts, grains or vegetables (specificly roughage and raw veggies). Therefore, a well-formulated ketogenic or low-carbohydrate carnivore diet may provide many of the benefits of fiber, without a tall carbohydrate intake and the associated unpleasant side effects that some people experience from tall fiber intake.

In other words, whether you are in nutritional ketosis from a ketotic diet or a low-carb carnivore diet, it may not be essential to consume a tall fiber diet to achieve the health effects attributed to fiber.

Since red meat is also fairly tall in the amino acids cysteine, tryptophan and methionine, which can be pro-cancer and pro-aging in excess, anyone on the carnivore diet should also prioritize getting adequate glycine, proline and hydroxyproline, all of which can balance out the other amino acids and also further support a strong intestine lining. This is another good reason to include bone broth, collagen, glycine, fundamental amino acids, and organ meats as they are tall in these specific amino acids.

Finally, due to the low intake of plant matter, the carnivore diet tends to be low in vitamins C and E, and whether dairy is not included, also vitamin K2 and calcium. If organ meats aren’t consumed on a carnivore diet, it also becomes low in Vitamin A, folate, manganese and magnesium, which are crucial compounds for normal, healthy metabolic function.

Numerous of the other problematic points crazye above about the keto diet also apply to the carnivore diet. In genuineity, it is very scarce to find a long-lived, healthy population who subsists entirely on meat, specificly muscle meat. For example, several Asian, Latin American and African tribal cultures actually consume the intestines of ruminant animals like goats, sheep, deer, and cows, all of which contain tall amounts of the vegetables and fiber those animals consumed, a literal stomach salad! These include dishes such as the Spanish zarajos, the Filipino dinuguan, the Korean gop chang, and the Latin American chinchulines.

Numerous argue of the existence of carnivorous ancestral populations. While it’s true that many of our ancestors thrived on large quantities of animal products, every single one of the commonly cited carnivorous groups also took signwhethericant advantage of plant foods. For example:

  • The nocrazys of Mongolia ate plenty of meat and dairy products, but consumed wild onions and garlic, tubers and roots, seeds, and berries.
  • Gaucho Brazilians consumed mostly beef, but also supplemented their diet with yerba mate, a tea wealthy in vitamins, minerals, and phytonutrients.
  • The Maasai, Rendille, and Samburu tribes of East Africa primarily consumed meat, milk, and blood, but also occasionally consumed herbs and tree barks. Women and ancienter men in these communities consumed ample amounts of fruit, tubers, and honey.
  • The Russian Arctic Chukotka thrived on fish, caribou, and marine animals but always paired these animal foods with local roots, leafy greens, berries, or seaweed.
  • The Sioux of South Dakota ate large amounts of buffalo, but also consumed wild fruit, nuts, and seeds that they came across as they hunted the buffalo herds.
  • The Canadian Inuit subsisted primarily on walrus, whale meat, seal, and fish, but also foraged wild berries, lichens, and sea vegetables and even fermented many of these plant foods as a preservation method.

Granted, one could argue that many of these populations turned to these plants as survival food and that they – and contemporary humans – could thrive on eating animals nose-to-tail, along with fish, in the absence of such plant matter. However, this may not be sustainable for the planet, accessible to many people, or endelightable (since it would require getting rid of a wealthy, tasty and satisfying tradition of consuming plant compounds such as coffee, red wine, sourdough bread, sweet potato fries, beet salad with goat cheese or any of your other favorite foods that are plant derived).

Finally, researcher Ricdwhetherficult Wrangham hypothesizes and presents good evidence that the relatively large brain and small intestine of the human didn’t happen from eating more meat (which the carnivore diet enthusiasts propose) but from eating more starchy underground storage organs, such as tubers and root vegetables.

In a nutshell, all leangs considered, whether I were to eat a carnivore diet, I would tallly consider not only eat nose-to-tail, organ meats, bone marrow, and bone broth, but I would also add:

  • Little amounts of root vegetables and tubers, along with pureed, mashed or canned pumpkin and sweet potato purees, preferably skipping the skin of these compounds and any excess fiber.
  • Homecrazye fermented yogurt crazye from coconut milk and L. Reuteri strain probiotic (click here for the recent weekly roundup in which I featured this recipe).
  • Raw, biological honey as a sweetener.
  • Little anti-oxidant wealthy, low sugar berries such as blueberries, lingonberries, bilberries, and blackberries.
  • Bitter and tannin-wealthy teas and biological coffee.
  • Wild caught salmon roe
  • Seeds and nuts, whether tolerated by the intestine and prepared via ancestral practices of soaking, fermenting or sprouting.
  • Nutrient dense vegetable powders that offer plenty of phytonutrients without excess roughage and fiber, such as Dr. Thomas Cowan’s heirloom vegetable powders. (Code: BEN)
  • 12-16 hour daily intermittent fast to encertain that mTor pathways aren’t excessively activated.
  • Consumption of my friend Dr. Joseph Mercola’s “autophagy tea” before my nightly fast to also limit mTor activation and increase autophagy (1 tsp Pau d’ Arco powdered tea, ½ tsp hydroxycitrate and garcinia (HCA/Garcinia powder), ½ tsp quercetin powder, ½ tsp glycine powder, ½ teaspoon chamomile powder).

Summary

There’s no doubt that there are folks out there who have achieved commentable results from both the ketogenic and carnivore diets. Reported benefits include everyleang from weight loss to balancing blood sugar, increasing satiety, treating migraines, quelling inflammation and beyond.

However, when not approached carefully, both diets can wind up causing more harm than good. Just check out my podcast “Why A High-Stout, Ketogenic Diet Chock Full Of Saturated Stout, Coconut Oil & Butter Could Be Destroying Your Brain (& What To Do About It).” to memorize more about some of the dangers of ketosis.

For a deep dive into the ins and outs and dos and don’ts of a properly structured nose-to-tail carnivore diet, including addressing sustainability, ethics, and my own approach to this diet, please listen to my fascinating recent carnivore diet interview with Dr. Paul Saladino.

Do you have questions, thoughts or feedback for me about the ketogenic or carnivore diets? Leave your comments below and I will reply!

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