HEALTH Wheat is a weak opiate

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Just another articles on wheat by William Davis, MD,


Wheat is a weak opiate


Ok, a tough one… can you give us a 10-15 second elevator speech that can help us explain the reasons to avoid wheat to doubting friends and relatives?

Sure. The American public needs to be aware that agribusiness and Big Food companies have sucker punched you. They have learned how to use this Trojan horse, wheat, harboring its hidden gliadin protein that increases appetite.

Wheat is a weak opiate. Eat wheat, you want more wheat, you want more carbohydrates. The gliadin of wheat is converted to exorphins, morphine-like compounds that can be blocked with opiate-blocking drugs.

Even worse, we’re advised by our own government agencies like the USDA and Health and Human Services that whole grains are good for us and we should eat more. Eat more “healthy whole grains,” we eat more, we gain weight, we acquire all the health consequences of wheat and weight gain such as hypertension, high cholesterol, arthritis, acid reflux, and diabetes. Big Food makes out, Big Pharma makes out; we all pay the price.

The epidemic of diabetes and obesity has been blamed on us. We’re told that Americans are overweight and diabetic because we are gluttons and we’re lazy. I don’t buy it. I believe the majority of Americans are fairly health-conscious and try to get at least some exercise. I do not believe we are that different from, say, the people of 1950 or 1960. I think we’ve been duped into blaming ourselves, when all along a big part of the blame should be placed on this corrupt product of genetics research, propagated by agribusiness, and put to profitable use.



If you haven’t already, check out Dr. Davis’ book Wheat Belly. I’ve found that is a great resource, especially for friends and relatives who have trouble grasping how “heart-healthy-whole-grains” could possibly be bad.
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Do You Have a Wheat Belly? Interview with Dr. Davis!

Katie - Wellness Mama 70 Comments

wheat belly 202x300 Do You Have a Wheat Belly? Interview with Dr. Davis![Note from Katie: I am so excited to post this interview with Dr. William Davis who wrote the book Wheat Belly:Lose the Wheat, Lose the Weight, and Find Your Path Back to Health.

William Davis, MD, is a preventive cardiologist whose unique approach to diet allows him to advocate reversal, not just prevention, of heart disease. He is the founder of the Track Your Plaque program.

He started recommending a wheat free diet with his patients because wheat products raise the blood sugar more than a snickers bar. Besides blood sugar improvements, he was surprised to see his patients also experience: "weight loss of 25 to 30 lbs over several months, marked improvement or total relief from arthritis, improvement in asthma sufficient to chuck 2 or 3 inhalers, complete relief from acid reflux and irritable bowel syndrome symptoms, disappearance of leg swelling and numbness. Most reported increased mental clarity, deeper sleep, and more stable moods and emotions."

Check out Dr. Davis' Blog Here]
Enter Dr. Davis:


1. How did you come to the conclusion that wheat is harmful in its current form?

I learned just how bad wheat was when I asked patients in my cardiac practice to remove it from their diet. I did this because 80% of people I’d meet for the first time were diabetic or pre-diabetic, situations that double or triple heart disease risk. In an effort to minimize this situation, I applied a very simple fact: Two slices of whole wheat bread raise blood sugar higher than 6 teaspoons of sugar, higher than a Snickers bar. (Most people are unaware that the glycemic index of whole wheat bread is among the highest of all foods.)

So I asked everyone to remove wheat to observe the blood sugar effects. People would come back after a 3-6 months and, indeed, their blood sugars and HbA1c (a measure of prior 60 days blood sugar) would be much lower, even to the point at which some diabetics were no longer diabetic. But people told me plenty more: They lost 30 pounds, lost 4 inches from their waist, felt better than they had in 20 years with more energy, less moodiness and deeper sleep. They told me how they experienced complete relief from acid reflux, irritable bowel syndrome, migraine headaches, hand and finger arthritis and joint pain, sinus congestion and chronic sinus infections. They told me about how their asthma improved so much that they threw away three inhalers, their rheumatoid arthritis was so much better they were in the process of reducing medication, their ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s had improved so much that no medication was required any longer, their leg edema had disappeared and rashes were gone.

At first, I dismissed it as pure coincidence. But the effects became so frequent and consistent that the conclusion became unavoidable: Wheat was the underlying cause for an incredible array of health problems and weight gain, and that eliminating was key to astounding health.

And note that this was not gluten avoidance for the gluten-sensitive; this was wheat avoidance for everybody, as it was a rare person who didn’t experience at least some measurable improvement in health, if not outright transformation. I now recommend complete wheat avoidance for all my patients, as well as anyone else interested in regaining control over health and weight.


2. How is wheat consumption linked to heart health?

Wheat consumption causes heart disease. It’s not cholesterol, it’s not saturated fat that’s behind the number one killer of Americans; it’s wheat.

The nutrition community has been guilty of following a flawed sequence of logic: If something bad for you (white processed flour) is replaced by something less bad (whole grains) and there is an apparent health benefit, then a whole bunch of the less bad thing is good for you. Let’s apply that to another situation: If something bad for you—unfiltered Camel cigarettes—are replaced by something less bad—filtered Salem Cigarettes—then the conclusion would be to smoke a lot of Salems. The next logical question should have been: What is the health consequence of complete removal? Only then can you observe the effect of whole grains vs. no grains . . . and, from what I witness every day, you see complete transformations in health.

Consumption of wheat, due to its unique carbohydrate, amylopectin A, triggers formation of small, dense LDL particles more than any other common food. Small, dense LDL particles are the number one cause for heart disease in the U.S. The majority of adults now have an abundance of small LDL particles because they’ve been told to cut their fat and “eat plenty of healthy whole grains.” This situation of excessive small LDL particles can appear on a conventional cholesterol panel as higher levels of LDL (“bad”) cholesterol, along with low HDL cholesterol and higher triglycerides that often leads to statin drugs. When more sophisticated lipoprotein testing is obtained, then the explosion of small LDL particles becomes obvious.

Compound this with the increased appetite triggered by the gliadin protein in wheat that acts as an appetite-stimulant, and you gain weight. The weight gained is usually in the abdomen, in the deep visceral fat that triggers inflammation, what I call a “wheat belly.” Wheat belly visceral fat is a hotbed of inflammation, sending out inflammatory signals into the bloodstream and results in higher blood sugar, blood pressure, and triglycerides, all adding up to increased risk for heart disease.

Say goodbye to wheat and small LDL particles plummet, followed by weight loss from the wheat belly visceral fat. Inflammation subsides, blood sugar drops, blood pressure drops. In short, elimination of wheat is among the most powerful means of reducing risk for heart disease.


3. What other conditions have you seen to be associated with wheat consumption?

A shorter list might be what conditions have not been associated with wheat consumption.

Gastrointestinal consequences of wheat consumption include the common conditions of acid reflux and irritable bowel syndrome symptoms of gas, cramps, and diarrhea. People with inflammatory bowel diseases such as ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease experience improvement and, sometimes, complete relief from cramps, pain, diarrhea, and bleeding.

Brain and nervous system effects range from mood disruption, such as depression, to behavioral outbursts in children with ADHD and autism, to triggering of hallucinations in people with schizophrenia and mania in people with bipolar illness. Wheat can also inflict direct damage on the brain and nervous system and show up as a condition called cerebellar ataxia, the progressive loss of balance and bladder control, and peripheral neuropathy, the loss of feeling, usually in the feet and legs. A British research group, for instance, has found that 50% of unexplained peripheral neuropathy can be blamed on wheat. There’s also the recent detailed description of gluten encephalopathy, or dementia from wheat by the Mayo Clinic; diagnosis is usually made at autopsy.

Joint pain and swelling are common accompaniments of wheat consumption. The most common form involves the wrist and fingers. Others experience relief from back pain and hip and knee pain with eliminating wheat, especially if weight loss from the abdomen develops, since this belly fat serves as a repository for inflammation; lose the wheat belly, inflammation subsides.

Skin conditions commonly improve or disappear with wheat elimination. Common conditions like acne improve, as well as a long list (enough to fill four pages) of other skin conditions from granuloma annulare, to allergic dermatitis, to gangrene.

From the head down to the toes, there is no body system not affected by consumption of wheat.


4. What are the most important things to understand when it comes to wheat consumption?

I believe one of the most crucial aspects of the wheat conversation for people to understand is that the gliadin protein in wheat acts as an appetite-stimulant. People who consume the gliadin protein in wheat consume, on average, 400 more calories per day. People who eliminate the gliadin protein of wheat consume 400 calories less per day, even if calories, fat grams, or portion sizes are unrestricted.

I think that this fact has been used to advantage by Big Food. Put wheat flour, and thereby gliadin, into every product you can, you increase appetite, increase consumption, increase sales. I believe this explains why wheat flour can be found in the most improbable places like tomato soup and licorice.

The gliadin protein in wheat exerts this effect on the human brain because it is degraded to a group of compounds called exorphins, or exogenous morphine-like compounds; these effects that can be blocked with administration of opiate-blocking drugs. Yes, the appetite-stimulating effect of wheat can be completely disabled by administering the same drugs that heroine addicts take to block their “high.” Studies in volunteers have demonstrated that people administered opiate-blocking drugs have much reduced desire for cake, cupcakes, and cookies. A drug company filed its application in early 2011 for the drug naltrexone for weight loss; in clinical trials, naltrexone was successful, with participants losing 22 pounds per month by reducing calorie intake 400 calories per day.

As long as wheat remains a part of your diet, you will not have full control over impulse and hunger. Calorie consumption is higher, especially for carbohydrate foods. Weight accumulates, particularly around the middle. Eliminate wheat, on the other hand, and you regain normal physiologic control over hunger.


5. If a person decides to eliminate wheat, should he/she turn to “gluten free” alternatives or what type of diet have you found to be optimal?

First, I believe we should return to real, unprocessed foods as often as possible. It means eating vegetables, raw nuts, meats, fish, eggs (including the yolks), cheese, healthy oils like extra-virgin olive and coconut. I do not believe that we should count or limit calories, especially after we’ve eliminated the potent appetite stimulant, wheat. If you miss baked goods, I provide recipes in the Wheat Belly book, as well as on The Wheat Belly Blog (www.wheatbellyblog.com). These recipes for chocolate chip cookies and cheesecake, for example, are wheat-free, nearly sugar-free, low-carbohydrate and are generally healthy enough to eat anytime with none of the adverse health consequences like weight gain or bloating.

I strongly urge people to avoid commercial gluten-free products. This is because, in place of wheat flour, these products, such as gluten-free whole grain bread, are made using cornstarch, rice starch, tapioca starch, and potato starch. These powdered starches are among the few foods that increase blood sugar higher than even whole wheat. It means these foods trigger weight gain in the abdomen (“gluten-free belly”), increased blood sugars, insulin resistance and diabetes, cataracts, and arthritis. They are not healthy replacements for wheat.

http://wellnessmama.com/3486/do-you-have-a-wheat-belly-interview-with-dr-davis/
 

RJC

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Everyone should take drugs
No one should eat wheat!
Leave it all for me!
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
It seems it is not so harmless. If you are doing hard labor then you will get away with a bit. On the other hand if you doing little in the way of exercise then watch out.
 

TerryK

TB Fanatic
The entire food pyramid is upside down.
Wheat and all starches are bad for you and promote hear disease and many other problems.
paleo-food-pyramid.png


High fat, moderate protein and very, very low carbohydrate diets have any benefits.
They are being used now to fight cancer, control epilepsy, postpone Alzheimer progression, enhance mental alertness, and fight heart disease.
The navy is even using artificially induced ketosis to improve SEAL ability to resist O2 poisoning at greater depths using rebreathers

 
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Garryowen

Deceased
I can affirm the results of avoiding wheat. Both DW and I have lost over 20 pounds, simply eliminating most of our wheat consumption.
 

Sebastian

Sebastian
Its been about five years from the time I was diagnosed as a celiac and I still crave biscuits. Have not voluntarily eaten wheat since but I still crave it,

Addictive?
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
Not good when you come down with something related to eating wheat and some other grains,
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Celiac disease -- also known as celiac sprue or gluten-sensitive enteropathy -- is a digestive and autoimmune disorder that results in damage to the lining of the small intestine when foods with gluten are eaten. Glutens are a form of protein found in some grains. The damage to the intestine makes it hard for the body to absorb nutrients, especially fat, calcium, iron, and folate.

Tips to Go Gluten-Free
What Causes Celiac Disease?

Normally, the body's immune system is designed to protect it from foreign invaders. When people with celiac disease eat foods containing gluten, their immune system forms antibodies to gluten which then attack the intestinal lining. This causes inflammation in the intestines and damages the villi, the hair-like structures on the lining of the small intestine. Nutrients from food are normally absorbed by the villi. If the villi are damaged, the person cannot absorb nutrients properly and ends up malnourished, no matter how much he or she eats.
What Are the Symptoms of Celiac Disease?

Symptoms of celiac disease vary among sufferers and include:

Digestive problems (abdominal bloating, pain, gas, diarrhea, pale stools, and weight loss)
A severe skin rash called dermatitis herpetiformis
Iron deficiency anemia (low blood count)
Musculoskeletal problems (muscle cramps, joint and bone pain)
Growth problems and failure to thrive (in children)
Seizures
Tingling sensation in the legs (caused by nerve damage and low calcium)
Aphthous ulcers (sores in the mouth)
Missed menstrual periods


What Health Problems Accompany Celiac Disease?

Celiac disease can leave a person susceptible to other health problems, including:

Osteoporosis, a disease that weakens bones and leads to fractures. This occurs because the person has trouble absorbing enough calcium and vitamin D.
Miscarriage or infertility.
Birth defects, such as neural tube defects (improper formation of the spine) caused by poor absorption of such nutrients as folic acid.
Seizures.
Growth problems in children because they don't absorb enough nutrients.
Cancer of the intestine (very rare).

People who have celiac disease may have other autoimmune diseases, including:

Thyroid disease
Type 1 diabetes
Lupus
Rheumatoid arthritis
Sjögren's syndrome (a disorder that causes insufficient moisture production by the glands)


How Is Celiac Disease Diagnosed?

If your doctor suspects you have celiac disease, he or she will perform a careful physical exam and will discuss your medical history with you. He or she may also perform a blood test to measure for higher levels of certain types of antibodies (substances produced by the immune system to fight harmful invaders) found in people with celiac disease.

Your doctor may perform other tests to detect nutritional deficiencies, such as a blood test to detect iron levels; a low level of iron (which can cause anemia) can occur with celiac disease. A stool sample may be tested to detect fat in the stool, since celiac disease prevents fat from being absorbed from food.

Your doctor may take a biopsy from your small intestine to check for damage to the villi. To perform a biopsy, the doctor inserts an endoscope (a thin, hollow tube) through your mouth and into the small intestine under mild sedation and takes a sample of the small intestine with an instrument to examine under a microscope.

http://www.webmd.com/digestive-disorders/celiac-disease/celiac-disease
 

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Wheat Belly, by Dr. William Davis
About.com Rating 4.5 Star Rating
User Rating 4 Star Rating (1 Review)

By Jane Anderson

Updated February 24, 2012
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Those of us with celiac disease and gluten sensitivity already know too well the obnoxious symptoms we can get from gluten exposure: diarrhea, constipation, brain fog, fatigue, irritability and insomnia.

But would you blame wheat and gluten for the obesity epidemic? What about for heart disease and diabetes?
Wheat: Responsible for Heart Disease, Dementia, Even Acne?

Wheat Belly, by preventive cardiologist Dr. William Davis, argues just that — and more — in a persuasive case that indicts wheat for (seemingly) most of the health ills of mankind.

Not only diabetes and heart disease can be blamed on increasing wheat ingestion, Dr. Davis argues, but irritable bowel syndrome, heartburn and dementia can stem from the gluten habit. Cataracts? Yup. Acne? Check. And weight gain — especially weight gain.

All this would be tough to absorb if I didn't already believe most of it myself. But as Guide to Celiac Disease for About.com, and as a journalist who's been studying the health implications of gluten ingestion for many years, Dr. Davis's book rings true.
Wheat Belly Traces (and Blames) Modern Wheat Development

As Dr. Davis explains it, increased wheat ingestion in the U.S. (the result, in part, of the government campaign to eat less fat and more "healthy whole grains") has coincided with the increased obesity rate, with its corresponding increases in heart disease and diabetes.

But the problem doesn't end there: promotion of a "healthy whole grains-based" diet also coincided with genetic manipulation of the wheat plant, which over just a few decades changed the familiar "amber waves of grain" into dwarf, stocky brown plants heavy with huge grain kernels.

"Fourteen-chromosome wild grass has been transformed into the forty-two-chromosome, nitrate-fertilized, top-heavy, ultra-high-yield variety that now enables us to buy bagels by the dozen, pancakes by the stack, and pretzels by the 'family size' bag," Dr. Davis writes.


As a result of this genetic manipulation, modern wheat contains far more gluten than its ancestors, he says. It also contains far more of other allergenic and immune system-stimulating compounds than ancient wheat.

In addition, wheat's addictive, which leads people who eat it to consume about 350 to 400 additional calories each day, Dr. Davis maintains. Wheat contributes more than any other grain to insulin resistance, the precursor to diabetes, because it causes significant rises in blood sugar. And, it contributes significantly to coronary artery disease by promoting unhealthy forms of cholesterol.
Wheat Belly Backs Up Assertions with Research, Anecdotes


Even for those of us who already avoid wheat and other gluten grains, all this is quite a bit to take in. But Dr. Davis backs up his assertions with plenty of footnoted evidence and anecdotes from his own cardiology practice in Milwaukee, Wis.

When it comes to diabetes and heart disease, he's got years of records on hundreds of patients, and he uses prescriptions for a wheat-free diet throughout his practice to help reverse heart disease.

In addition, his evidence for weight gain due to wheat and subsequent gluten-free diet weight loss also is strong, with several studies backed up by evidence from his medical practice.

The evidence Dr. Davis offers for wheat's effects on the aging process — that wheat, in essence, speeds up aging — is a bit more circumstantial. But I honestly don't have any trouble believing that, either, given all I know about gluten's inflammation-promoting properties.

Overall, the book makes a persuasive case that Americans could significantly improve their health if they'd stop eating wheat, cold turkey.
Bottom Line: Excellent, If You Like Research Books
Wheat Belly goes into a little detail on celiac disease, but it's not intended to be another book on celiac disease. Instead, like the well-written volume Dangerous Grains by Dr. James Braly and Ron Hoggan, it goes well beyond celiac disease to explore some of the other manifestations of gluten intolerance and wheat/gluten effects on human health.

The book occasionally seems repetitive, which shouldn't seem that surprising; after all, each chapter details yet another disease or condition and then blames wheat for it.

Dr. Davis writes well, with enough anecdotes and stories mixed in to soften the hard science data he's presenting, and he backs up his research with more than 250 references to medical studies.

He also includes an appendix with 28 wheat-free recipes, many of which look intriguing to me from my preferred low-carb perspective (recipes include cauliflower crust pizza and pecan-encrusted chicken with tapenade).

However, another appendix on instituting a wheat-free diet doesn't go far enough or provide enough detail for those of us with celiac or severe gluten intolerance, so I wouldn't rely on it. To be fair, Dr. Davis states up front that people with celiac or who get serious symptoms from gluten should be more careful than he suggests.

The bottom line: Wheat Belly offers a strong indictment of wheat, well beyond its role in celiac disease. If you enjoyed Dangerous Grains or Good Calories, Bad Calories by Gary Taubes, you'll also enjoy reading this book.
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User Reviews

Reviews for this section have been closed.
4 out of 5
Wheat/gluten sensitivity, Member silqin

"I ignored ""Wheat Belly"" by William Davis, M.D., discounting it as just another food fad book, until I witnessed the results that a colleague achieved by removing wheat from her diet. Not only did she shrink by one trouser size (down to size 14) within two weeks but, also and best of all, she lost the persistent burning sensation in her abdomen that had plagued her for more than five years. Thus, I read ""Wheat Belly"", and was amazed by the scope of Davis's observations regarding the pervasiveness of wheat/gluten in our normal food supplies and the unhealthy physical and mental conditions that can and do develop in people who are simply eating and living in seemingly healthy manner. When Davis wrote about the connection between wheat/gluten and arthritis, diabetes, and auto-immune conditions, he riveted my attention because I've been struggling with the non-prescription management of these conditions for longer than I care to remember. Food is my medicine. I take a number of supplements to manage arthritis. I carefully balance my food combinations to manage Type II diabetes and auto-immune events, and I eat at regular intervals to ensure that my insulin is never spiked nor depleted. However, until now I had no reason to suspect that the recommended foods included in my diet, ie., the complex carbohydrates of which wheat/gluten are part and parcel, could be exacerbating the conditions I have been managing. On the strength of Davis's well-reasoned argument, I have cut wheat/gluten products from my food regime. The new food intake has only been followed for one week, sufficiently long to notice advantageous changes in digestive function. I will give it a month before I decide whether this experiment becomes a permanent life-style change. I recommend this book on the strength of the amazing information compiled by Dr. Davis. Even if one has no wheat belly, celiac disease nor other condition discussed in ""Wheat Belly"", it is worth reading for the enlightenment offered about the current food industry, government, and science. It is a page-turner, written with just the right amount of humour to indicate that this is no ivory-tower medical practitioner. Read it and rejoice."

http://celiacdisease.about.com/od/glutenintolerance/fr/Wheat-Belly-By-Dr-William-Davis.htm
 

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From above


Ketogenic Diet Plan

The goal of a low carb, ketogenic diet plan is to achieve a metabolic state called ketosis. Ketosis is simply a normal metabolic process in which the body cells burn fragments of fats called ketones instead of glucose for fuel.

Ketosis is a beneficial process and helps the body survive during times when no food is available. It has also been shown to improve disease conditions such as epilepsy, autism, Alzheimer's, cancer and others.

This site will answer some questions you may have about a ketogenic diet plan including:

How do I start a Ketogenic Diet Plan?
Do I need to worry about the "dangers of low carb diets"?
What are the side effects of a ketogenic diet?
What are the benefits of a ketogenic diet?

But first a little legal and medical coverage: I am not a doctor or a dietitian. I am just a person who has lots of experience with eating the ketogenic way. I cured my health problems with a ketogenic diet.

I am not guaranteeing that this diet will work for you or cure your health problems. I am just sharing what I know about ketogenic diets. Click here for the full legal disclaimer.

Note of Caution
You should check with your physician if you have any concerns about starting a ketogenic diet plan with pre-existing health conditions, especially if those conditions involve kidney or heart problems.

Although ketosis, and ketogenic diets in general, are beneficial for most people, there is some anecdotal and research based evidence that suggests that ketosis will cause a transient increase in the body's levels of adrenaline and cortisol for a small subgroup of people.

These higher levels of stimulant hormones can cause thyroid issues, heart irregularities and elevated blood pressure for some, while others just feel more alert.

If you find you are one of the people in this subset, adding enough carbohydrate back into your diet to come out of ketosis should resolve the issues, and still allow for the health benefits and weight loss, if desired. However, you should consult your doctor about starting a ketogenic diet if you have any concerns.

However, be aware that most classically trained doctors don't understand the effect of foods on the body, much less ketogenic diets, so you may get push back, and a terrifying "danger of ketosis" sermon.

Just remember the doctor is confusing ketosis with ketoacidosis. These are two different conditions, click on the link to read why.

Now back to our regularly scheduled program..
The Basic Concepts

There are many low carbohydrate, ketogenic diet plans from which to choose. (The Atkins diet is just the most famous). They all involve following a higher fat, moderate protein, low carb food plan.

The main difference between a regular low carb diet plan and a ketogenic diet plan is the amount of carbohydrate and protein allowed on a daily basis:

ketogenic diet ratios

A ketogenic diet plan requires tracking the carb amounts in the foods eaten and keeping carbohydrate intake between 20-50 grams per day. The daily protein requirement will be moderate, and depends on height, gender and how much exercise is done. The balance of calories will be from fats. These ratios ensure that most people go into ketosis and stay there, which is the main objective of the ketogenic diet.

The nutrient intake on a ketogenic diet typically works out to about 70-75% of calories from fat, 20-25% from protein, and 5-10% from carbohydrate on a daily basis. Since a ketogenic diet reduces hunger, most find they don't really need to get involved in calorie counting, unless one feels more comfortable tracking them.

The key to understanding a ketogenic diet plan is to remember that one is swapping out the carbs in the diet with a higher fat and a moderate protein intake.

Why high fat and moderate protein? Fats have no effect on blood sugar and insulin levels. Protein does effect both blood sugar and insulin, if large quantities are consumed. If you overeat protein, about 56% of any excess protein will be converted to glucose (sugar) in the body, and that extra glucose hanging around will increase insulin, and put the brakes on the body's ability to release and burn fatty acids (go into ketosis).

In addition, eating a diet that is heavy on lean protein (without enough fat) can make one sick with a condition know as "rabbit starvation". It can also wreck the metabolism in other ways.
How to Start A Ketogenic Diet Plan

Get a book that explains the science behind ketogenic diets and read the whole thing. Make sure to understand everything that will happen when carbohydrate intake drops. Ketogenic diets are very powerful, metabolically speaking. This is especially important if any kind of medication for blood pressure, cholesterol or triglycerides is being taken. These books are highly recommended:

New Atkins for a New You: The Ultimate Diet for Shedding Weight and Feeling Great. by Dr. Eric Westman, Dr. Jeff Volek and Dr. Stephen Phinney

Dr. Atkins' New Diet Revolution, Revised Edition by Dr. Robert Atkins

The Protein Power Lifeplan by Drs. Michael and Mary Dan Eades

The Art and Science of Low Carbohydrate Living: An Expert Guide to Making the Life-Saving Benefits of Carbohydrate Restriction Sustainable and Enjoyable by Dr. Jeff Volek and Dr. Stephen Phinney

Get a carb counter guide (see sidebar) to help learn and remember the carb counts of the foods being eaten. Counting carbs is a critical part of the program, and it's important to understand how to do this correctly.

Go on a carbohydrate sweep. Inspect kitchen cupboards and refrigerator, and remove all of the high carb foods. This includes any whole grain "complex carbs".

Restock the kitchen, so that the foods on this low carb food list are available. This will help keep you on the path, grasshopper, and out of the cookies. Here's a low carb grocery list to help with food shopping.

A ketogenic diet plan is not a "special diet" that requires special foods. There is no need to buy any "low carb" packaged foods. Ketogenic foods are essentially just real, whole foods which are close to their natural state. In other words, they are not highly processed.

The only exception to this is the category of artificial sweeteners. These are highly processed. However, I think these are important to include in a low carb diet plan, because a small amount of fake sweetener has less of a negative effect on health than the standard amounts of sugar in sweetened foods. Some people may prefer more natural sugar alcohol sweeteners, but studies have shown these are "antiketogenic" and can derail the process of ketosis for some. They effect each person differently, so you'll have to test to see if they effect your health or weight loss goals.

Be prepared to spend more time in the kitchen. This is an important point. A ketogenic diet menu involves cooking and eating real foods. If you don't know how to cook, this would be a good time to learn about cooking in general and specifically low carb cooking.

Think about your meals, and how you will plan them. This will help in buying the right foods at the grocery store, and give a framework to follow when meal time arrives. If you know you're supposed to have salmon and broccoli for dinner tonight, it makes it a lot easier to avoid choosing the old high carb foods you used to eat.

Replace old habits with new ones. If you're used to hitting the coffee place for a bagel, start making coffee at home, and have it with the eggs instead.

Stay hydrated. As carb intake is lowered, the kidneys will start dumping the excess water the body has been holding due to a high carb intake. Make sure to drink enough water to replace what gets lost. The old 6-8 glasses is a good rule, I guess, although just drinking to thirst will probably do the trick. If you find yourself getting headaches and muscle cramps, you need more water, and more minerals such as salt, magnesium and potassium, because the water loss also takes minerals with it. (See my low carb diet side effects page for more info).

Avoid the foods on this list of high carb foods. These are the foods that drive up your blood sugar and insulin levels. In addition, cereal grains like wheat are toxic for more people than is widely known. I think that most people with diet related health issues have an untreated gluten intolerance.

Consider taking these natural supplements. I recommend them for the specific issues I discuss on my low carb diet side effects page.

You may also want to buy some Ketostix Reagent Strips so that you can check to see if you are in ketosis for the first few weeks. However, after the first 3-4 weeks on the plan, the goal is to become "keto-adapted". Once adapted, the body should be burning the ketones for fuel. The stick shouldn't register as deep purple if you are using the ketones as a fuel source.

And recently, a blood ketones meter has become available to track ketosis at home. This is a much more accurate way to track your individual ketone levels. See the sidebar on my ketosis page for more information.

Find some way to track daily food intake and carb counts. Keep a spreadsheet, use one of the online food intake trackers, or simply write it down in a journal. Not only will journaling help you stay on track carb count wise, you'll want to have a record of the foods you are eating, how you felt and the changes you make so that if you go off track, you can look back and see what worked for you. This is a good place to track ketone levels as well. I've created a free printable food diary for you to use.

The Atkins website also has some nice tools for tracking your progress on a ketogenic diet plan. And this database is an excellent resource for food information.

Think about any social situations that will be encountered, and devise ways to handle those times when temptations to eat the "old" way will be high. You don't want to be blind sided when someone at the office brings in a box of your favorite chocolates and puts them right under your nose. Likewise, a beer with your friends usually turns into a date with potato skins and nachos. Think salad and steak instead.

Even if you are starting a ketogenic diet plan for weight loss purposes, don't focus on your weight. Don't weigh yourself every day. Your weight can vary between 2-4 pounds each day because of changes in water intake and absorption. You won't be able to track any fat loss accurately on a daily basis, and the fluctuations will make you crazy if you focus on them. Instead, weigh yourself once a week, or keep track of your body measurements to track your progress.

Better yet, focus on the health benefits and the long term health changes that come with eating a low carb diet. Knowing that you are greatly improving your health is a powerful reason to stay with a ketogenic diet plan, even if you don't lose any weight.

I discuss in more depth the health benefits of a ketogenic diet in this article published in the July/August issue of the Well Being Journal.

I recommend getting a health check up and a blood panel test done just before starting the diet, so that you can track the effect of the change in your eating habits on your cholesterol, blood pressure, and other health markers. Four to eight weeks later, you can get another blood test done and see if there are improvements.

Learn how to stop sugar cravings. There are supplements and techniques that can help you overcome those nagging thoughts of dessert and get your blood sugar under control. As time passes, you'll find that ketosis is a powerful appetite suppressant, so it should get easier to abstain the longer you eat ketogenically.

Fallacies and Fears: Is a Ketogenic Diet Plan Dangerous?

The "dangers of low carb diets" are really just myths told by people who have a limited understanding of how low carb diets work.

The main criticisms include fears about fat intake and the process of ketosis.

Fears about fat: Most people have trouble on a ketogenic diet plan because they are scared to increase the amount of fat they eat, especially saturated fat.

The message that fat is bad has been pounded into the collective American consciousness for the last 30 years. It's hard to unlearn the message that fat makes you fat, and saturated fat especially is very bad for you.

I understand that message has been repeated over and over, but it is a lie.

Here's the reality: A high carb diet drives up blood sugar and insulin levels. All that sugar and insulin are inflammatory. The standard American diet offers lots of foods that are high sugar AND high in saturated fat, and in studies, these two factors were lumped together. So although saturated fat is healthy, it got the blame for the inflammation that causes heart disease because it was studied in combination with a high carb diet. A ketogenic diet plan which is high in saturated fat and very low in carbohydrate will REDUCE inflammation. (Reference here.)

Saturated fat is not harmful in the context of a low carb diet. This study from Johns Hopkins Medical School confirms this.

The ketogenic diet plan is healthier because the higher saturated fat intake increases your HDL cholesterol, and at the same time, a lower carb intake decreases your triglycerides levels. These two factors are the major markers for heart disease, and the closer your triglyceride/HDL ratio is to 1, the healthier your heart.

In reality, the cause of heart disease is a chronically high carbohydrate consumption, not a high saturated fat and cholesterol intake.

I think the best way to learn this is to get a full blood test before you start a ketogenic diet plan, then do the diet faithfully for 3 months. Then have your blood work checked again. You'll see the difference and discover how much better you feel. (See my Healthy Eating Politics website for more information on the how the lie that "cholesterol and saturated fat cause heart disease" got started and gets repeated.

Some people don't do well in ketosis. As I mentioned above, you should check with your physician if you have any concerns about starting a ketogenic diet plan with pre-existing health conditions, especially if those conditions involve kidney or heart problems.

As I said above, although ketosis, and ketogenic diets in general, are beneficial for most people, there is some anecdotal and research based evidence that suggest that deep ketosis will cause a transient increase in the body's levels of adrenaline and cortisol for a small subgroup of people.

These higher levels of stimulant hormones can cause thyroid issues, heart irregularities and elevated blood pressure for some, while others just feel more alert.

It's for this reason that I don't recommend going much lower than 15-20 carbs per day. The ketogenic is a very low carb diet, but it is not a zero carb diet.

If you find you are one of the people who doesn't feel well at very low carb levels, adding enough carbohydrate back into your diet to come out of ketosis should resolve the issues, and may still allow for the health benefits for sure, and weight loss, for some.

General Side Effects

Switching to a ketogenic diet plan is not easy at first. Here's a list of all of the common side effects that will happen the first week or so of starting a ketogenic diet. If you know about them, you can take steps to minimize them, and save yourself some carb withdrawal misery.

That withdrawal period and side effects are associated with the time it takes for your body to refit itself to burn mostly fat instead of sugar. New enzymes have to be created.

Dr. Mike Eades has a great analogy for this process in this blog post. He writes:

"When you’ve been on the standard American high-carb diet, you’re loaded with enzymes ready to convert those carbs to energy. You’ve got some enzymes laying in the weeds waiting to deal with the fat, but mainly dealing with it by storing it, not necessarily burning it. All the pathways to deal with carbs and their resultant blood glucose are well-oiled and operating smoothly.

Then you start a low-carb diet. Suddenly, you’ve idled most of the enzyme force you have built to process the carbs in your diet while at the same time you don’t have a ready supply of the enzymes in the quantities needed to deal with your new diet.

It would be like a Ford automobile factory changing in one day into a plant that made iPads. All the autoworkers would show up and be clueless as how to make an iPad. It would take a while – not to mention a lot of chaos – to get rid of the autoworkers and replace them with iPad workers. In a way, that’s kind of what’s happening during the low-carb adaptation period.

Over the first few days to few weeks of low-carb adaptation, your body is laying off the carbohydrate worker enzymes and building new fat worker enzymes. Once the workforce in your body is changed out, you start functioning properly on your new low-carb, higher-fat diet. The carbs you used to burn for energy are now replaced to a great extent by ketones..."

In addition, during the first week or so, your blood sugar will drop, and you may experience insulin overload and a reactive hypoglycemia episode once you burn through all of your stored glycogen (carb energy stored in your muscles and liver).

For those of you that have been living on a high carb diet for a long time, the effects may be even more pronounced, as your blood sugar and insulin levels are probably chronically high.

Benefits and Dangers

As mentioned above, the "dangers of low carb diets" are false beliefs and unsubstantiated fears communicated by people who have a limited understanding of how low carb diets work, or by people with financial or professional reasons to maintain support for the low fat, high carb message.

For instance, since the privately owned Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics (formerly the American Dietetic Association) receives great sums of money from processed food manufacturers, they can't just suddenly start saying that a high fat, low grain diet is healthiest - they would lose all their funding from companies like Kraft Foods, Hershey's and Coca-Cola.

The more likely result of a ketogenic diet plan, once you've adapted to it, is that you will feel much better and be much healthier. One of the long list of health benefits of a ketogenic diet is that it lowers your fasting blood sugar and insulin levels, helps reverse insulin resistant conditions, cools inflammation and in turn, leads to better overall health.

If you have any lingering concerns, please remember that the latest scientific studies (visit the Nutrition and Metabolism Society) have shown that following a ketogenic diet plan is not detrimental to human health, if it is eaten while also minimizing carbohydrate intake.

It's only when you combine lots of fat and lots of carbohydrates in your diet that you get into trouble. The sugar from the carbohydrates drives up your insulin levels, and those high insulin levels cause any fat you eat to be stored immediately. This causes the weight gain associated with insulin resistance and starts the health problems that should be associated with a high carb diet, not a ketogenic diet plan.

Last tip: You may be able to find a doctor who has actually read the latest studies on ketogenic diets, understands how to manage a ketogenic diet plan, and who practices in your area by checking this resource.
If this information has been helpful to you, please consider donating to help keep this site running. Any contribution is gratefully accepted and sincerely appreciated.

http://www.ketogenic-diet-resource.com/ketogenic-diet-plan.html
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
Common sources of gluten

Gluten is a protein found in the following cereal grains: wheat, barley, rye and oats. In addition many processed foods contain hidden sources of gluten.
Gluten is responsible for the cooking and baking properties of these grains. They are described as gluten-containing grains and must be avoided when on a gluten free diet.
Other names for these grains or common derivatives are:
Wheat

Atta
Bourghul/bulgar/bulghur/bulgur
Bran
Couscous
Dinkel
Durum
Emmer
Farina
German Wheat
Graham Flour
Kamat
Polish Wheat
Semolina
Spelt
Triticale (hybrid of wheat and rye)
Wheat bran
Wheat germ

Barley

Malt (barley)

Rye
Oats

Pilcorn

Any type of food containing wheat flour, wheat, barley, rye, oats is not suitable for coeliacs. This includes, but is not limited to; biscuits, cakes, pastry, pasta, breadcrumbs, sausages, sauces, mayonaise and food cooked in batter. Foods containing corn, maize, potato, rice, soy or tapioca are suitable for people with coeliac disease. For more information on foods that are gluten free and foods that contain gluten, see our Getting to Grips with gluten free page

We recommend you purchase our 'Reading Food Labels' booklet to help guide you with your gluten free shopping and our 'Manufactured Foods List' booklet to help you find brands and products which are gluten free. You can purchase these at our Shop

We also have grocery and manufacturer guides which identify shops selling gluten free items and companies that make gluten free food. You can view our grocery guide here and our manufacturers guide here

http://www.coeliac.org.nz/what-contains-gluten
 

gelatinous

Eyes WIDE Open
DW has been on a wheat free diet for quite some time. There are some things you would normally think wouldn't have wheat in them that are everyday consumables. The industry tries to hide the wheat content with various phrases. Modified food starch, hydrolyzed vegetable protein, etc.

We've been snowed in the past couple of days and we don't have any wheat bread in the house (since we ran out the day before the snow hit and haven't been to the store). I've definitely had a craving for bread. Almost like going without caffine for a day or so. DW made some wheat free bread and it definitely didn't satisfy the craving.
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
I have Scotch Finger cookies staring me in the face now. I'll give them away tomorrow. It is terrible having to control one's self.
 

Watchman2

Veteran Member
The thing is bread has been a staple for centuries but is was grown and processed way differently. Back in the day they did not bleach it to death robbing of its natural attributes , nor did they issue vaccines to mess with your autoimmune system

W2
 
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