Dr. Benjamin Bikman - 'Insulin vs. Ketones - The Battle for Brown Fat'

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  • Опубліковано 21 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 547

  • @rosemaryfreitas7656
    @rosemaryfreitas7656 4 роки тому +80

    As a health professional I find myself angry at the ignorance of our current dietary teachings. These have not helped anyone. I am so grateful that teachers such as Dr. Bikman are proving them wrong.

    • @IvySnowFillyVideos
      @IvySnowFillyVideos 3 роки тому +12

      Me too. I started reading Dr.Atkins books 25 years ago. Its frustrating not many Dr's talk about nutrition. I'm happy to find this content.

    • @DebraRN1195
      @DebraRN1195 2 роки тому +9

      As an ICU RN, dealing with so many Diabetic patients, I find it difficult to administer high Dextrose TPN and chasing their Blood Sugars with insulin every six hours!!

    • @michaelspencer2559
      @michaelspencer2559 2 роки тому +1

      Lots of simple minded people.

    • @annwestcott3752
      @annwestcott3752 2 роки тому +3

      I agree with you so much. I have long Covid, which translates into I have cognitive challenges. But I am not stupid. So I know I have to change my diet, but from the starting point of not being able to think properly and having very little energy. I’m also autistic and find change challenging.
      Mainstream medicine has been unhelpful. Basically all about managing energy, and assuming I don’t know how to breathe. I’ve humored them, to make sure I wasn’t missing anything. But meanwhile, back at my body, back at the evidence, evidence is starting to mount that I, along with my fellow sufferers are more likely to end up with dementia. And I’m 61 so I don’t want to play Russian roulette with this.
      But even discussing a basic, evidence based change, intermittent fasting, my health supporters have become anxious, and fearful that I am being silly, getting involved in faddish diets. But they haven’t been able to help. They’ve probably spent a small fortune on painkillers, and are happy to carry on managing my symptoms in this way. Whilst sitting there saying they don’t really know what is going on in my body.
      So here, I am, cognitively challenged trying to work out how to get well. And I will get well. But there is enough knowledge out there for medics to be able to support patients in improving their health at relatively low cost. For someone like me this would be wonderful. But I shy away from any possible medical intervention with my diet, because I’m pretty sure they would give me the wrong information.
      And if I don’t sort this myself, then I’m going to cost an awful lot more in terms of drugs to maintain me as an ill person. Basically modern medicine is a broken paradigm. Hypocrites knew this, but today medics don’t.

    • @sixtysense
      @sixtysense 9 місяців тому

      Me too.

  • @TheKetoSurvivor
    @TheKetoSurvivor 6 років тому +421

    WoW! Love this talk. My son did the "keto" diet about a year ago and turned me on to watching Dr Berg keto talks on UA-cam. I started my keto journey on Dec. 8th, at 477 lbs. As of Feb. 27th (2.5 months), I'm down 50# (427) and couldn't be more ecstatic. My cravings for food are minimal and mostly psychological at this point. I've reduced intake to about 2 meals a day with little interest for more. I do one meal a day "OMAD" at least once a week. I came off my insulin (was taking U-500) within days and am now starting to wean off my blood pressure meds. I really appreciate this deeper dive you've done into the science and that you're making it public. I hope you'll be able to do a collaborative video with Dr Berg soon because I think more people would appreciate the additional evidence. This is life changing affects the person doing it and all around them. Best of luck to you as you continue your work and thank you!

    • @Loribyn
      @Loribyn 6 років тому +11

      Congratulations! (and well done).

    • @pamir2593
      @pamir2593 6 років тому +6

      wow , keep up the good work ,the outcome is so much sweeter than any junk food ,refined carb ,dont get emotionally attached to your food and get it out of your memories and fill in the blank slots with the social experiences you have had with your family ,friends etc instead of the food you ate or ate with them which should mean little to nothing to you.

    • @StygianStyle
      @StygianStyle 5 років тому +3

      Happy to hear another success story. I hope this catches on in the mainstream media and the health industry. I discovered the insulin-based approach years ago, but I wish I had known about the power of less frequent eating coupled with keto. I'm finally doing it now and I'm making progress again.

    • @nancyarchibald9095
      @nancyarchibald9095 5 років тому +10

      Fantastic results! Keep going!! I'm 63, disabled, but down 46 lbs since starting 10/22/18. Doing 20/3 I.F. btw **Dr. Ken Berry M D. would likely work better with Dr. Bikmen. Dr. Berg thrives within his "king of the hill" M.O. He was a chiropractor when working in a practice.

    • @MsDestinedtoReign
      @MsDestinedtoReign 5 років тому +6

      Joseph Bates Dr Berg is an Awesome Doctor, Congratulations on your journey and losing so much weight, keep up the great work. It’s easier to lose weight doing Keto (LCHF) than it is on High Carb Low Fat. How’s the mental clarity, have you noticed any difference in your outlook on and attitudes? You’re making amazing progress Joseph, don’t listen to the Naysayers or the Vegan Trolls that are landing on the Keto/Carnivore videos, ignore them. As you’re doing OMAD you might be interested in Carnivore OMAD. Check it out, you’re halfway there.

  • @rufussweeneymd
    @rufussweeneymd 7 років тому +335

    Dr. Bikman was my teacher for pathophysiology at BYU. He's a wonderful lecturer; his class was life-altering. Now, I'm doing research with the professor with whom he did his post-doc. I've become a champion of this message. In fact, I've started a podcast aimed at distilling a clear picture of what the current literature has to say about nutrition for the layman.
    If anyone is interested in talks like this, they'll enjoy the podcast. It's called Peer-Refined Health, and the first episode will be coming out later this month.

    • @kingly71
      @kingly71 6 років тому +14

      @Willy Driscoll just watched that.. I mean I suppose its possible. But come on man, that video is a joke. At least if you require even a shred of evidence to support a claim. Its nothing but testimonials - can't take it seriously unless they bring a bit more.

    • @vtshadow314
      @vtshadow314 6 років тому +28

      @Willy Driscoll I may have an answer for you. It has to do with what happens to vegans who stay on that WOE for extended periods of time. One case in particular should stand out. A UA-cam content provider named Freely the Banana girl(ua-cam.com/users/Freelea) LINKED ONLY FOR REFERENCE. Has gone from a healthy young woman to almost skeleton. What I believe is happening is that are surviving off of pure glucose all the while being in a state of malnutrition. I don't know the exact mechanisms. But you can see it for your self. MANY of these Vegans are eating well over 5000 calories a day, yet they are shrinking into nothing. As well as the SERIOUS deficiencies they are having. Bone breaking and rotten teeth are two that stand out. As well as serious metabolic disorders leading to Vegans always feeling like they are freezing cold. I believe the problem with fruitarians and vegans is that no matter how much fibrous plant matter they consume, they just can not get enough calories into their bodies. And they start to burn off their body fat. Hence losing masses of Fat. But what happens when the body fat is gone and you get nothing but sugar? Eventually? Multiple Organ Failure syndrome. In the short run, pancreatic failure, Diabetes, and heart disease if prolonged.And in the end? Death.

    • @micahgourley7984
      @micahgourley7984 5 років тому +1

      awesome, thanks :)

    • @kam0406
      @kam0406 5 років тому +12

      @@vtshadow314 I think Steve Jobs was on a fruit only diet before his diagnosis of pancreatic cancer. Some theorize that was the driving force....or at least a contributing factor.

    • @2367J
      @2367J 5 років тому +5

      film the podcast and upload it to UA-cam, I don't do podcasts unless there's video

  • @rstores1
    @rstores1 6 років тому +58

    DR Bikman is an amazing presenter, objective, articulate. Not the least bit offensive or obnoxious like some. It is a pleasure to watch and listen.

  • @lindamcneil711
    @lindamcneil711 5 років тому +80

    I have watched this several times... and this lecture is one of the best lectures that describes the rudimentary mechanisms of the metabolic effect of food. Thank you for al, your heard work.

    • @davidmciver9483
      @davidmciver9483 3 роки тому +3

      The last sentence has a typo, “heard”. That is ironic because we are heard animals that this advice helps a lot.

    • @-astrangerontheinternet6687
      @-astrangerontheinternet6687 2 роки тому +2

      @@davidmciver9483
      And more ironic- it’s “herd” animals
      😂
      But your point stands. Happy day, sir

  • @Jchathe
    @Jchathe 2 роки тому +17

    I am overweight. I’ve been on high fat, almost zero carb carnivore for the past eleven weeks and haven’t counted calories at all. I haven’t lost much weight, just a few pounds, but I’ve lost over 20 inches off bust/waist/hips/thighs. It’s weird but amazing! 😁

    • @mikafoxx2717
      @mikafoxx2717 Рік тому +8

      All that protein must be triggering muscle growth!

  • @KatariaGujjar
    @KatariaGujjar 5 років тому +45

    If anybody wants this in more scientific and historic detail, please watch _The Aetiology of Obesity_ by Dr. Fung. It is a 6-8 hour lecture on the same topic.

  • @lucvandermeeren
    @lucvandermeeren 2 роки тому +6

    BB is a superstar. I've watched many of his presentations and he hits it out of the park each time. He is always clear and concise, witty and humble. I now understand the biochemical pathways that underlie the health benefits of a low carb diet, intermittent fasting and exercise. I have ordered his book, "Why we get sick" and can't wait for it to arrive.

    • @DanSuolo
      @DanSuolo 2 роки тому

      They're making synthetic meat in Laboratories. At the same time they're killing livestock it's all part of the bill back better reset plan!

  • @matthewjfreeman75
    @matthewjfreeman75 7 років тому +50

    Completely brilliant and fascinating! I've been so incredibly impressed with the humble and enthusiastic way you present your research. After watching this I'm so grateful to have a better understanding of why and how Keto works and how it relates to my own issues with diabetes and insulin resistance. Thank you!

  • @biomonkeywpaullauener4813
    @biomonkeywpaullauener4813 7 років тому +82

    This is one of the best explanations for the difference between glucose and ketone sources of energy. Brilliant!

  • @fabioarruda3184
    @fabioarruda3184 6 років тому +18

    An interesting thing that crossed my mind while watching is that when we are getting fat in nature is when we hunt, and to hunt we need to run a lot, and to run a lot we cannot be heavy.

  • @mobiustrip1400
    @mobiustrip1400 7 років тому +20

    Brilliant presentation, way, way ahead of its time...

  • @drewpamon
    @drewpamon 6 років тому +95

    We've been living off carbs for so long that we think of the emergency energy source (glucose) is the normal source and the normal sources (fat and protein) are the backups.
    Glucose is a quick and dirty way to supply energy and to store up fat in times that fat and protein are scarce

    • @lindawick455
      @lindawick455 5 років тому +8

      Exactly. Glucose from gathering when fat/protein was scarce. Body knows that we would only eat it when times are hard, so make storage fat for later use.

    • @incorectulpolitic
      @incorectulpolitic 5 років тому +5

      so why does the body spend valuable energy to convert fat ad protein into glucose, if glucose is not important?

    • @mannylongoria7633
      @mannylongoria7633 5 років тому +5

      @@incorectulpolitic I believe based on my understanding is we evolved both due to the need for Fight/Flight Mechanisms we use Glucose because its fast so we are always prepared for rapid get away or defense. The Ketones is for everyday maintenance and function. We should be always in the maintenance mode as western society especially. I can see this science working in me. I have lost over 50 lbs by following a ketogenic way of life. I started at 350 and want to get down to 230. The wasting is interesting due to the need to drink lots of water 2-3 liters per day and now thanks to this video i understand why it works.

    • @axeman6560
      @axeman6560 5 років тому +3

      So when are we short of protein and fats? Most supermarkets are just sugar delivery factories.

    • @tommy605
      @tommy605 5 років тому +1

      @@incorectulpolitic It's not important to eat. The body will convert the amount it needs from protein and the body will use what it converts. But too much protein will have a negative effect.

  • @alphacause
    @alphacause 7 років тому +34

    What a wonderful presentation. This is definitely one I will keep in m video playlist, and reference when someone speaks about caloric consumption being the sole determinant of weight loss and maintenance. Thank you for this.

  • @robertchew8167
    @robertchew8167 5 років тому +2

    Dr. Bikman knows this stuff so well. Love it. No notes or anything !!

  • @CalebO1996
    @CalebO1996 7 років тому +64

    Fascinating! Very, VERY enlightening. I had a sense of sheer amazement throughout Dr. Bikman's lecture.
    Imagine a scenario:
    Spring comes in the paleolithic era and Grog the Caveman comes across a patch of delicious berries. He and his tribe gorge on them to excess, storing an abundance of white adipose tissue on their body.
    Autumn comes, leaves fall and the sweet fruits of nature dry up and wither away. Grog has to figure something else out. Luckily some animals are migrating south for the winter. He and his tribe snag a few to bring along as pack animals until they arrive at their new home... Little did they know they'd be some winter chow soon.
    Winter brings terribly cold weather. We have not used slavery and pollution to create a huge clothing industry yet so the only options to stay warm are fire (if we know how to make it) or relying on body chemistry to help. Since we haven't seen any berries in a while, our insulin sensitivity is high and ketogenesis begins. That fatty caribou didn't taste too bad either.
    That WAT is converted slowly to BAT as discussed and out come ketones. Not sweet smelling urine mind you (like those with major insulin insensitivity and glucose in the blood), but pee rich in ketones. Caloric waste. Some nice warmth is gained from the thermogenesis resulting from the BAT and Grog lives to see Santa Clause and ring in the New Year once more.
    Congrats Grog, you really know how to use your body to your advantage!
    Now that we have clothing, air conditioning, a strange lack of ice ages, year-round fruit and grains, among other modern comforts people couldn't live without, the body does not need to use all of its facilities to keep us comfortable and healthy..... but that's exactly what it has evolved to do.

    • @k14michael
      @k14michael 6 років тому +6

      Caleb - best explanation EVER!

    • @loubob21
      @loubob21 6 років тому +2

      A very good explanation. The elephant in the room is always that if most humans (6 billion +) started eating like this, the planet would be void of all animal life. Keep this secret to ourselves?

    • @OperatorJon
      @OperatorJon 5 років тому +3

      @@loubob21 There's enough fat to go around, the issue is protein. We could easily get that from insects though. But no one really wants to, I wonder why 😂

    • @y.g.1313
      @y.g.1313 5 років тому +3

      good tale, Caleb. One correction on clothing, though. Buying hundreds of clothing items for pure consumerism is certainly fairly modern phenomena (produced by cheap labor, yes), but the caveman Grog was smart enough to use animal skins and fur for clothing !! This should have been obvious to you. Since I was like ~9 years old, I remember from school, the posters of 'cavemen' wearing that and holding big stones and bats in their hands.

    • @adamamoroso7943
      @adamamoroso7943 4 роки тому +1

      But what's missing from both your Grog the Caveman scenario and the talk is the evolutionary and/or the physiological rational for the energy waste involved in ketosis. Is the waste a feature or a bug? From an evolutionary perspective it is understood that energy must be conserved to the greatest extent possible - our survival depended on it. The entire insulin system as I understand it is based on that idea in that it directs our bodies to store the energy that is not needed in any given moment. When carbs become scarce in the winter, as you mention, or in times of food scarcity generally the body can switch into an alternative energy system where it can now use the energy that it has stored in times of plenty. It wouldn't want to waste that energy. Presumably it even takes energy to break lipids down into the various components as Dr. Bikman covered. This seems to be an inefficiency that I'd like to be able to reconcile. Does it have to do with the starvation metabolism vs ketogenic diet? In other words is the body just not able to well-regulate the available energy against what it needs to function in any given moment, given that the lipid energy is being consumed rather than harvested from the body itself? I feel like I might be answering my own question to some degree here, but it would still be nice to hear the experts address it. And in addition it still seems like a surprising inefficiency that the body did not adapt a way to store excess energy in this alternative, ketogenic energy system. Though perhaps the explanation is revealed in the fact that it is a starvation energy system. If that is the case though I'm still curious how that explanation interplays with the other aspects of this system like the brown fat Dr. Bikman is studying. Does brown fat play any role in starvation metabolism? If indeed ketosis can be thought of as 'starvation metabolism', at least evolutionarily speaking, and it explains the energy waste involved, why wouldn't the body have adapted a way to store the excess energy during those lean times, as it would have been so much more vital for survival?

  • @justtakealook1226
    @justtakealook1226 6 років тому +15

    The Video that cleared up why some people cant lose weight, Thanks BB

  • @Journeyman-Fixit
    @Journeyman-Fixit 7 років тому +129

    Brilliant explanation of what I have been doing wrong all my life and how to fix it, it really hits home for me at 11:00 in this video. Thanks for the education would be an understatement - thumbs up!

  • @nancyarchibald9095
    @nancyarchibald9095 5 років тому +6

    Not sure, I may have already posted. But this KWOE has changed my life. Today, I am down a whopping -99 lbs. BP 118/68. Fasting morning BS 94. This thumbnail was me at 305lbs. Today 206...still a way to go, but I'm so grateful for the truthful science Dr. Bikmen shares with us. LCHF is practically effortless in month #10. My body prefers fat for fuel. Thank you, Thank you, Thank you!!!

  • @barbaragonzales5944
    @barbaragonzales5944 2 роки тому +3

    The concept of uncoupling is new to me and I'm a practicing physician. I knew about white vs brown fat but had no idea they can change based on the metabolic milieu.

  • @burritosburritos
    @burritosburritos 4 роки тому +6

    For the year and a half, I've done 20-24 hr dry fasts 3-4 times a week. Also I've only taken daily cold showers. Now, I haven't totally stopped my carb in take, but I suspect the dry fasts have upregulated my mitochondrial activity and increased my brown fat. In the past when I would sleep (especially in the winter), I would curl up in my blanket all night long, especially during the winter. This has been since I was a kid. Now I find myself waking up in the night having to remove the blanket cause I feel hot. If I haven't thrown off my blanket, I'm a lot more sweaty as compared to before. The last time I did this regularly was when I was a kid. This was probably a time when I had more brown fat and wasn't the product of decades of carb intake.

    • @mayracasarez9354
      @mayracasarez9354 Рік тому

      This makes so much sense. It's been happening to me and I couldn't understand why, now I know because of the work Ive been putting in in my lifestyle I'm creating more of that brown fat which is helping me lose fat. 🎉

  •  7 років тому +15

    Great...it helped me a lot to understand relation between keto nutrition and ice swimming...I was swimming second winter in ice waters and it improves my termoregulation by changing white fat cells to brown fat cells. But nobody could explain it like this!! (thanks to this video!!) It feels great. And this winter I also started with keto nutrition...it should help us even more with better thermoregulation which is connected with better immunity too. 👍

  • @FLJD427
    @FLJD427 6 років тому +6

    OUTSTANDING presentation. Just awesome.

  • @DorindaD
    @DorindaD 7 років тому +14

    I would love to see a video where he goes more in depth like he was saying he'd like to

  • @G03t-l7n
    @G03t-l7n 3 роки тому +3

    This explains a lot about hunter gatherers. There are two modes for human. Hunters eat meat, sleep without proper shelter, and can’t store too much fat to the point of slowing down, so it breaks up fat and waste it while making heat to provide cold resistance, and the hunts are normally more than a day’s meal, making wasting not a big problem. For gatherers who eat grains and fruit, the opposite happens so they store fat due to not always having enough food to go around and lower metabolism, until we are able to produce more than enough calories from fruits and grains.

  • @craigmcintier5488
    @craigmcintier5488 6 років тому +4

    This answered so many of my questions. Awesome talk!

  • @brianchandler3346
    @brianchandler3346 7 років тому +17

    Thanks for putting this up. You've provided some of the best information I've found on how insulin comes into play. I now no longer need my Metformin from maintaining a strict Ketogenic lifestyle, but now I understand more about why that is.

    • @kimmiller3899
      @kimmiller3899 5 років тому

      How does Metformin play into this?

  • @jimcameron9848
    @jimcameron9848 7 років тому +60

    Very good video and very timely. It is concerning to me that similar video topics without any substance garner 1000s of views, while the complex and substantive videos like this one are not readily viewed. It suggest to me that there is a large role for policy on this and education generally.

    • @spaceghost8995
      @spaceghost8995 5 років тому +4

      Because lazy people just want a quick sound bite. Most are far too stupid and/or lazy to actually dig into some numbers.

  • @dannybasquez7631
    @dannybasquez7631 7 років тому +3

    Very interesting, I would love to see a video of the Q & A portion as well.

  • @drshyamvaidya
    @drshyamvaidya 6 років тому +5

    love it.. so good to hear him, it solves many of my questions, thank you for doing this.

  • @Heretical_Theology
    @Heretical_Theology 7 років тому +3

    This is fantastic. Love LCHF diet but never heard the science behind it explained like this. Thank you!

  • @JJMalvarez
    @JJMalvarez 5 років тому +1

    Excellent talk...Good for those on Keto and also for those in Intermittent fasting. A must watch for Diabetics to understand more about what's going on in their bodies.

  • @robertlaslo8951
    @robertlaslo8951 5 років тому +4

    Ketogenic wasting probably includes perspiration as well as the other two means because my body odor changes during ketosis indicating that sweat may be another way to waste.

    • @ubuu7
      @ubuu7 3 роки тому

      Do you smell worse on keto sweat?

  • @helmutgottschalk7983
    @helmutgottschalk7983 7 років тому +32

    Thank you so much for sharing this information. Keto diet has changed my life for the better after 50 years of being overweight. Now I know more about what's going on in my body and can pay even more attention to what I put in it.

  • @mikesmith4053
    @mikesmith4053 3 роки тому +4

    As a new type two diabetic, and spending my career in the medical field, I couldn’t figure out why they were not testing insulin level or output. If I’m insulin resistant can you don’t know the insulin output of the pancreas how in the world would giving More insulin solve the problem.

    • @Julia_Berrrlin
      @Julia_Berrrlin 3 роки тому

      because the old treatment focuses on glucose. It's also not widely known that diabetes type 2 is reversible

  • @nikkiguerlain
    @nikkiguerlain 7 років тому +11

    What a great lecture! Thank you!

  • @m4xfl4xst4r
    @m4xfl4xst4r 7 років тому +20

    how long does it take to develop Brown fat in the presence of ketosis.

    • @paulylah
      @paulylah 5 років тому +5

      How long is a piece of string ?

    • @jumpjet777
      @jumpjet777 5 років тому +10

      @@paulylah I'm buggered if I am going to study string theory :P

    • @IvySnowFillyVideos
      @IvySnowFillyVideos 3 роки тому +1

      Are u stringing me along
      : - D

  • @myjourney3229
    @myjourney3229 7 років тому +9

    This is a fantastic video. I've been getting into a ketogenic diet lately as well as doing the Wim Hof method which advises cold showers that build brown fat.

    • @Unexcelled
      @Unexcelled 5 років тому +1

      Wim Hof is the real deal. The science Dr. Bikman is presenting coorelates with the cold exposure. Dr. Bikman explains it extremely well. The Wim Hof method helps the body develop brown fat. The brown fat also has a positive effect on the immune system.
      That's just one part of what the Wim Hof method does. Concentrating on the cold while breathing similar to what a free-diver would can cause the brain to develop new pathways that can literally control automatic body functions. It's essentially a way to become a monk. I myself can now release adrenaline, or dopomine- not unlimited amounts but enough to make me twice as strong in the gym with a burst of adrenaline, or calm down from a stressful situation with a few breaths and a release of dopomine.
      I've barely scratched the surface having done the method for a couple of months.

    • @sidmichael1158
      @sidmichael1158 4 роки тому

      Link?

    • @IvySnowFillyVideos
      @IvySnowFillyVideos 3 роки тому +1

      Interesting about ur workouts.
      I sleep with my room temp@50f & swim in cold water from mountain snow. Im always hot.

  • @mpy1234567
    @mpy1234567 7 років тому +6

    thx, keep those videos coming

  • @justanothernoobe
    @justanothernoobe 5 років тому +1

    What an amazing presentation. For me, as a non-academic (certainly non-scientific or medical), this made complete sense and was easy to understand - the use of the slides to support / explain the findings was great (ok - I DID have to pause a few of the slides to make sure I understood the graphical correlations).
    I hear some recent concerns about keto diet effects on the kidneys for diabetics. I'm Type 2 - although moderating my diet so comfortably at pre-diabetic levels. Would be keen to hear if there has there been any new information since this presentation that might be relevant to diabetics.

  • @DarinHibbs1
    @DarinHibbs1 6 років тому +3

    Looking for a video by this Dr. On thyroid issues

    • @ryanjones4042
      @ryanjones4042 5 років тому +1

      Ketosis slows your thyroid. Ketosis mimics a permanent fasting, so you are in constant survival mode.

    • @PamelaStClair-lu1fj
      @PamelaStClair-lu1fj 3 роки тому

      @@ryanjones4042 i know you posted this a year ago but I saw this just now. That may explain why I developed hypothyroidism after doing a strict Atkins diet for a year!

  • @Cloppa2000
    @Cloppa2000 11 місяців тому +1

    I have never believed the 'calories don't matter for fat loss' brigade.. but this has totally enlightened me!!!
    Absolutely brilliantly explained! 👍👍👍👍

  • @John03140
    @John03140 7 років тому +54

    Another brilliant Low Carb Down Under post!

  • @RobinJacobi
    @RobinJacobi 6 років тому +5

    I am thankful that you have given us the science behind the keto diet.
    Im finally losing the fats.
    I didnt count calories, however, now I do because eating proteins and maybe a little to much fat (which was measured in tablespoons) causes me to retain fat. I can only assume im extremely insulin resistant.
    So very thankful for this research!

  • @TheZGALa
    @TheZGALa 7 років тому +5

    Thank you for sharing this fascinating and valuable research!!

  • @anewlifestirring
    @anewlifestirring 5 років тому +4

    Thank you for yet another clear and informative presentation.
    One question that remains is to understand to what point ketones themselves have an effect on the metabolic pathways and cellular inflammation and to what extent they are merely an index of the glucose shortage and the opening of the decarboxylation pathway.
    Do ketones have an anti-inflammatory effect or does the glucose shortage starve intracellular germs and viruses that produce inflammation?
    In so many ways, the valiant band of metabolic explorers you represent remind me of the feats of Livingston and Stanley discovering Africa.

    • @YeshuaKingMessiah
      @YeshuaKingMessiah 5 років тому

      Its pretty well proven that ketones themselves are the key, having the effect. Dr Boz has some vids on this. Shes very much in brain healing n healed her mom of cancer.

  • @peterfaber9316
    @peterfaber9316 6 років тому +20

    What people are completely unaware of, (and in my opinion the scientists don't emphasize this enough), is that metabolic rate varies depending on what you eat and how often you eat.
    It doesn't vary a little bit, but enormous. Metabolic rate between 2 people with equal health, same weight and bodyfat percentage, on different diets of the same amount of calories, can be different as much as 50%. Fifty percent!!!!!
    Reducing calories just drops your metabolic rate by about the same amount of calories. Nobody seems to be aware of this.
    The problem is that this effect is somewhat hidden because it's not instant. At first you burn through glycogen. Glycogen stores are about 2 to 3 kg of glucose and water and they are in the muscle and liver. That's the first week of dieting. After that first week, the metabolic rate starts to drop to match the caloric intake. And it's when the real suffering starts: Feeling cold, constantly thinking about eating, living from meal to meal, grumpiness, etc.
    If people could only really understand these shifts in metabolic rates, they wouldn't even try to just simply cut calories.
    It is weird as hell. I've explained this to people and even if they say they understand, the only possible effect is that they start a low calory diet because they became aware (again) they need to lose some weight. It's like trying to convince mormons that god doesn't exist. A total waste of time.

    • @spaceghost8995
      @spaceghost8995 5 років тому +2

      EXACTLY. That's why my days of calorie counting were nearly useless.

    • @erastvandoren
      @erastvandoren 5 років тому +2

      BS, metabolic rate is quite stable, variations are not greater than 10-15%.

    • @jakesnowake1
      @jakesnowake1 5 років тому +1

      @Odd Fish funny you say we reject the bible as we are currently studying the sermon on the mount in my gospel doctrine Sunday school class and have been going through Christ's ministry all year... Also if you were unaware the speaker Benjamin Bikman is a very active member of the Church of Jesus Christ of latter day saints.

    • @karinlogtenberg
      @karinlogtenberg 5 років тому

      @Odd Fish Clearly you don't know anything about Mormonism, so sad....

    • @TheRealMonnie
      @TheRealMonnie 5 років тому

      @@jakesnowake1 actually the Bible that Mormons use is not the Bible. There are several places where words are changed. There are several ministries online to look into showing Mormonism is a cult. Jesus Christ is part of the Godhead, the Trinity, the three in one, and that's the major doctrine Mormons reject. Compare the watchtowers Bible with the KJV. Ephesians 2:8-9:
      "For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast.". Works based salvations like Mormonism's are heretical towards the Bible. You cannot earn your way, and saying you can is prideful. Jesus paid it all. We only need to trust in him. That's what the Bible teaches.

  • @ArinaThomsen
    @ArinaThomsen 7 років тому +6

    Brilliant and absolutely necessary research. Thank you, Dr. Bikman! I hope your ideas will become very widely spread in the modern medical field and among the general population.

  • @Marqusdavis
    @Marqusdavis 5 років тому +3

    Absolutely fascinating. Thank you for the presentation.

  • @betterlifebroadcasting7547
    @betterlifebroadcasting7547 7 років тому +9

    YAy! Thermo geekiness! Also.. as regards the restricted calorie vs. ad libidum groups, one group also wasn't feeling angry, controlled by outside forces and resentful. That makes a HUGE difference in whether a person is going to keep the weight off after the diet.

    • @Jefferdaughter
      @Jefferdaughter 7 років тому

      Interesting thought. But does that really apply to people who voluntarily signed up for a study? And were most likely compensated for their participation?

    • @betterlifebroadcasting7547
      @betterlifebroadcasting7547 7 років тому

      I appreciate the question! But I think it probably does. I mean, we all sign up for work and are compensated for it too, but that doesn't stop us from resenting it on occasion. And then, having been "told what to do" there's an almost inevitable bit of rebellion once a person is "free" of the restriction.

  • @jbfitness3056
    @jbfitness3056 6 років тому +8

    I frigging love this presentation. Thank you Dr. Ben Bickman

  • @amywilde8892
    @amywilde8892 6 років тому +1

    DR. Bickman mentions pairing up with a bariatric clinic to test the patients - has that testing/study/ findings been published yet?

  • @DorindaD
    @DorindaD 7 років тому +50

    No wonder so many people who start a keto diet feel like they are having hot flashes.

    • @loubob21
      @loubob21 6 років тому +5

      In truth he did say the heat was mostly imperceptible.

    • @spaceghost8995
      @spaceghost8995 5 років тому +10

      I know that I typically fast for 24 hours, and then I eat about 2 pounds of meat. After that, I feel hot for about two hours.

    • @cbpuzzle
      @cbpuzzle 4 роки тому +2

      @@spaceghost8995 That much meat and it could be bacterial inflammation. Meat rotting in your gut, not digesting. Add 2 tbsp of ACV to that meal to help digest all that meat and see it the heat goes away.

    • @IvySnowFillyVideos
      @IvySnowFillyVideos 3 роки тому

      Geez...here I thought I've had menopause for 20 years : - D

  • @harikrishnanchandramohan4209
    @harikrishnanchandramohan4209 4 роки тому +3

    Can anyone pls tell me how to use this diet on a diabetic patient on medication. My mom has to take medication three times a day on how can she possibly fast.

    • @regular-joe
      @regular-joe 4 роки тому +1

      From what I understand, look into going Keto first. As her insulin resistance improves, she'll start being able to reduce her medications (under doctor's supervision!). Intermittent fasting can follow after that!

    • @maiaallman4635
      @maiaallman4635 3 роки тому

      Hi, I'm also diabetic. I would suggest getting a continuous glucose monitor so your mom will know her BG every 5 minutes, less chance of going into hypoglycemia. Then she has to make sure that the long acting insulin is prescribed separately to the fast acting insulin, so she can inject them separately. Initially start keeping the long acting insulin at the same level as the doctor prescribed. Inject the quick acting insulin as required in response to the BG readings you see from your 5 minute readings. The body does produce some glucose in the blood by itself from other sources. Also, before you start, buy some ketone urine strips and make sure that your mom's ketones don't go over the safe level, as that is dangerous and will require hospitalisation for Diabetic Keto Acidosis, which is very dangerous.

  • @okritsky
    @okritsky Рік тому

    18:03 wrong reference to the original study? misprint? I can't find the original study by number given.

  • @yamaha69x
    @yamaha69x 3 роки тому

    the study at 27:30 also indicates that after 3-6 months there were no significant changes between the 2 groups.

    • @LTPottenger
      @LTPottenger 2 роки тому

      They lost more weight, they are talking about bloodwork

  • @Tienganhmrtuan
    @Tienganhmrtuan 4 роки тому +2

    Th presentation was quite complicated to me. Any way, Thanks for sharing your idea!

  • @elenbokhari1040
    @elenbokhari1040 5 років тому +1

    A very informative talk! However, as a next step would be interesting to understand wider physiological effects of the ketogenetic diet, I.e. cardiovascular health, dementia and cancer. As well, if this type of diet can be used during the whole human life span or only at certain pre-diabetic states. Again, well done!

  • @ms.crystal8280
    @ms.crystal8280 5 років тому +5

    But how do levels of ketones affect the liver?

    • @cbpuzzle
      @cbpuzzle 4 роки тому

      Liver creates the ketone level. It converts fat acids to ketones and puts them in the bloodstream for energy.

  • @jschultzf3
    @jschultzf3 6 років тому +7

    Interesting how the endocrine theory engulfs the caloric theory - you explained this really well! I also never realized that that there are two different kinds of fat tissue: white and brown...fascinating!

  • @trejosworld
    @trejosworld 4 роки тому +4

    33:02 “Eat when you’re full.” That’s all I got from this talk and I’m doing it now!

  • @joeamrine7450
    @joeamrine7450 5 років тому +1

    I'm suggesting this out of ignorance, But isn't gluconeogensis very energetically inefficient?
    Due to the higher concentrations of glucose, glucose-6-p, glucose-1,6-bp and early substrates of glycolysis, wouldn't this make the non-standard state delta G of the steps involved in gluconeogensis very energetically costly requiring a lot of atp?
    So if you were to decrease carbohydrates intake, wouldn't your body need to go through a very energetically inefficient gluconeogensis to restore blood glucose concentrations, using a lot of ATP?
    And also the low glucose effects on hormones (insulin) that would upregulate fat burning enzymes in order to make the atp needed to fuel gluconeogensis?

  • @michaeldillon3113
    @michaeldillon3113 3 роки тому

    This ties up with something I heard on a Dr Fung talk where he mentioned that nearly a hundred years ago it was discovered that diabetics ( insulin deficient !) expend about 30O kcalories a day . Incidentally I saw a documentary about brown adipose tissue on TV at least 30 years ago , so like a lot of this knowledge it has been around for years . Thank goodness these brilliant people are putting all this knowledge together and applying it in the clinical setting ( goodness knows we desperately need it ) . Great talk doctor 👍

  • @KenZShadower
    @KenZShadower 5 років тому +2

    How do you explain stalls some people experience even though in keto diet?

    • @seal9454
      @seal9454 5 років тому +1

      As you lose weight, your body's energy requirements and expenditure decreases since your fat mass is shrinking. This means that you have to gradually lower the amount of calories you are consuming. For example, an obese individual might see fast weight loss eating at 2,500 calories, rather than the 6,000 calories he/she could have been consuming on a daily basis. However, this person would eventually need to lower the calories to continue the weight loss.
      Weight loss stalls happen when your body burns the same amount of calories you are consuming.

  • @BenyaminMentchale
    @BenyaminMentchale 3 роки тому

    Hi,
    I have a question regarding Keaton.
    Are Ketons used, as an input, to create energy, in the cell?
    Or
    Are Ketons, the output, of the energy creating process, in the cell?

  • @pavement66
    @pavement66 7 років тому +3

    brilliant stuff. thanks for posting

  • @555Trout
    @555Trout 5 років тому +1

    Does anyone know what causes the color change in the fat?

  • @ramkumar-lc1st
    @ramkumar-lc1st 8 місяців тому +2

    Pls read his book " Why we get sick" free pdf available online!! Real eye opener about insulin resistance,, after reading it you will really make conscious choice about carbs and sugar!!

  • @Laionel76
    @Laionel76 5 років тому +1

    Does anybody research the effect of triggering glucagon release (or not releasing)?

  • @TheFogskum
    @TheFogskum 7 років тому +2

    Absolutely fantastic presentation!

  • @rogerbird5665
    @rogerbird5665 3 роки тому

    I love this guy. His thinking is so clear and easy to understand. I think I'm going to subscribe to his channel, if he has one.

  • @testinginstruments7785
    @testinginstruments7785 2 роки тому

    Wonderful presentation. Very useful. Thank you.

  • @bilbobeutlin268
    @bilbobeutlin268 4 роки тому

    Fantastic lecture Dr. Bikman
    How would you explain constant blood ketone levels between 0.1 and 0.5 mmol/L in subjects eating one meal per day consisting only of fatty fish and fatty meat?

    • @winsomecohall2250
      @winsomecohall2250 4 роки тому +1

      What is your glucose measuring.. got to burn up the stored sugar then your ketones will go up also eating fatty cuts of mean and 20 grams carbs TOTAL not net carbs

  • @MsSRose-gp5pr
    @MsSRose-gp5pr 2 роки тому

    Is this the video where he talks about the most accurate test for diabetes, but that most doctors don't even know about, Fasting Insulin? I've been trying to find that video of his! I've watched it and I'm wondering if I'm just missing the part he talks about that, because I've listened to so many and its all running together. Thank you!! ❤️

  • @Biohackthefat
    @Biohackthefat 6 років тому +5

    So Interesting and wonderful data! I love this! ❤️

  • @rickhdee
    @rickhdee 2 роки тому +1

    Fascinating! I would conjecture that the body is not just "wasting" the energy but in fact senses the surplus of stored fat in the body and is purposely burning off that excess. It is only the constant supply of glucose that inhibits this action with our Standard American Diet. I would be interested in hearing what others think, since the body does not seem to do things without rhyme or reason.

  • @musclesmouse
    @musclesmouse 5 років тому +4

    wow, this is happening in my body. I feel hotter and my wife feels the heat also. so the ketones she smells is my fat burning. this really helps me understand what is happening.

  • @dralasays
    @dralasays 6 років тому +3

    What a fantastic lecture.

  • @lindael2
    @lindael2 7 років тому +11

    I am going to watch this for the second time. Sent a link to my Dr. Great information.

  • @VegasCyclingFreak
    @VegasCyclingFreak 7 років тому +15

    Wasting some energy makes sense to me... it's a byproduct of being warm blooded.

    • @Tmanaz480
      @Tmanaz480 5 років тому +1

      Contrast that with glucose, which we have a hard time eliminating. Our kidneys try their best to get rid of excess glucose, but it's damaging to them.

    • @cbpuzzle
      @cbpuzzle 4 роки тому +1

      Navy Seals and Olympic swimmers in training burn 8000+ calories a day in cold water compared to a track athlete burning 2500+. The heat production is very calorie intensive.

  • @pureffm
    @pureffm 7 років тому +7

    I have 3 important questions:
    (1) will the body enter ketosis when food intake has less than 20g carbs and moderate protein more easily if there is an important fat intake, or will the body need to be kickstarted with important amounts of fat?
    (2) If the body enters ketosis just as easily without fat intake, can the body and the brain in particular use those ketones for fuel without that fat intake or does it need to be trained with actual fat consumption?
    (3) Are ketones produced out of own body fat excreted through urine more easily than ketones produced through fat intake?
    My thinking is that since people who are fasting for more than a few days have good mental clarity and energy, high fat intake is not necessary to a ketogenic diet - as long as own fat reserves are sufficient and the typical fat transported vitamins are not lacking. Is this assumption correct?

    • @carrollhoagland1053
      @carrollhoagland1053 7 років тому +2

      Laurent, good analysis. The trigger is in the liver when it senses "Low Glucose" or glycogon stores in the liver - it either uses available carbs to make glucose or stores it as fat. If the carbs are not present, it then signals adipose tissue to release fats. Dr. Bikman and Mike from High Intensity Health have a "New" discussion on Hormones and metabolic feed back systems. He goes more into science in this discussion ...
      LOL www.70GoingOn100.com the Centenarian Diet, or maybe 128, the Hayflick limit, or if a Ray Kurzweil fan then this is a Moot Point …

    • @michaelcariello6233
      @michaelcariello6233 7 років тому +2

      Laurent Grimal here is my thinking on your question. Fasting long enough will bring on ketosis. However, at some point we will have to eat. To stay in ketosis and take in nutrition on an everyday basis it must be a higher fat diet. Fat is the only macronutrient when ingested does not provoke an insulin response. So eating a high fat diet allows you to eat everyday without the body ever coming out of ketosis. So if you plan on eating everyday and want to remain in ketosis a majority of your calories must come from fat.

    • @victoribiyemi4488
      @victoribiyemi4488 7 років тому +4

      Fat does produce an insulin response when ingested, any food does , however the insulin response from fat is not of the same magnitude of that from carbs and from some extent protein

  • @armadillotoe
    @armadillotoe 4 роки тому +3

    I have been very strictly to pretty much keto for about 18 months. I devour information on keto, health, and weight loss. This is the 1st time I have seen an actual reason why eating so much fat is a good thing when inducing ketosis. I hate blindly following instructions, and love knowing why I should do things. More dietary fat means less insulin. This also explains when I began the keto diet, I was so hot, and minimal exertion would cause me to sweat uncontrollably. I could take a long cold shower, and before I could dry off, I was sweating again. When fat is "burned" it actually is turned into carbon dioxide, and water. If you are more rapidly burning fat than can be expelled as water and carbon dioxide, breathing and whizzing out ketones (converted fat) makes perfect sense. This is the best explanation of the ketogenic diet I have ever seen.

    • @kicknadeadcat
      @kicknadeadcat 4 роки тому +1

      The insulin roller coaster is what finally messes with your pancreas. That’s why doctors have it backwards they try to control glucose when they should be to controlling insulin for type 2.

  • @frankfromupstateny3796
    @frankfromupstateny3796 7 років тому +17

    Look....our ancestors ate meat when they could...and ate really anything that they could...when they weren't being eaten too.
    Today....we eat crap and watch TV for 8 hours a day...or sit on our asses...
    If we cut our carbs now...and increase our good fats...and slightly decrease our protein or nitrogen levels...we lose weight due to "wasting; pissing out ketone bodies,...and burning more "fat"...as a consequence of eating more fat.
    If we now know that "brown fat" can upregulate with more fat eaten...it's a "given" that we need more fat...
    Time to change the pyramid...again...

    • @HammerheadGuitar
      @HammerheadGuitar 6 років тому +3

      Humans are the greatest predator to ever live, we chase the lions and wolves away and eat their food. Humans ate mostly animal products and plants when the hunt went wrong. You would die if you didn't eat enough animal proteins and fats in the past. Non of the grains, vegetables or fruits you eat are found in nature. Stop believing that humans were as pathetic and weak as modern humans who have sugar and plant based diets, we are the apex predator and have the bodies of carnivores.

    • @loubob21
      @loubob21 6 років тому +3

      If you were dropped into the woods to survive, the first thing you would consider for food would be animals. (Birds, Fish, small mammals etc.) Why? because you know that you could cook them and survive from the nutrients they provide. You wouldn't start eating leaves, or berries or root vegetables. You wouldn't even know if they were safe. Eating animals is safe.

  • @get8020fit
    @get8020fit 3 роки тому

    Is there a simple point of care or home test for insulin. Can C peptide work?

  • @julievalentine5375
    @julievalentine5375 7 років тому +2

    I know there are strips to measure Ketones in the urine. How are Ketones in the breathe measured or detected?

    • @PokeyMeansBusiness
      @PokeyMeansBusiness 7 років тому +1

      I don't think there's any easy, direct method to detecting ketones in the breath that would give you a number, but a lot of people report "keto breath" and their breath smelling bad or fruity.

    • @conceptualelegance
      @conceptualelegance 7 років тому +1

      breathalizers , i wouldnt recommend neither of them. not even the blood tests, because ketones can be consumed or wasted. and its hard to account for where they are going.
      eg. you might be fueling on ketones and not excreting any, yet still in ketosis .

    • @curtisbowman6199
      @curtisbowman6199 7 років тому

      I know they have breath tests for measuring blood glucose levels, but they're not nearly as accurate as a blood test is. I'd assume it basically condenses your breath down into water vapor and tests that like you would urine.

    • @Rodnas4
      @Rodnas4 6 років тому +1

      www.ketonix.com

  • @elisafrye2115
    @elisafrye2115 5 років тому +1

    Thank you, Professor Bikman! You have explained the complex metabolic reaction of our bodies to carbohydrates, protein, and fat so clearly that I think even a fairly uninformed person can understand the role of carbohydrates and insulin in fat deposition. I am going to point out your presentation to several type 2 diabetics who think I’m nuts for controlling my type 2 Diabetes strictly through diet-a diet greatly made up of-OH HORRORS-FAT!

  • @ilegor365
    @ilegor365 4 роки тому +3

    Great talk! What I found fascinating was the graph from the David Ludwig study starting at 26:30, where the metabolic rate for the low carb high fat diet continues to rise and stay high for 4-6 hours after the meal. Are there any other studies that have built on this study by looking at meal frequency and IF over a longer time span 24-72 hours?

    • @pacojavo2978
      @pacojavo2978 3 роки тому

      Just watched the video and I was exactly thinking the same regarding HFLC meal metabolic reaction, and if it keeps improving if next meals are also HFLC 👍

  • @davidpannell2172
    @davidpannell2172 4 роки тому

    Also I'm curious if there is a ceiling to this behavioral transfer between WAT & BAT and would the ceiling even be a substantial difference in a BMR bump?

  • @VaughnMalecki
    @VaughnMalecki 6 років тому +2

    Perhaps my access body fat I'm still hanging on to isn't as unhealthy as I thought. Maybe my body doesn't want to "waste energy" so it hangs onto it and stores it quite easily. 🤔
    It kinda makes sense now why people say "just stick with it" and six months later they suddenly begin to see results of more muscle tone happening.

  • @benzei2003
    @benzei2003 3 роки тому

    Really good lecture, easy to understand. Great career choice as a professor

  • @vjr6939
    @vjr6939 7 років тому +12

    amazing vid, i recently read Dr Volek's research on high level endurance athletes, high carb vs low carb, and i think this accounting discrepancy came up, was actually wondering about how that worked out, guess this sort of answers it!

  • @ReeImagined
    @ReeImagined 7 років тому +3

    This heat theory... I need to know more. I've been doing keto for seven months, have lost 35 pounds, and I stalled when my gallbladder decided to get irritated. It was never infected or inflamed, but it was definitely being used hard maybe for the first time in my life. Now that I'm healed from that trauma and am watching spicy foods, I find myself getting really warm right before bedtime. And, I'm finally losing weight again. Is this heat metabolism? It almost has to be. I've done bloodwork that proves all my numbers are good and no infection. The liver is the center of metabolism, and this heat centers around my core right where the liver is. Any ideas? When I say heat, my temp rises about one to two degrees right before bedtime.

    • @Jefferdaughter
      @Jefferdaughter 7 років тому +2

      Cherie, you may want to contact directly someone who is doing research on low cab high fat diets and/or nutritional ketosis in humans. Others have had similar experiences, but it is unlikely that other viewers will have any useful information on your body temperature rise in the evening. Dr. Jason Fung would probably suggest that you consider brief occasional fasts, which could give your gall bladder a chance to rest and repair itself. He says that short fasts have many health benefits, which include allowing the body to more effectively maintain and repair itself. Videos featuring him are here on YT.I'm not always sure what people mean when they say 'spicy foods'. Spices are generally very beneficial, as they contain compounds that can be very healthful but which are not often found in other sources. The quality of the fat we eat is, as you most likely know, very important, whatever the level of fat is in our overall diet (original meaning of the word, as in 'the sum total of all we eat'). Avoiding processed foods is a key to health regardless of the percentage of fat we consume, so we should all avoid processed oils like corn and soybean oil. If there are no other issues except feeling warm in the evening, I wonder if this is an issue at all, really? Have you tried shifting when you eat, maybe eating in the morning and midday or early afternoon, rather than at 'dinner time'? Just a thought... Hope you are able to find the answers you seek.

    • @ReeImagined
      @ReeImagined 7 років тому

      Jefferdaughter thank you for the info. My gallbladder seems perfectly fine now after its freak out. Nothing hurts. I love spices, but I have been watching spicy pepper spices, if that makes sense? Generally I'm finding the warm temperature rises happening at random times now, so I've decided to keep a food journal to track everything. I have avoided processed foods and oils for two years. I'm pretty much whole foods now. Healing is my goal. Now that my gallbladder is fine, I'm losing weight again, slowly but steadily. I do a lot of research, so I'll continue to dig deeper. I have found healing in nutrition. Doctors do not tell you anything and only want to mediate symptoms.

    • @jonanderson6882
      @jonanderson6882 6 років тому

      Thermogenesis. You are eating more calories than your body needs so it burns it and converts it to heat. Try eating less. Could be it.

    • @jonanderson6882
      @jonanderson6882 6 років тому

      Iidentyasyourb0ss
      Start eating fruit daily but don't mix it with fat.

  • @cojanti
    @cojanti 7 років тому +3

    The science is clear and intriguing - thank you. However, the term 'metabolic advantage' is highly subjective: for the vast majority of human history calories have been in short supply, so to store and not to waste energy would have been advantageous. Could it be the case that from an evolutionary perspective, ketosis was signalling a lack of calories, and the higher metabolism was pushing us to go find calories? Of course, it has it's uses today in our bubble of excess calories, but part of me really wonders if this is optimal or just a survival mechanism.

    • @scotchfillet
      @scotchfillet 3 роки тому

      Ketosis is a function of low insulin, not low energy. You can have an excess of calories and still be in ketosis.

  • @iant419
    @iant419 4 роки тому +3

    I've been listening to keto advocates for years and I've never heard about white vs brown fat! Somebody tell Thomas Delauer.

    • @tonyspaniol1966
      @tonyspaniol1966 4 роки тому +1

      Rusty Shackleford TD already has videos talking about brown fat.

  • @thomasgronek6469
    @thomasgronek6469 5 років тому

    Any help would be appreciated, it seems impossible to eat over 1200 calories, I don't mind eating some fat (Bacon, porkroll, scrapple, etc), but other than that, living on meat, sardines, eggs, cream, butter, etc is resulting in reduced caloric intake, my concern is about metabolic rate reduction due to reduced caloric intake.

  • @bernardorojas91
    @bernardorojas91 3 роки тому

    Has anyone else heard👂 that sea kelp consumption help with the conversion of WAT tissue to BAT for body absorption through the blood and out through the lungs as CO2. Fat turns to CO2 then as opposed to getting sweated out ?

  • @danielstapler4315
    @danielstapler4315 6 років тому

    25:12 I once did some calculations based on the mmols on a ketostix for piddling on and worked out that not many ketones in absolute terms ended up in my urine. Was I wrong? how many Kcals actually end up in your urine? Ok Here are the calculations 3 mmol/L = 17.5mg/dL = 175 mg/L = 1gram per 5.7 litres of Urine. 1 gram Ketones = 9 Kcal I guess, so nearly 6 litres of urine (over 1.5 gals) = 9 Kcal Are these calculations right or wrong?

  • @DjEnDium
    @DjEnDium 7 років тому +2

    Yes sir.. Energy can be waisted but it may also be created by cortisol. So you have to realize if you've been breathing out keytones but stressing out about some thing or putting your body thru too much stress than your "waste" might not be noticeable.

    • @Jefferdaughter
      @Jefferdaughter 7 років тому

      So many people are keenly aware of how easy it is for energy to be waisted. :) While many of those same people don't even think about how much energy they have wasted simply by not even thinking about it; or through their lifestyle choices. I'll just assume that English is not your first language, but the confusion of word usage and misspellings makes your meaning nearly undecipherable, which is why I could not resist the tongue-in-cheek comments above. Sadly, this is becoming a very common issue even among those who are native English speakers, including those holding high school diplomas, and in some cases, college degrees.All the best to you, Marco!

    •  7 років тому

      Haha. Gj JD

  • @guskale9085
    @guskale9085 5 років тому +4

    Gotta love science.

  • @adeypoos
    @adeypoos 6 років тому +1

    I was wondering if on the flip side of this, can this endocrine theory account for why so many people say they feel cold when their insulin is high as a result of a high sugar diet?

    • @Clare0116
      @Clare0116 3 роки тому +1

      I am insulin resistant (no meds) and frequently feel icy cold, even my normally warm hands. I hibernate in a blanket if I can. I hoped this meant my ketosis was revving up. Apparently the opposite, my insulin is high, preventing fat burning.