jet

joined 2 years ago
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A nice casual high level overview of zero carb, benefits, downsides, current evidence, all humanized and concise. Good for curious onlookers to get a view of keto/carnivore.

summerizerCarnivore Diet: Proposed Mechanism

  • A meat-only diet removes plant foods, wheat, soy, sugar, vegetable oils, and most processed foods at the same time.
  • The recurring pattern is weight loss, lower hunger, clearer thinking, reduced anxiety, less depression, fewer migraines, calmer digestion, less arthritis, better skin, and better blood-sugar control after removal.
  • Mikhaila Peterson’s beef-only case anchors the story: severe arthritis, artificial hip and ankle, depression, bipolar disorder, chronic fatigue, heavy medication use, and 17-hour sleep shifted after narrowing food to beef.
  • In that account, itch and joint pain improved within 2 weeks, depression lifted after 4 more weeks, and anxiety lifted after 5 months.
  • TEDx did not upload her talk, while many vegan personal-success talks stayed online, which sets the media double-standard angle.

Historical Meat-Only Cases

  • Stefansson’s Arctic experience and the Inuit example are used to show that near-plantless eating can coexist with health, low scurvy concern, and low dental disease in that account.
  • The Bellevue meat-only year with Stefansson and Karsten Anderson is used as the strongest historical test: N=2, all meat, supervised, weight loss, lower blood pressure, fewer gut-gas findings, and no feared collapse.
  • Lean meat caused problems during the trial, while higher fat corrected them, so the diet depends on enough fat and not just protein.
  • The 1886 British Medical Journal case adds an early one-person example of weight loss, higher activity, and gas relief on meat-only eating.

Fiber, Gas, and Gut Load

  • The gut section rejects the universal fiber rule: fiber can help some people, but the transcript says it can worsen symptoms in others.
  • The 63-patient constipation study is the key example: high fiber had worse symptoms, reduced fiber improved symptoms, and the zero-fiber group had no symptoms.
  • Gas matters because fiber fermentation can increase gas, gas transit can slow, and methane can slow intestinal movement enough to aggravate constipation.
  • Human digestive anatomy is linked to meat and fat: bigger brains, smaller guts, strong stomach acid, and high absorption of animal foods.
  • Smaller stool volume on meat-only eating is linked to more complete digestion, not constipation.
  • The 2021 carnivore survey is used for modern gut evidence: among 531 people using carnivore for gut issues, 97% improved or fully resolved the issue.

Diabetes, Insulin Resistance, and Red Meat

  • The diabetes section contrasts red-meat diabetes warnings with carnivore survey outcomes for diabetes or insulin resistance.
  • In the 2021 survey subgroup, 402 people used carnivore for diabetes or insulin resistance; 74% fully resolved it, 24% improved it, and 98% had benefit.
  • John Rollo’s 1797 meat-and-fat diabetes cases and the 2009 insulin-resistance/CAD paper are used to link carbohydrate restriction, insulin resistance, and heart-disease risk.

Plant Defenses and Nutrient Availability

  • The plant-food section says plants defend themselves chemically, and small amounts of many plant compounds at every meal can add up for sensitive people.
  • Examples include lime-induced burns with sunlight, sorrel-soup oxalate poisoning, oxalate kidney-damage cases, wheat gliadin, and protease inhibitors in grains, nuts, seeds, and soy.
  • The nutrient point is that plant minerals can be poorly available: spinach iron, oyster zinc eaten with beans or corn tortillas, and minerals bound by fiber or phytate.
  • Animal foods function as dense sources of iodine, iron, zinc, B vitamins, vitamins A and D, choline, creatine, and highly absorbed protein.

Mental Health, Inflammation, and Ketosis

  • Mental-health anecdotes are tied to nutrient density, lower gut irritation, lower inflammation, and ketosis.
  • Meat abstention, constipation, IBS, inflammation, LPS exposure, obesity, arthritis, fasting, and ketogenic diets are used as connected pieces in the pathway.
  • Ketosis is the shared feature between fasting and most carnivore diets; ketone production is linked to lower inflammatory signaling in several cited works.
  • The Matt Baszucki bipolar story and Chris Palmer’s metabolic-psychiatry view give the mental-health endpoint: keto can change brain-energy metabolism when medication alone has not worked.

Limits

  • Long-term carnivore examples include Jordan Peterson and Shawn Baker, but the transcript also includes people who quit or added carbohydrates back.
  • Paul Saladino’s move away from pure carnivore is used as the main caution: electrolyte trouble, lower free testosterone, and lower thyroid function can occur.

References

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 1 hour ago

The food theory - theory is that since the glucose is inside a cell, its more healthy.

 

Today, we dive into a significant case of Alzheimer's disease research fraud that shook the scientific community for two decades. This educational video explores how a scientist's data manipulation led to billions invested based on potentially false findings. It raises crucial questions about research ethics and the integrity of medical research, highlighting the importance of critical thinking in science. Join us to understand the implications of this incident.

summerizerAlzheimer's research fraud and the amyloid detour

  • Alzheimer's research began with Alois Alzheimer's 1906 brain examination and the discovery of amyloid-beta plaques.
  • The amyloid cascade hypothesis became the field's central model: plaques accumulate, plaques damage the brain, and plaque removal should stop Alzheimer's.
  • That model drove more than a century of work, yet amyloid removal repeatedly failed to deliver a cure.

The Aβ*56 breakthrough

  • In 2006, Sylvain Lesné at the University of Minnesota published the Nature paper that made Aβ*56 a candidate toxic culprit.
  • Aβ*56 was a soluble oligomer, not a hard plaque, and the mouse work tied it to memory loss before plaque formation.
  • The paper became field-shaping, drew thousands of citations, helped direct grant money, and sent labs and drug companies after amyloid oligomers.
  • The goal was prevention: stop Aβ*56 early and stop Alzheimer's before the disease fully starts.

The image-manipulation scandal

  • In 2022, Charles Piller's Science investigation, aided by Matthew Schrag's forensic image work, found Western blot problems in Lesné-linked work.
  • The suspect images involved duplicated bands, inconsistent backgrounds, splicing, and other signs that protein evidence had been digitally altered.
  • The image problems mattered because the images were the visual proof for Aβ*56 and its supposed link to memory loss.
  • The scandal widened beyond the 2006 paper, with later concerns across additional Lesné papers and a University of Minnesota inquiry.
  • Lesné remained in his role for years after exposure, deepening the sense that accountability was slow.

The human and financial cost

  • Billions of dollars, thousands of research hours, young careers, and patient hopes moved toward amyloid oligomer work built on unstable evidence.
  • Patients entered trials with invasive procedures, side effects, and hope for drugs linked to a story that could not bear the weight placed on it.
  • Other disease mechanisms lost oxygen because funding and prestige kept flowing into amyloid-centered work.
  • The scandal damages trust in peer review, top journals, academic oversight, and pharmaceutical incentives.

Anti-amyloid drugs after the scandal

  • Lecanemab costs about $26,500 per year and removes amyloid, but it also carries ARIA risk, including brain swelling and bleeding.
  • Clearing plaques does not equal restored memory; patients can still decline while amyloid burden falls.
  • Amyloid is made by neurons, so removing it does not remove the reason the brain keeps making it.
  • Aducanumab reached FDA approval amid controversy, advisory-committee resignations, weak clinical confidence, and later market withdrawal.

Why amyloid may be the wrong target

  • Amyloid burden does not map cleanly onto cognitive decline; some people die with heavy amyloid and intact cognition.
  • A 2008 amyloid-imaging study found amyloid deposition in cognitively normal older adults without worse cognitive function.
  • Amyloid-beta also has antimicrobial activity, with mouse, worm, and cell work showing protection against microbial infection.
  • This changes the core question from amyloid removal to why the brain mounts an amyloid defense and fails to clear it after danger passes.

The metabolic and infection model

  • Alzheimer's fits a metabolic-disease model in which impaired brain glucose use leaves neurons under-fueled.
  • The type 3 diabetes idea links Alzheimer's with brain insulin resistance and defective energy handling.
  • Ketones offer an alternate fuel route when glucose handling is impaired, which is why low-carb, ketogenic, and carnivore approaches matter here.
  • Chronic triggers such as herpes viruses, periodontal bacteria, gut pathogens, inflammation, and metabolic dysfunction can drive amyloid as a defense response.
  • Brain-health prevention should center on metabolic health, infection control, vascular health, microvascular function, inflammation reduction, and insulin sensitivity.

Lessons from the scandal

  • Follow the money when drug markets depend on one hypothesis staying alive.
  • Question authority when prestigious journals miss manipulated work for sixteen years.
  • Use joined-up thinking when plaques, symptoms, drug results, and healthy amyloid-positive brains do not fit the official story.
  • Prevention beats late-stage plaque removal: nutrition, metabolic optimization, sleep, movement, and root-cause work come before expensive infusions.
  • The brain evolved to run on real fuel and integrated physiology, not recurring IV antibody cycles that can injure the brain.

References

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 5 points 5 hours ago* (last edited 5 hours ago) (2 children)

Do they not know that Diet Coke doesn’t have sugar? That’s the whole point of it. It’s hard to take them seriously after that.

They cover it in the video

Artificial sweeteners were removed because sweet taste still engages the same reward pathway logic that made this experiment about cravings, dopamine, and sweet reinforcement.

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 5 points 5 hours ago (1 children)

Don't forget the morning diabetes in a cup from dunkin/starbucks! easily 1000kcal

But yes, I used to live this way... it was totally normal

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 4 points 6 hours ago (2 children)

It's kinda funny they go through sugar cravings, but they can't kick the habit because they are wolfing down high sugar dates and whole grain pasta, so the cravings come back in week 4.

At the end where they talk about their take aways, only doing sugar deserts on one day a week... imagine if someone knew they were an alcoholic and decide only on fridays they can have jeager shots.... i mean, sure, harm reduction... but..... they are so close to making a breakthrough.

-1
submitted 6 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago) by jet@hackertalks.com to c/ketogenic@discuss.online
 

What happens if you quit sugar for one day? That would be pretty difficult, right? No M&Ms, no Diet Coke, no Feastables. How about a week? Even tough. Well, how about a full month? That's right, 30 FULL DAYS without sugar. Beatrice Caruso did it. Matt D'Avella did it. So can we? Our bodies are in for a rude awakening...

It's not keto, they went for no-added sugar, and only cellular sugar. They made a weird distinction between wheat carbs and crabs from whole wheat bread... but it's a bunch of people cutting down on their sugar for a month. Interesting to see. So they still had a bunch of carbs, but lower carb then they were eating before, and they even said they were going through keto flu.

summerizer30-Day Sugar Cutoff Experiment

  • A one-month sugar cutoff began because a food-channel job, parenting around sweets, and constant exposure to candy, sauces, fast food, and sweet drinks made sugar and sweeteners a daily default.
  • Steph, Kai, Ash, and Matt joined the experiment to track physical and mental changes when heavy sugar users removed almost all sugar from their diets.
  • The rule set allowed whole fruits and naturally occurring sugars in fruits, vegetables, and milk, because those sugars come inside intact foods with nutrients such as fiber.
  • Free sugars were removed: candy, cookies, soda, fruit juice, syrups, donuts, added sugars, and other sugars released from food cells or added during processing.
  • Fruit juice was removed because squeezing fruit breaks cell walls, releases sugar, removes the eating experience of whole fruit, and makes it easy to consume several fruits' worth of sugar quickly.
  • Artificial sweeteners were removed because sweet taste still engages the same reward pathway logic that made this experiment about cravings, dopamine, and sweet reinforcement.
  • Simple carbohydrates such as flour, rice, rice flour, pastas, certain breads, cereals, waffles, and pancakes were also removed because they break down into sugar and spike blood glucose.
  • The diet was extreme enough to count as a crash diet, so major food changes should be checked with a doctor or qualified expert.

Week 1: Withdrawal, Hunger, and Keto Flu

  • The challenge began with strong sugar habits: Steph estimated sugar as a huge part of her diet, Ash called themself a sugar fiend, and Kai was the least sugar-driven.
  • The first symptoms arrived quickly: grogginess, fatigue, hunger, cravings, and the feeling of being hit by a truck.
  • Ash had the most severe early reaction, with body aches, chills, feverish feelings, pain, and a doctor visit that ruled out COVID and flu.
  • The explanation was keto flu or carb flu: cutting carbs pushed the body toward ketosis, where fat replaces missing glucose as a fuel source.
  • Keto-flu symptoms included stomach aches, nausea, soreness, dizziness, brain fog, and full-body pain.
  • After the first few days, the worst acute symptoms eased and energy started to normalize.

Week 2: Food Planning and Irritability

  • The second week became less about immediate illness and more about daily logistics.
  • Cutting caffeine during the first two weeks made the water-only routine feel worse and increased irritability around drinks, flavor, tea, soda, and anything besides water.
  • Meal planning took over the day because the team had to check ingredient lists and find meals that did not taste like cardboard.
  • Unexpected added sugar showed up in pasta sauces, canned vegetables, and many foods that did not seem sweet.
  • Sugar-free pasta, sugar-free bread, hot pot, steak, buffalo sauce, and other workarounds made the diet more livable.
  • Dates became a practical loophole because they are high in sugar but often accepted in no-sugar diet rules.

Week 3: Restaurants, Travel, and Social Friction

  • Travel exposed the hardest part of the diet: eating out.
  • Small restaurants rarely had full ingredient lists online, and asking staff about every sauce, glaze, butter, cream, and hidden sugar felt socially awkward.
  • Large chains were easier to navigate because nutrition facts were available online, even when the usable options were limited and disappointing.
  • Restaurant meals became functional instead of enjoyable, with Chipotle serving as an example of a technically possible but emotionally disappointing meal.
  • Cravings returned hard around social eating, Christmas cookies, Cinnabon fantasies, sushi cravings, and visible desserts that others could eat.
  • The social context mattered as much as the food, because specialized diets affect where people eat, who they eat with, and how normal meals feel.

Week 4: Conditioning, Stress, and the Final Wall

  • The final stretch was rough because hunger and sweet cravings came back after the team expected adaptation.
  • Ash reached equilibrium, but others felt hungrier, more desperate for sweets, and frustrated that the hardest part had returned.
  • The cravings were not only physical; they came from habits and mental associations built around using sweets during travel, late nights, exhaustion, and stress.
  • Week four became deconditioning: the body and mind had to learn that sugar was not coming back just because cravings got louder.

Results After 30 Days

  • The biggest change was awareness: nutrition facts, snack choices, and grocery decisions became conscious instead of automatic.
  • The team felt proud of making deliberate choices, eating more fruits, vegetables, plants, whole grains, grapes, macadamia nuts, and apples.
  • Snacking shifted away from Oreos and default sweets toward fruit and nuts.
  • Fruit cravings replaced some dessert cravings, including Ash wanting an apple at the airport.
  • Matt's fructose intolerance seemed to improve during the month, possibly because fruit sugars were coming through whole foods rather than free sugars.
  • Everyone planned to keep a more sustainable version afterward, with moderation and limited dessert rather than total restriction.

Donut Reintroduction

  • The final test was donuts after a month without free sugar.
  • The expected reward fell flat: the donuts were less satisfying than expected, and the team felt like sugar had been ruined.
  • The explanation was taste adaptation: taste bud cells follow roughly a 10-day cycle, and a month of lower sugar intake lowered the sweetness threshold.
  • Brain reward responses also seemed recalibrated because sugary snacks were no longer constantly flooding the system.
  • Donuts with roughly 15 to 20 grams of sugar overloaded the newly sensitive system instead of delivering the old pleasure.
  • The body reaction was stronger than the taste reaction: a brief sugar rush, a dopamine jolt, stomach discomfort, and then a craving for carrots or fruit.
  • The experiment ended with less desire for dessert and a stronger sense of control over food habits.

References

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 1 points 7 hours ago

Do a activity with others, like a game with voice chat. Meet people!

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 1 points 21 hours ago

no, totally different - there are a few companies that do ai assisted plaque characterization of ct angiograms. Basically the first company these researches worked with refused to do blinded analysis, which is weird because why can't a AI be blinded? Turns out they also where the only company that showed monotonically increasing plaque for all patients.

They have since used 3 other AI plaque algorithms that allow blinding, and those analysis of the same data set don't show monotonically increasing plaque for all patients.

I think they are now involved in some legal drama over it.

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

i just watched the movie

Wow, they really speed ran the final act! I'm not sure movie goers would get the motivations

Pretty good for a movie adaptation, the main character was more of a buffoon then i think is necessary, but maybe the director thinks that plays better.

Was it just by version of the film, or did the master this on a estate sale reel to reel tape deck ? Lots of warbling

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

sounds great, thanks for the recommendation.

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 1 day ago

Carl demonstrates why its valuable to be patient and caring with everyone even if they are not interested today, tomorrow they might decide to change.

 

How Carl got his groove back

summerizerChildhood obesity, vegetarian years, and the first low-carb turn

  • I grew up in the 1970s as one of the few overweight children at school, while eating the same food as parents who were not overweight.
  • My mother followed the conventional low-fat healthy-diet pattern, and the nurse still accused her of feeding me too much.
  • By age 50, I was 160 kg, had type 2 diabetes, and had already been vegetarian for 35 years.
  • Vegetarianism came through early interest in yoga, Buddhism, Hinduism, and Ayurveda, and I believed the diet was good.
  • My vegetarian meals included homemade ghee from cultured butter, spinach curries, paneer, and other foods I thought were healthy.
  • Every year I became stiffer, until I could not wipe myself properly or bend down to tie my shoelaces.
  • A Radio New Zealand headline led me to Dr. Andrew Jenkinson's Why We Eat (Too Much), my first real exposure to low-carb high-fat eating.
  • The next day I removed vegetable oil, sugar, grains, and processed food, and began a pescatarian low-carb high-fat diet at about 100 g of carbs per day.
  • Those carbs came from foods such as sweet potatoes, blackberries, and raw honey, while the rest of the diet became much lower in processed food.
  • Weight loss started quickly, stiffness disappeared within weeks, and I felt decades younger.

Skin flares, histamine, carnivore, and ferments

  • Lifelong doctor-diagnosed psoriasis worsened during the early low-carb period, and food tracking connected flares to spinach, celery, aged cheese, and other foods.
  • Most triggers were plants, and removing them cleared most of the condition that had been called psoriasis.
  • Smoked wild sockeye salmon produced a major flare, which pointed the problem toward histamine, not ordinary psoriasis.
  • Beef, bacon, butter, and eggs on a strict carnivore pattern cleared the skin almost completely, but high-histamine foods still required caution.
  • Dr. Sean O'Mara's living diet added ferments to carnivore, including sauerkraut juice in drinking water.
  • After three weeks of sauerkraut juice, I could eat anything without flares, my skin was fully clear, and the flares have not returned for over a year.
  • Carnivore solved the main problems, and the living diet removed the remaining histamine limit.

Training, weight loss, fasting, and body changes

  • I started the journey on February 1, 2024.
  • I lost 70 kg in 10 months, reached 90 kg by October 2024, and kept the weight off.
  • I later gained about 5 kg of muscle while my waist continued to shrink.
  • Weekly 48-hour fasting, hill sprints, and sprint interval work restarted fat loss after a long plateau.
  • Sprint training now includes work every second day, six to ten hill repetitions, plus one 10-second maximum-effort sprint even on rest days.
  • Hill sprints reduced speed enough to avoid injury after a hamstring issue.
  • At age 53 and 174 cm tall, I measured 2 cm taller than before the diet.
  • Food cravings, hunger, and even ordinary like-dislike pressure around food disappeared.
  • The freedom I had searched for through spiritual systems came through fixing food and health.

Current food routine

  • I eat two meals per day.
  • Breakfast at 9:00 usually contains six pasture-raised eggs, a can of sardines in spring water, sauerkraut, and raw A2 kefir.
  • The second meal between 4:00 and 5:00 p.m. usually contains 250 g of grass-fed red meat, especially lamb or beef.
  • Lamb is cheap in New Zealand and tastes best to me, so lamb shoulder chops and slow-cooked lamb with bones are staples.
  • I drink grass-fed beef bone broth daily.
  • I also eat raw cheeses, including French Comté.
  • Sardine quality matters because some brands pack fish in spring water or olive oil after frying them in sunflower oil first.

Family changes and medical markers

  • My parents are in their 90s and are thrilled after watching me carry excess weight for my whole life.
  • After vascular events in both parents, dietary changes improved their health, weight, and energy.
  • My father lost weight and felt decades younger.
  • My 92-year-old mother added lamb's fry and pasture-raised eggs for breakfast, and her iron deficiency resolved after low ferritin had been missed.
  • My parents are not carnivore, but they now avoid processed food and vegetable oil, use allulose, and eat more saturated fat.
  • My own triglycerides fell to 1.1, HDL rose to 1.54, and LDL rose from about 2.9 to 6.6.
  • My LDL rose while I felt better.
  • My HbA1c was 52 after three months of low-carb high-fat eating and later reached 31.
  • Type 2 diabetes medication is no longer part of my life.

Adherence, work, and outlook

  • Since February 1, 2024, I have not eaten sugar, processed food, or vegetable oil.
  • I have not eaten restaurant meals and have cooked everything myself.
  • Food noise is gone, eating is functional, and life is available again.
  • An old boss gave up sugar after seeing my changes and could bend down without pain, but alcohol kept him from continuing.
  • Before the health change, I worked mainly in call centers, Inland Revenue, and telecommunications.
  • Occupational overuse, finger pain, frozen shoulder, sore shoulders, extreme weight, and sickness made work harder.
  • When Spark New Zealand closed and outsourced the collections department, I took redundancy and did not apply for another role.
  • At 53, I am not winding down; I am ready for something new.
  • Growing older now feels like a challenge worth taking, not another decline to dread.

Advice for trying carnivore

  • Cut ultra-processed food, sugar, flour, and seed oils from day one.
  • Move toward carnivore gradually over a few weeks.
  • A sudden dietary change is not ideal for the microbiome.
  • The practical path is immediate removal of the worst foods, then a slower transition into full carnivore.

References

 

A great page turner. I really enjoyed the hard science fiction and that decisions have consequences. Id love to explore the biological roots of this universe.

Highly recommend

spoiler thoughts

The helpful spiders that live in the dark is still unsettling.

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 1 points 1 day ago

Fascinating articles. Humans really can get caught up in target fixation and emotional sunk cost!

Plus I've seen some interesting papers in Alzheimer's link to metabolic health.

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Eat local food that doesn’t get shipped far

True but not that much apparently, slow shipping is pretty dang efficient it turns out, and often more ecological than local greenhouses for the same plants. The biggest co2 impact is the “last mile delivery” to every point of sale, which is the same for local or internationally shipped foods.

There is more environmental impact then just co2, and its illogical to say food shipped around the globe doesn't have environmental impact. Plant based foods are bulky, so they take more energy to ship. Also, I hope you realize from this community you are not limited to plant based foods. Growing exotic plants that require greenhouses isn't eating locally, it's fighting nature which goes against the other green philosophy 'Learn to live in your local environment'

Reduce electricity consumption as much as possible.

Trueish, it depends more on the amount of renewable energy that you’re using.

Your making an assumption, perfect green energy still takes industry to build and maintain, plus every time you use electricity your generating waste heat. This impacts your environment.

Learn to live in your local environment without modern tools of comfort

I don’t think there’s a cave nearby, nor wild mammoths to hunt, so I’ll pass, thanks

Don't run heating or AC, learn to love natural breezes, channel your inner frank lloyd wright and be part of nature.

Be healthy and don’t get sick. Sick people are extremely environmentally expensive

Gladly but alas that’s mostly out of my control lol. Sure I’ll stay at home when I’m sick to keep from infecting others, but there’s not much I can do to keep getting sick except total isolation.

This IS in your control, the whole point of these metabolic communities is to make you aware of your metabolism and give you the tools to keep yourself healthy. Most medical expenses are for prolonged metabolic dysfunction. Keep your insulin low, reduce your carbs, live a active lifestyle, be healthly.

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (3 children)

Eat local food that doesn't get shipped far

Never fly in a airplane

Reduce electricity consumption as much as possible.

Learn to live in your local environment without modern tools of comfort

Be healthy and don't get sick. Sick people are extremely environmentally expensive

 

When everyone thinks you are crazy, but you know you are sane...

Based on the ASIP skit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GiJXALBX3KM

Why Ellen G White - Her visions and religion fund educational and nutritional programs to promote the total avoidance of meat, they basically started every dietetics association in the world.

Why Ancel Keys : Promoted the diet heart hypothesis that saturated fat drove CVD, doctored results and drop studies when they didn't lineup with his hypothesis.

Why Walter Willett : Pumps out weak, poorly powered, and associatively only epidemiology headline grabbers every 2-3 months vilifying meat.

Science is about reproducible results, asking for that shouldn't be crazy.

 

Reviews focused on the ketogenic diet (KD) based on the increase in fat-free mass (FFM) have been carried out with pathological populations or, failing that, without population differentiation. The aim of this review and meta-analysis was to verify whether a ketogenic diet without programmed energy restriction generates increases in fat-free mass (FFM) in resistance-trained participants. We evaluated the effect of the ketogenic diet, in conjunction with resistance training, on fat-free mass in trained participants. Boolean algorithms from various databases (PubMed, Scopus. and Web of Science) were used, and a total of five studies were located that related to both ketogenic diets and resistance-trained participants. In all, 111 athletes or resistance-trained participants (87 male and 24 female) were evaluated in the studies analyzed. We found no significant differences between groups in the FFM variables, and more research is needed to perform studies with similar ketogenic diets and control diet interventions. Ketogenic diets, taking into account the possible side effects, can be an alternative for increasing muscle mass as long as energy surplus is generated; however, their application for eight weeks or more without interruption does not seem to be the best option due to the satiety and lack of adherence generated.

Full Paper - https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191912629

 

Welcome back Dr. Nash Jocic: celebrated bodybuilder, cutting-edge scholar, and a sought-after coach whose expertise is revolutionizing how athletes achieve peak performance and longevity. Dr. Anthony Chaffee sits down with Dr. Jocic for an unfiltered conversation that promises to challenge everything you think you know about fueling workouts, muscle growth, and lasting strength. Dive in as Dr. Jocic reveals real-life transformations, scientific discoveries, and firsthand experiences. Curious about what can take elite athletes to the next level and how they can remain strong well into their later years? Tune in now to discover why Dr. Nash Jocic is changing the game—and see for yourself what makes his approach so compelling.

summerizerCentral thesis

  • Dietary carbohydrates are not needed to keep training performance, muscle glycogen, or bodybuilding fullness.
  • The fitness world teaches that no carbs means empty glycogen, weak training, and poor athletic output.
  • Protein and fat can support high-volume lifting, contest preparation, and year-round condition.

Glycogen without dietary carbohydrates

  • Glycogen does not come only from carbohydrates; gluconeogenesis can convert amino acids and glycerol into glucose and glycogen.
  • A hard workout may use roughly 100 grams of local muscle glycogen, and the body can restore that amount over 24 to 48 hours.
  • Glycogen restoration is local to the trained muscle; chest, back, legs, and shoulders refill what they used.
  • The FASTER trial shows keto-adapted runners had comparable muscle glycogen before, immediately after, and during recovery from a three-hour run.
  • Human evolution also connects meat-and-fat diets with fighting, running, hunting, escaping danger, and survival.

Contest preparation and carb loading

  • Competitors usually stay on high-protein, medium-fat diets year-round and need only an 8-to-12-week precision phase before a show.
  • Protein and fat adjustments, not carbohydrates, make a bodybuilder harder, leaner, and drier.
  • Carb depletion and carb loading often disrupt an already lean look through water, bloating, insulin effects, and digestive unpredictability.
  • The peak-week method keeps the process that produced the best condition and avoids last-minute experiments.

Fat oxidation, endurance, and energy supply

  • Keto-adapted athletes can shift much more exercise energy toward fat, even at high percentages of VO2 max.
  • Glycerol from triglycerides and lactate recycling provide glucose and glycogen while training demand rises.
  • High-carb endurance athletes often depend on gels because blood glucose rises and crashes; fat-adapted athletes can reduce that dependence.
  • A marathon client cut carbohydrates, ate fewer meals, lost weight, felt calmer around food, and improved his time by about 20%.

Carbohydrates, cravings, and glycation

  • Carbohydrates are easy, tasty, addictive, and emotionally comforting because they drive reward chemistry.
  • Stress is a poor time to eat because sympathetic physiology conflicts with digestion.
  • Glucose and carbohydrate exposure create advanced glycation end products that damage arteries, kidneys, eyes, joints, cartilage, and spinal discs.
  • Avoiding glycation helps preserve the athletic tools of the body and can lengthen an athletic career.

Building muscle without carbs

  • Carbohydrates are not structural building blocks; muscle growth needs essential amino acids, essential fatty acids, training, recovery, and enough energy.
  • Golden-era physiques relied more on training, high-volume work, protein, and fat than on modern drug-driven mass building.
  • High-carb professional bodybuilding is tied to exogenous insulin, growth hormone, and large drug stacks, not to ordinary natural physiology.
  • Nasser’s two-steak, no-potato meal is used as an example of protein being prioritized over carbohydrate for size.
  • Dorian-era mass bodybuilding changed the culture because insulin use required carbohydrate intake to prevent hypoglycemia.
  • Recent hypertrophy and keto-performance research is used to say matched protein matters more than carbohydrate intake.
  • AGE research is used to say excessive glycation may impair muscle protein synthesis, extracellular matrix quality, and hypertrophy.

Training method and long-term physique

  • The training method is high volume, short rest, 30 to 40 sets per session, 45 to 50 minutes, and one or two reps short of failure.
  • Training five times per week at age 64, visible leanness, and injury-free longevity are linked to high-volume training and no-carb protein-fat eating.
  • The 90-day transformation challenge uses similar training and diet principles, adjusted by individual level, and early four-week changes are large.
  • The same pattern across thousands of clients is high protein, medium fat, low or zero carbs, and high-volume training.

Protein absorption, meal timing, and fat

  • A person is not what they eat; a person is what they absorb.
  • Three larger protein-and-fat meals can be better absorbed than six smaller protein-and-carb meals because fat slows digestion.
  • Chicken and rice can spike glucose and amino acids, while fat-containing meals create slower amino-acid release and lower insulin exposure between meals.
  • Protein alone digests too fast; steak, eggs, fattier cuts, chicken legs with skin, or added cheese are better than dry chicken breast alone.
  • Whey protein can shoot amino acids into the blood too quickly, so much of it may be burned as energy and not used as building material.

Plant foods, fiber, and protein quality

  • Plant-food protein counts on paper do not equal absorbed protein in the body.
  • Plant foods bring lower bioavailability, protease inhibitors, tannins, fiber, and other barriers to digestion.
  • Gluten is a wheat protein with no useful bioavailability and gut-damaging effects.
  • Humans cannot digest fiber like gorillas because humans lack the same active appendix-based fermentation system.
  • Vegetarian and vegan bodybuilding cases usually depend on powders, supplements, and sometimes steroids, so they do not prove whole-plant diets equal meat.

Practical diet pattern

  • The target pattern is high protein with enough fat, usually three meals spaced five to six hours apart.
  • If carbs are cut but protein and fat are not increased, energy collapses and training performance drops.
  • The preferred foods are meat, eggs, steak, fatty cuts, fish, chicken legs, and small amounts of vegetables only if desired.
  • The overall goal is a strong, lean, healthy body year-round, not short-term contest tricks or offseason bulking fat.

References

 

A gene mutation that reduces ketone production in the fasted state is associated with sudden infant death in modern populations. But in the ancestral context where it evolved alongside an omega-3-rich diet, it may have been part of what kept infants alive.

Dr. Gideon Mailer and Nicola Hale join The Metabolic Link to present their hypothesis that the CPT1A L479 Arctic variant is not anti-ketogenic but pro-metabolic flexibility, conserving glucose by upregulating ketosis at the fed-state threshold. Their work explains why SIDS rates are dramatically elevated in modern Inuit communities no longer eating the ancestral Inuit diet, and how omega-3 fatty acids counteract the downregulation the mutation produces.

The clinical picture extends beyond infancy. Modern carriers of the variant show lower triglycerides, lower VLDL, slightly higher HDL, and a "healthy obesity" phenotype with favorable fat distribution. But the health advantages seen in traditional Inuit populations disappear with Western diet adoption, as cardiovascular disease and diabetes rates rise to match the general population.

summerizer1. Setup and thesis

  • The old assumption is that Arctic populations were the cleanest human example of chronic ketosis.
  • The story moves toward metabolic flexibility: glucose and ketones both mattered, and the Arctic setting changed when each fuel was useful.
  • Nicola Hale enters through metabolic-health research, chronic-fatigue recovery, ancestral health, and the question of whether long-term ketosis is optimal.
  • Gideon Mailer enters through early American history, ancient North American populations, archives, and the metabolism of Arctic migration.
  • The collaboration joins biochemistry, evolutionary genetics, archaeology, and history across more than one discipline.
  • The 2020 Hale paper becomes the center of the conversation because it reinterprets CPT1A L479 as glucose conservation and preserved fuel switching.

2. CPT1A L479 and the Arctic variant

  • CPT1A encodes carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1A, the liver gatekeeper for long-chain fatty-acid entry into mitochondrial oxidation.
  • The Arctic L479 variant is counterintuitive because a low-carbohydrate, high-fat population carries a variant often called anti-ketogenic.
  • The sweep ranks as one of the fastest known human selective sweeps, faster than familiar diet and skin-pigmentation examples.
  • The key is timing: in fasted mode, the variant lowers ketone output; near the fed, high-protein threshold, it can raise ketone use.
  • That threshold behavior lets ketones spare glucose when protein and glucose have high strategic value.
  • The variant is therefore not a simple thrifty gene and not a simple anti-keto gene; it is a stress-resilience fuel-partitioning gene.

3. Traditional Inuit diet and ketogenic ratio

  • The traditional food pattern is very low carbohydrate, high fat, and high protein, with small carbohydrate inputs from glycogen, seaweed, berries, and related foods.
  • Seasonal carbohydrate intake is near 25 to 30 grams, not a high-carbohydrate ancestral pattern.
  • Four 20th-century macronutrient estimates test whether the diet actually crosses a ketogenic threshold.
  • The Woodyatt ketogenic-ratio calculation puts the threshold around 1.5 to 2, depending on person, setting, and chosen cutoff.
  • Using a 2:1 standard, the estimates sit close to the threshold but usually do not cross into chronic ketosis.
  • The likely pattern is periodic ketosis: sleep, fasting, long hunts, scarcity, infection, and other stress windows.
  • High protein matters because it can move a very low-carbohydrate meal away from sustained ketosis.
  • The diet still creates glucose pressure because carbohydrate is scarce even when chronic ketosis is absent.

4. Glucose conservation and the brain

  • The adult brain still needs a minimum amount of glucose even when ketones are available.
  • The glucose range is roughly 30 grams per day as an absolute minimum and about 110 grams per day under ordinary adult conditions.
  • Glucose also matters for immune function, especially when infection raises immune-cell demand and insulin resistance helps keep blood glucose available.
  • The infant brain intensifies the problem because it consumes a much larger share of body energy and glucose.
  • The selective pressure is therefore strongest where infant survival, fasting, infection, cold, and scarce protein overlap.
  • The fed-mode ketone rise makes sense as a way to save glucose for the next fasted or stressed interval.

5. Infant risk and hypoketotic hypoglycemia

  • The dangerous side of the variant is low ketones plus low glucose during sleep, missed feeding, or infection.
  • Greenberg's work enters through family clusters, high allele frequency, and sudden-infant-death concern.
  • A Nunavut example has sudden-infant-death frequency moving from 5.4 per thousand to 32.7 per thousand in one community.
  • Mechanistically, lower hepatic CPT1A activity lowers ketone output when the liver should supply the brain.
  • The P479L enzyme activity figure is about 22 percent of wild-type activity in fibroblast work.
  • Pancreatic CPT1A may also lower glucagon support, so blood glucose can fall at the same time that ketones are low.
  • Infants are vulnerable because their brains can become energy deficient during sleep and illness.

6. Omega-3 buffering

  • Omega-3 intake is the central ancestral buffer in this model.
  • Marine omega-3s increase CPT1A activity and concentration, offsetting the low basal activity of the variant.
  • Traditional marine foods therefore make the variant safer in fasted mode and useful near the fed-mode threshold.
  • A modern shift toward more glucose, less marine fat, and lower fatty-acid oxidation removes that buffer.
  • The Inuit and Yup'ik context is therefore diet-gene-environment interaction, not the isolated effect of a mutation.
  • High omega-3 intake helps explain how the mutation can be common without constant infant catastrophe.

7. Food ecology and migration

  • The ancestral food system includes seals, fish, salmon, whale oil, whole dried marine foods, birds, caribou, deer, and other land mammals.
  • Leaner land protein remains important, so the food system is not just fat and fish oil.
  • The migration story moves away from a simple Bering Land Bridge remnant model.
  • Paleo-Inuit ancestry is placed in ancient Northeast Asia, with Neo-Siberian-related communities moving toward riverine and maritime niches.
  • Boat and coastal routes matter because the Bering Land Bridge had already sunk before the relevant Paleo-Inuit movement.
  • The marine-superhighway or kelp-superhighway model fits the route and food-system explanation.
  • Pottery and storage evidence supports dried omega-3-rich fish, stored marine foods, and oil extraction for eating.
  • Seal oils and whale oils matter, but whole-food marine storage matters too.

8. Timing of selection

  • The selective sweep is placed mainly after the Ice Age and not simply inside the Younger Dryas story.
  • Ancient DNA from Northeast Asia before the key migration has not yet yielded the variant in this account.
  • The first ancient-DNA occurrence here is the roughly 4,000-year-old Saqqaq Paleo-Eskimo genome from Greenland.
  • Clemente's estimate leaves a broad window, but the working model narrows attention to about 6,000 to 4,000 years ago.
  • The pressure is a sudden combination of colder conditions, less reliable protein, new disease risk, isolation, and marine specialization.
  • The goal of selection is preserved metabolic flexibility under longer and harsher stress intervals.

9. Cold, clothing, and energy demand

  • Cold does not need to mean a direct CPT1A cold-tolerance mechanism.
  • The separate stature and growth-signaling idea remains limited here.
  • Cold still raises glucose demand through inspired cold air, frozen food, higher metabolic rate, and heat production.
  • Efficient clothing reduces the need for core-temperature conservation adaptations, so metabolism and technology both belong in the story.
  • The cold-stress example uses minus-40 Fahrenheit and an extra-energy estimate near 1,000 calories per day.
  • The variant helps by protecting glucose supply when cold adds another drain on fuel availability.

10. Current-day carriers and disease patterns

  • Lemas 2012 compares L479 homozygotes, heterozygotes, and P479 homozygotes in Yup'ik Eskimos.
  • The L479 pattern is linked to lower triglycerides, lower VLDL, slightly higher HDL, lower overall fat mass, and healthier fat distribution.
  • This is a healthy-obesity pattern because fat storage is less centered on high-risk abdominal distribution.
  • The mutation does not protect people against a Western diet.
  • As traditional foods recede, diabetes and cardiovascular disease can rise toward the broader population pattern.
  • Higher omega-3 intake remains linked to better health markers, but not as complete protection.

11. Paleo-Eskimo and Neo-Eskimo contrast

  • The Paleo-Eskimo and Neo-Eskimo transition works as an ancient test case for the omega-3 buffer.
  • Paleo-Eskimo groups carry the variant but may have moved away from the marine omega-3 complex toward more land mammals.
  • Neo-Eskimo groups gained dog-sled coastal technology that improved access to marine mammals and omega-3-rich foods.
  • The proposed difference is not possession of the variant, but access to the food system that makes the variant work.
  • Loss of marine fat would expose the fasted-mode downside in infants and reduce the fed-mode advantage.
  • This metabolic story helps explain a major Arctic population transition.

12. Wider human-brain evolution

  • Wang 2014 supplies the deeper evolutionary lens: ketogenesis and lipid energy metabolism conserve glucose for the brain.
  • This links to HMG synthase duplication, liver SCOT repression, and the old mammalian machinery of ketone production.
  • Crawford and Cunnane supply the infant-brain lens, where fat babies, ketones, glucose, DHA, and marine foods support brain expansion.
  • The African shore-based or Rift Valley food model becomes a far older parallel to the Arctic omega-3 story.
  • The Arctic case is therefore a late, local version of a broader fuel problem in human evolution.
  • The exogenous-ketone analogy works because the variant may keep ketones available during a fed-mode crossover period.

13. Public meaning and diet takeaways

  • The Inuit should not be used as a weapon in diet wars about permanent ketosis versus anti-ketosis.
  • The core lesson is that ketosis is one tool inside a larger metabolic arsenal.
  • Chronic strict ketosis may be useful in some therapeutic contexts, but it should not become the universal ideal.
  • Metabolic flexibility means being able to use glucose and ketones at the right time, under the right stress, in the right environment.
  • Precision nutrition should study individual differences in switching between glucose and ketones.
  • The Arctic variant teaches that genes, diet, life stage, infection, cold, and technology all shape the same metabolic outcome.

References

References

This is the paper they wrote (paywall) https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymgme.2020.01.010

 

Background Diabetes can be detected at the primary health-care level, and effective treatments lower the risk of complications. There are insufficient data on the coverage of treatment for diabetes and how it has changed. We estimated trends from 1990 to 2022 in diabetes prevalence and treatment for 200 countries and territories.

Methods We used data from 1108 population-representative studies with 141 million participants aged 18 years and older with measurements of fasting glucose and glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c), and information on diabetes treatment. We defined diabetes as having a fasting plasma glucose (FPG) of 7·0 mmol/L or higher, having an HbA1c of 6·5% or higher, or taking medication for diabetes. We defined diabetes treatment as the proportion of people with diabetes who were taking medication for diabetes. We analysed the data in a Bayesian hierarchical meta-regression model to estimate diabetes prevalence and treatment.

Findings In 2022, an estimated 828 million (95% credible interval [CrI] 757–908) adults (those aged 18 years and older) had diabetes, an increase of 630 million (554–713) from 1990. From 1990 to 2022, the age-standardised prevalence of diabetes increased in 131 countries for women and in 155 countries for men with a posterior probability of more than 0·80. The largest increases were in low-income and middle-income countries in southeast Asia (eg, Malaysia), south Asia (eg, Pakistan), the Middle East and north Africa (eg, Egypt), and Latin America and the Caribbean (eg, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, and Costa Rica). Age-standardised prevalence neither increased nor decreased with a posterior probability of more than 0·80 in some countries in western and central Europe, sub-Saharan Africa, east Asia and the Pacific, Canada, and some Pacific island nations where prevalence was already high in 1990; it decreased with a posterior probability of more than 0·80 in women in Japan, Spain, and France, and in men in Nauru. The lowest prevalence in the world in 2022 was in western Europe and east Africa for both sexes, and in Japan and Canada for women, and the highest prevalence in the world in 2022 was in countries in Polynesia and Micronesia, some countries in the Caribbean and the Middle East and north Africa, as well as Pakistan and Malaysia. In 2022, 445 million (95% CrI 401–496) adults aged 30 years or older with diabetes did not receive treatment (59% of adults aged 30 years or older with diabetes), 3·5 times the number in 1990. From 1990 to 2022, diabetes treatment coverage increased in 118 countries for women and 98 countries for men with a posterior probability of more than 0·80. The largest improvement in treatment coverage was in some countries from central and western Europe and Latin America (Mexico, Colombia, Chile, and Costa Rica), Canada, South Korea, Russia, Seychelles, and Jordan. There was no increase in treatment coverage in most countries in sub-Saharan Africa; the Caribbean; Pacific island nations; and south, southeast, and central Asia. In 2022, age-standardised treatment coverage was lowest in countries in sub-Saharan Africa and south Asia, and treatment coverage was less than 10% in some African countries. Treatment coverage was 55% or higher in South Korea, many high-income western countries, and some countries in central and eastern Europe (eg, Poland, Czechia, and Russia), Latin America (eg, Costa Rica, Chile, and Mexico), and the Middle East and north Africa (eg, Jordan, Qatar, and Kuwait).

Interpretation In most countries, especially in low-income and middle-income countries, diabetes treatment has not increased at all or has not increased sufficiently in comparison with the rise in prevalence. The burden of diabetes and untreated diabetes is increasingly borne by low-income and middle-income countries. The expansion of health insurance and primary health care should be accompanied with diabetes programmes that realign and resource health services to enhance the early detection and effective treatment of diabetes.

Full paper: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(24)02317-1

(Reposting since it was originally on lemm.ee which is gone now)

 

We are sick. Around the world, we struggle with diseases that were once considered rare. Cancer, heart disease, Alzheimer's disease, and diabetes affect millions each year; many people are also struggling with hypertension, weight gain, fatty liver, dementia, low testosterone, menstrual irregularities and infertility, and more. We treat the symptoms, not realizing that all of these diseases and disorders have something in common. Each of them is caused or made worse by a condition known as insulin resistance. And you might have it. Odds are you do—over half of all adults in the United States are insulin resistant, with most other countries either worse or not far behind. In Why We Get Sick, internationally renowned scientist and pathophysiology professor Benjamin Bikman explores why insulin resistance has become so prevalent and why it matters. Unless we recognize it and take steps to reverse the trend, major chronic diseases will be even more widespread. But reversing insulin resistance is possible, and Bikman offers an evidence-based plan to stop and prevent it, with helpful food lists, meal suggestions, easy exercise principles, and more. Full of surprising research and practical advice, Why We Get Sick will help you to take control of your health.

I've posted this book before, it's super impactful and makes a great demonstration of why hyperinsulinemia is so bad. It's written in a very easy to understand and compelling way. I can not recommend this book enough. I've given out nearly a dozen copies of it to friends suffering from metabolic problems.

I just discovered, today, that a official chinese version is now available! If you have relatives, friends, who arn't so great at English (especially such they wont try to read a book).. this is a great gift. Especially the auntie who smiles kindly at you, but never stops chain smoking and pops metformin like candy.

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submitted 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) by jet@hackertalks.com to c/media_reviews@hackertalks.com
 

Yesterday I read Dungeon Crawler Carl book 1 cover to cover in the afternoon.

Great writing style, I enjoyed the world building. Breezy to read. Would recommend

Book 1 isn't self contained, it doesn't resolve the major plot arcs, just sets them up.

I think the special skill demonstrated is the authors ability to humanize all the characters, flesh them out, give them some depth...

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