Well, mostly 'free'. Google is tracking everything we watch on RUclips, which they bought a few years ago... and tracks most cell phone owners, our emails, etc - for their profit, with no respect for our rights or privacy. For profit, of course; that's why corporations exist. Thought they freely share our data with government entities, aka 'law enforcement', in most cases without a warrant. So, I remain grateful for the access to the tremendous amount of quality information on RUclips, yet....
PS- Why is our right to privacy so important? Because without privacy there is no freedom. We have been trading our rights for a false sense of security - and for convenience.
Jefferdaughter As soon as your Birth Certificate was signed, you were incorporated as an asset of your country. There exists 2 “yous”. Research Maritime Law etc. without this incorporation, you cannot buy a house, have a credit card, get any loan-as the global financial system is part of this. Why are Syria, Iran etc been outside the “dollar”.
1:10:30 - Fasting - It is interesting that most of Phinney's concerns and objections to fasting do not relate to the audience member's question, which was about 'fasting' for periods within each day (really reducing the time frame during which we eat each day) and fasting for up to 4 or 5 days. Phinney said he had no problem with restricted eating periods each day. Or fasts up to 48 hours. The rest of his remarks seem to be mostly aimed at Dr. Jason Fung. Yet Fung does not advocate long periods of fasting *except for extreme cases* and *under medical supervision^. Phinney's slide taken from published research shows that the obese are largely protected from the loss of lean body mass during longer fasts - and Fung only uses longer fasts with obese patients. Phinney seems unaware that all lean body mass is not made of muscle. Fung does not advocate fasting for long periods AT ALL for those who are not significantly overweight. Or fasts of any length for those who are already lean, or who may be prone to anorexia nervosa. For those with insulin resistance, which is really an excess of insulin production, Fung does recommending reducing the number of times those people eat each day. And/or very short term fasts - maybe up to a few days. Or every other day. Refeeding syndrome is NOT an issue in these instances. Dr. Fung does not disagree that these patients would benefit from nutritional ketosis through a well-fomulated keto diet - but states that many of his patients are unable to do so, often because of limited finances, and/or these people are already under a lot of stress and find trying to just feed themselves at all challenging enough. Phinney says that two plastic jugs (which leach toxins into whatever they contain) from one of the large discount bulk food chains of olive oil is a cheap way to add healthy fat to the diet, and he believes that olive oil is real. However, it is not 'extra virgin' olive oil, so one must wonder if it was not pressed from the olive, but maybe extracted using chemicals? Regardless, it does take some thinking on how to add a lot more fat to the diet, and get away from the carbohydrate eating habits we have all been trained into. One does not sit down and just eat olive oil. Yes, it can be done, but Dr. Fung has a good point when he says it is faster, easier, and cheaper than re-thinking one's diet. With deep respect for Dr. Phinney, Dr. Jason Fung's videos, books, and website idmprogram.com are all worth checking out.
Jefferdaughter I started dealing with insulin resistance with IF 18 6, and I lost all the weight I needed to but glucose level still prediabetes. So I have started Keto with IF and am making headway on glucose while keeping weight stable. I never really liked eating breakfast so it works for me. I will never go back to 3 meals plus snacks throughout the day. The two together offers an amazing tool to put together something that works for me.
great reply. plus: nitrogen depletion is NOT losing lean mass, it could come from anywhere, since those are studies from the 50's they are surely incomplete, they didn't know anything about autophagy on those years and a product of the cleaning of the cells is nitrogen. dr phinney is a great researcher but he's biased about fasting, not very well informed and a bit of a snob.
@@stefaniafei , I suspect that Dr. Stephen Phinney is very carbohydrate-tolerant. I find that carbohydrate-tolerant people have a hard time understanding that fasting does very good things for people who are very carbohydrate-intolerant (repeat: Intolerant). Also if Dr. Phinney has always lived with a lot of income, he might have problems understanding people who are scraping by on low income. However, I do appreciate Dr. Phinney'a research and receiving his presentations free of charge.
I wanted to thank you for your interest in supporting the well-being of others by means of providing this information. I am new-ish to keto, still trying to bring down AIC, and trying to educate myself. I very much appreciate this info, and your kindness in providing it 🖖
What he says about long term fasting, I’ve lived. In 1999, I ended up in the hospital with Ketoacidosis where my doctor came in my room and told me, “if my kidneys don’t turn my pH around, my organs would start shutting down one by one.” I had been fasting for five days at this time. I was in a season where I was just eating on Saturdays. I knew nothing about the Keto lifestyle but I lost a lot of lean muscle and at sixty now, practicing a Ketogenic lifestyle, I am beginning to repair my body. I have no interest in a long term fast, although I will fast up to twenty hours daily . I don’t do the same time frame each day. Thank you Dr Phinney
Regarding the comments on skin conditions: I had eczema, particularly on the insides of my elbows where there were persistent silver-dollar sized lesions. I was using topical steroids for treatment without much success. When I initially started on a ketogenic diet in 2000, the eczema dramatically improved within just 2 weeks, disappearing completely in under 2 months, and has never returned. I have maintained a more or less keto diet from then until now, with only a few short-term lapses. This genuine cure of eczema was a real convincer for me that keto was fundamentally beneficial.
I've read that all these skin issues like eczema psoriasis and even skin cancer are caused by high blood sugar and vegetable oils/trans fats which detox thru the skin. So glad you recovered! Were your lesions like sores that wouldn't heal?
39:30 -Inflammation - It's not clear whether the ingestion of carbohydrates 'up regulates' an 'inflammatory gene, OR if the ketone bodies 'down regulates' or turns off this gene... but the result is the same. This affects inflammation throughout the body, as well as the G.I. tract. Either way, eliminating sugars and/or starches will reduce or eliminate many of the aches and pains our physicians tell us are due to 'getting older', or old injuries, or whatever. Whether they are unaware of chronic systemic inflammation, or have no idea of the role diet plays in this is unclear. Regardless, it is worth trying dropping all sugar and starch (yes, including fruit) for 2 weeks, to see if it makes a difference. Some people find that the aches they did not even know they had go away!
Pecisely! I do fall for sweets/ deserts once in a while - one evening: nothing really happens, but if I digg in two or three days in a row I feel like someone beat me up with a baseball bat overnight ..... damn holiday season!
Black coffee is acidic and bitter. We were delighted to find that 'cafe con leche' is not at all bitter, but smooth and delicious. In other words, if enough cream and/or milk is used, no sugar was needed, even when we were first weaning ourselves off sugar. The milk we use if from 100% grassfed Jersey cows, fed certified organic pasture, hay, and fermented hay, and milked once per day, so the butterfat and solids-not-fat are both very high, and relatively low in lactose, though we don't worry about that. The cream is very 'heavy', and is difficult or impossible to pour from the jar. All unpasturized, so the enzymes and naturally occuring benefical diary bacteria are present. We used to drink black coffee, but this is now our favorite way to enjoy coffee. (But we only drink it occasionally, not every day, as we used to.) The 'bullet proof' coffee with coconut oil and/or butter is well known, but some folks may want to try this instead, or as a variation.
I have been having between 7 and 10 grams of sodium a day and never really knowing why i would feel better on this amount. Now i have sat through both of these videos i have learned why. As my ketones float between 3 and 5 this means my kidneys excrete sodium more efficiently so thanks for the info guys!!!
I’m three weeks in , 3kgs down , sugar cravings gone and nagging hip arthritis pain which wakes me at night! Amazing! This info from Dr is priceless, thanks.
Totally explained (to my relief) why I was lightheaded to the point of near syncope during a hike today. One month into keto and I am WAY under in my intake of salt. Felt sick for hours after and already feeling a bit better having taken a few grams of sodium and sitting watching this drinking high electrolytes. Thanks!
i skipped breakfast and lunch today and i was feeling a bit lightheaded, i drank coffee with sugar, when i should have just drank water with salt:) now i learned something new about salt so next time I will not do the same mistake.
His stance on losing lean body mass while in long-term fasting seems to be contrary to more recent studies that show fasting tends to protect lean body mass. And there is anecdotal evidence that someone fasted for more than a year and only started eating when he finally felt hungry, after losing about 80% of his excess fat that he had when he started his fast
Jason Fung replied to Dr. Phinney's criticisms of fasting (somewhat over-aggressively) in a recent podcast with Jimmy Moore on their new podcast called Fasting Talk (episode 5). His basic claim is that HGH and norepinephrine have protein sparing effects and any protein that is lost is damaged protein/excess skin (he says none of his overweight patients who lose a lot of weight from fasting ever need excess skin removed).
I would have to agree with Dr Fung on this, not that I'm an expert but I'm thinking the people doing fasting have some health issues that need to be addressed quick smart with some weight loss, I don't think losing some lean muscle would be a huge priority if somebody had 100kg to lose, nothing you can't build later when you are lighter and move around better don't you think?
Exactly. I think the difference is that Dr. Fung is typically working with obese patients on the verge of type II diabetes, whereas Dr. Phinney, from what I understand, typically works with endurance athletes and people looking to optimize their overall health. If you're highly active, are already at a great weight, and have a well balanced diet, fasting might not be necessary (although I still think it has tremendous benefits and most people should do a long fast once or twice a year). On the flip-side, if you're obese and are looking to rapidly lose weight and re-stabilize your hormones, I think fasting is your best bet. I'm sure Phinney and Fung would agree that Keto and Fasting are simply tools and both have different applications. They need to recognize this and work together rather than sticking in their "camps" and refusing to acknowledge the benefits of both.
that is exacly what I am thinking. As an former obese person that is about to become from overweight to "normal" (based on BMI) think that dr fung is far more interesting. I got from Keto to fasting and think both should be done at some point. If Keto work for example me I should learn that my high carb diet was bad for me for a long time. At the same aspect IF and sometime a 24 hour up to 42 hour(18 hours if + 24 hours extra) might help with the addictiove part many obese people have with food and sugar. Including eating when bored ect. Since Dr. Fung talked about his patence alot and that they usually don't gain weight after weight loss might be a part of it.
I'm an enthusiastic follower of Jason Fung's ideas, but I recognize he is sometimes a little bit aggressive with people that disagree with him, and this attitude is not paying him a service. Maybe wisdom will come with age.
A lot of people get a bit agressive when you don't agree with high carb low fat or 3-6meals diet people discuss keto and IF. In these discussion you propably get like this over time.
I have been experiencing a lot of fatigue so i will up my salt and broths .my son introduced me to keto a year and a half ago and i love it!My Mom had Ahlzand i will try to avoid that with keto and i love what i eat.
On salt, common table salt is overly-processed, lacks trace minerals, and contains toxic chemicals added to keep it flowing in humid weather. Sea salts are now polluted, and contain microplastics. So we choose pre-pollution sea salt - Himalayan pink, Redmonds from Utah, or Kansas grey. These natural salts taste so much better than processed salt! And they provide important trace and micro-trace minerals.
I agree about the salt - it does matter - if not for the extra minerals, definitely for the lack of toxins! Are those 'brands' you are mentioning - i.e Redmonds or Kansas grey? And is there a Himalayan salt brand you recommend (I imagine with it's popularity cheaper imitations are being made. I did read one's salt should be grey, pink, or beige -ish in color, NOT white, as that means it has minerals. I've been using Celtic Sea Salt which is supposed to be pretty good quality. I realize your comment is 2 years old, but someone might chime in :) TY!
Pre pollution salt... not happening in Utah. Our salt beds are right next to the city, with one of the worst air qualities in the world at times. All that rain has to go somewhere, and the salt is just pulled up outside in giant mountains!
I give my hat off to all the doctors whom collaborate their knowledge, findings and band together on the topic of the LCHF lifestyle ,and educating the world . You have the guts and the wisdom to go against all the bullshit we've been told and brainwashed with over the past years. Well Done 👍👍👍👍👍👍😄
1:25:20 "My opinion is no good unless I have data to support it" Excellent Dr. Phinney. I've started the KETO diet 7 years and a few months ago, at 65 years of age. When in doubt or in need of some advices to improve my condition, I to listen to some of Dr. Phinney and Jeff Volek presentations. I'm always learning something that help me.
Between them Steve and Jeff (Volek) have changed the world and of course Tim Noakes in SA. You don;t need to understand science to watch this and you don;t need to be super nerdy to get it. Watch this alongside Robert Lusti'g's seminal video and you will get the truth of what has been done to us but more importantly how we can fix it !
Christopher Sorby I know! I just started keto lifestyle January 3 and have lost 12 pounds (yay) but am still obese. I love when I see the sidelong glances from friends and strangers when I eat high fat foods-meat, butter, cream in my coffee, etc. “Keto” I say and people are okay with it and ask me how it works.
😂The only thing that produces more disbelief/ curious reactions is eating your steak tatar (with a butter, salt & eggyolks)..... last time when a colleague asked if was planning for a heart attack - I asked him if his jambread got his resting heart rate in the low 50s and how his 10k time was... that got him thinking! 😁
Thanks for the details about "keto-flu" I thought it was just an artifact of adaptation due to ramping up of beta-oxidation and did not know about the sodium deficiency effect. I have been recently complaining of persistent and significant chronic fatigue, and the low sodium sounds like a likely cause. I'm checking it out as I write this and drank some bullion. We'll see.
Make sure you also drink enough water, and get enough of the other minerals - especially potassium and magnesium. On salt - unprocessed salt is a much better choice than standard table salt. It is super-heated to ~1,200 F, which changes its molecular structure, has had all the trace and micro-trace minerals removed, and contains chchemicals to prevent it from caking in humid weather. Unprocessed salt - whether Himalayan or Redmond salt from the USA, or Kansas grey, etc - contains valuable trace minerals. It has not been change by high heat in processing, and it tastes so much better!!! Unprocessed salt is also not as dessicating. Those who have had sores on their lips or in their mouths (cold sores, or abrasions, etc) know that salt burns. Natural, unprocessed salt burns very little compared to the processed stuff they put on potato chips, etc - or not at all. Mercola.com has lots of great info on real, unprocessed salt vs the processed stuff. Yup, they have even messed up something as basic as salt!
Another issue with keyto flu is cleaning out your bowels when you fast. It is extremely hard on your body to start a fast and not clean out your bowels. I do a vitamin c flush when I start my fast and it helps my energy and it helps prevent keto flu as well. I also take magnesium and potassium and I put lemon in my water and a pinch of Himalayan sea salt in each large glass of water and I drink a gallon a day.
I wish Dr. Phinney would stop publicly attacking Dr. Fung. Each Dr. Has excellent tools to be used. To treat this spreading epidemic we need lots of options. Dr. Fung isn't wrong just because his approach is different. Dr. Phinney should know that better than anyone. I expect much more professionalism from Dr. Phinney.
I've just ordered some empty gelatine pill capsules on Amazon and will put ground up pink Himalayan salt in. I only eat once or twice a day and cannot use enough salt. Hopefully this way of injesting salt will help.
That's a great idea! I've just ordered a 'capsule machine', which is not really a 'machine', and 500 capsules; and am moving toward making my own supplements! So much cheaper, BUT even more importantly, none of the fillers, toxic substances that so many manufacturers put in - even the 'high quality' ones. Hope it's worked well.
Comparing the digestion of cattle (whether they are cows, bulls, or steers) to human digestion is... risky. Unlike humans, cattle have four-chambered 'stomachs', including the rumen, which is basically a fermentation vat. Cattle regurgitate the contents of the rumen and chew it again, as these animals are designed to eat forages - grasses, forbs and other vegetation. Cattle, and other ruminants are NOT designed to eat grains, so the guy's question about finely ground grains, aka flour, may be irrelevant. Also, when cattle are fed grain, these are generally truly whole grains (unlike the games processors can play with labeling flour), even if they are coarsely ground to decrease the percent of grains that are passed through the animals undigested. Also, as Phinney alluded, the fiber in grains is mostly or completely removed during processing for human consumption.
Very interesting about the lack of functional decline as the Ketogenic mice aged! Because I don't care how long I live if I can't keep my functionality
Huge respect for you Dr Phinney but you need to accept fasting is a vital component for both weight loss and health. You do not lose muscle mass with fasting lots of evidence for that if that’s your main worry!
Thanks Dr. Phinney ... brilliant discussion ... we are not in that room, but follow your line of thought. Have researched much of this so very easy to understand your lecture. In addition, have picked up some good knowledge and filled in some blanks with this talk and provided several new treads for analysis and research ... tx 70 Going On 100 ..., the Centenarian Diet
I'm one full week in, mainly for the health benefits and as a giant middle finger to my sugar addiction. Maybe i'll drop some weight too, but about 7kgs max. It's just a fun learning experience thanks to LCDU videos like this one! Thanks, you are among the best Dr. Phinney!
I disagree on the artificial sweetner part. Some of them like aspartame are really just as dangerous at least for the brain than regular table sweetner. I had depression, anxiety and agoraphobia when I started on my journey to better nutrition. I read a book saying that MSG and aspartame were involved in those conditions and to try removing them to see if it helped, I stopped using them, I was using a tiny amount of aspartam every morning in my coffee, that's all but just stopping that for 2 weeks made my agoraphobia go away and my depression and anxiety were a bit more manageable. Dark thoughts most of all were way less frequent. If I couldn't use safer sweetners like erythritol and stevia I would prefer to use unrefined cane sugar or honey rather than aspartame.
Artificial sweeteners are a dicey subject in the LCHF communities. Some people can work with it, some can't. I dropped all sweets completely when I went keto. I see them as having many potential side effects I wasn't interested in interfering with my new lifestyle. And preferred to get the sweet tastes away from my palette, so that I could more easily become accustomed to the more savory foods of keto life. YMMV
D rB agreed, I just like to share my own experience when I can just in case someone with the same issues can get any benefits from it. That's how I learned about keto after all and that saved my life :)
JezaGaia Yeah he kind of touches on that in this video. While there are general guidelines to handle 90% of this style of eating, the remaining parts need to be ironed out on an individual basis. Some things you might be able to use and some you can't.
DrB - In addition to the challenge of weaning ourselves off of sweet flavors, Jeza makes an important point. Aspartame, if I recall correctly, is metabolized to formaldehyde. Mercola.com has excellent articles about artificial sweeteners with references to the medical literature.
Just curious, Muffin, if you also tried eliminating all starch - since starch (bread, pasta, rice, cereals, potatoes, tapioca, etc) is just sugar molecules linked together, and quickly become sugar in our digestion. Alcohol is another substance that, metabolically speaking, is essentially a sugar. Hope you find the right balance of foods for you that helps you feel great, and also restores your skin!
@@Jefferdaughter You need to find out what triggers flare ups, and what triggers it generally. Many are inflammation responses, drop the inflammation, psoriasis either goes, or dramatically reduces. If yours isn't related to inflammation then you have a harder road ahead of you.
@@muffinman8365 have you tried eliminating ALL OILS except butter and olive oil? Skin conditions are usually caused by sugar OR bad oils like canola etc in processed foods or cooking
On sweeteners - Aspartame is at least as dangerous as sugar. No synthetic sweetener is 'safe'. Also, those addicted to sugar may need to go 'cold turkey' as sweetness of any kind can perpetuate thee addiction. (Are babies still being given sugar water in hospitals shortly after birth?) Others may find it helpful to wean themselves gradually by enjoying things like small amounts of low-sugar berries (blueberries or blackberries) withe cream, for instance. We recently found that some stevia extracts have no funny aftertaste (which apparently comes from the stems). Most every commercially made desert or 'sweet' is WAAAY too sweet for our taste, anyway, even before we tried low carb living. Now just a few drops of a high-quality stevia extract per serving - at most - makes our homemade ice cream plenty sweet. Stevia is easy to grow in warm climates, or in the summertime in colder areas. 'Fresh squeezed' 100% grassfed cream from Jersey cows, (of Devon, Ayshire, Shorthorn, etc or well-manged goats ) is so delicious that it needs very little sweetening!! It is also wonderful as a savory food - with salt, some onion and/or garlic (even the powders) sprinkled with chives, maybe some bacon crumbles... We don't miss the potato!
Well, I suppose the saltwater drink first thing in the morning before I go riding (still fasting - breakfast after I ride, if I'm hungry) is beginning to make sense. Two large glasses of water, and a salt boost. I don't know how much a gram is, but as though I were salting a meal, just.... in the glass of water. No need for cubes - I like the taste of salt, and, it seems, I can't get enough of it.
Problem in Singapore beef and sausage are very expensive, keto works best in Australia and USA, also you guys have huge kitchens and fridges so can meal prep in advance. But there are still enthusiasts in Singapore now compared to 5 years ago.
Dr Phinney I've just found your yt last night and this morning I'm listening to my second video. *Here's my question:* Is there anything that affects the insomnia that some people have from fasting? By something I guess I'm thinking of mineral or electrolyte balance but I'd like to leave the question open. Thank you.. from the USA.
I have a lot of respect for Dr. Phinney, but it is curious that he is so opposed to long term fasting. I'm not a doctor, but my understanding from the current research is that if you are fat adapted, long term fasting does not have a significant negative impact on Resting BMR or lean tissue loss. Its also curious that he cites old articles and says just because they are old doesn't mean they're wrong. That's true, but there is some newer research being done with new measurement techniques that seem to indicate fasting is not as harmful as previously thought.
I think the study only says that obese breakdown less protein than lean people. Ketones/Ketosis while fasting is just a way of the body to drastically reduce protein loss over time, bc too much lean mass loss = death. Doesnt mean it can be stopped. It has been shown a lot of times that you lose a siginificant amount, especially during the first days of fasting. Something like 20g-30g after a few days protein loss per day doesnt sound like much...but when you look at how much you have to lift weights and train to gain that amount of muscle...
thats what i was thinking Dr Jason Fung in Canada is treating type 2 diabetes with fasting, they are supervised fast for up to 14 days he's helped thousands of people so exactly how harmful is it?
I share your respect for Phinney, and respectfully disagree with him regarding sensible fasting. In another video e states that 'intermittent fasting' up to 16 hours a day is no problem. And, as Dr. Jason Fung points out, fasts of 24 hours or longer were common to nearly every culture around the world, at least until recently. We noticed that it is much easier to do when fat adapted, and sometimes forget to eat more than one meal a day... or at all! Always while drinking plenty of water, often with pre-pollution mined sea-salt and magnesium in the water, along with a Tbls of raw apple cider vinegar.
I have no gallbladder (approx at 50 mins in) and can eat keto just fine. Haven't had any issues, so it's doable at least for me and I doubt I am special in that.
41:00 On fiber, and 'whole grain' bread - While truly whole grain bread *may* have some benefits over breads made from finely ground flours that are not really whole grain (as is the case with much of the so-called 'whole grain' bread sold - because it is almost impossible to make a light loaf that rises well, but usually produced a heavy bread that most of those in 'developed' nations are not used to, and/or do not like) may not be as beneficial as we have been led to believe. The ancient Egyptians, for instance, ate bread made from whole, stone ground grain - from ancient grain. It was produced without chemical fertilizers, toxic 'cides', and was not dessicated in the field by being sprayed with herbicides when ripe, as most grains are today - which has led to the alarming rise in glyphosate, and other chemicals, in oatmeal, boxed cereals, and other products made from grain. Yet the ancient Egyptians were chubby, and the men had 'man boobs', which indicates that they had higher levels of estrogen in their bodies than is optimal for men. Dr. Michael Eades talks about this in 'Paleopathology and the Origins of the Paleo Diet' ruclips.net/video/VSRDfkt-wJY/видео.html
On salt - we all need it! Table salt is highly processed. It is heated to around 1,200 F which changes the salt. Then chemicals are added so that 'when it rains, it pours'. These chemicals are not beneficial to health. Yup, the corporate industrial food system has messed up even something as basic as salt. Unprocessed salts TASTE better! Once you get used to it, table salt will taste funny, even bad. This is partly due to those added chemicals. The trace and micro-trace minerals - in the proportions present in the ancient seas, and in the healthy bloodstream of animals - adds to the flavor of mined seasalts. Sadly, due to pollution, more sea salts these days are being processed, not simply dried in the sun. However, processing does not remove chemical pollution. Or the microscopic and near microscopic bits of plastic now found in 80%+ of sea salts. We also find that it is less dehydrating to tissues; in other words, if you have chapped lips, or a a cold sore, unprocessed salts to not burn nearly as much, if at all. Natural salts, like Himalayan and Redmond (basically the same thing, but from Utah www.redmondagriculture.com/ ) that are mined from ancient seabed deposits are 'pre-pollution' sea salt. They are not super-heated, and they do not contain added chemicals - which is why Himalayan salt is often sold in a grinder. Even if humidity in the air makes it clump together, you can grind fine particles onto your food. Even sun drying removes some of the beneficial natural trace and micro-trace minerals, so this may be another advantage to mined sea salt.
if you believe in evolution it still does make sense, because even 200 years ago the average person did take the "right" amount of sodium to them, because there was just no well configured industrie machine to hook us up on it.
What they didn't have was sugar however.😏That's been shoved down our necks since the slave trade began. Before that none of us ever knew anything about sugar. Then the twentieth century, at least since WW11 and supermarkets it's been put into all out foods. Now it's killing us. I'll take the salt.
Staying away from junk food and learning how much God loves you will keep depression away. Also, rebounding! There is no way to be depressed when you bounce😃
Fascinating. I had almost the exact same results after doing one year of low carb high fat diet. My question is have you found any reason why people plateau after 9 months that is what happened with me and I have not been able to lose anymore
Last high priced meal i had out at a restaurant, they hand churned their own herbed butter and served it with a little roll baked in house. The waiter when clearing the plates was confused why my butter dish was empty but the bread roll remained untouched
Himalayan pink salt is Purer then Seasalt. Pink salt is mined in deposits that haven’t been touched or environmentally polluted for a quarter of 1 billion years. It may not be possible to find Pure Seasalt anymore. They have been finding micro plastics in it. Also I tried resistant starch. And my glucose levels go up just the same as any starch.
On salt - Adding a natural, unprocessed salt to the diet is simple, and cheap. Himalayan and Redmond's natural trace mineral salts have wonderful flavor, contain beneficial trace and micro-trace minerals, and don't 'burn' the way processed salt does. (Yes, industrial/commercial interests have ruined even salt.) These salts are pre-pollution sea salts. Sadly, our oceans are too polluted for me to feel comfortable with sea salt any longer. Also, some sea salts are now also highly processed, super-heated like regular table salt. This exposure to temperatures in the range of 1,400F changes the structure of the salt. Mercola dot com has articles and references on salt, for those who would like more information.
Also, the additives in regular table salt, including ant-caking agents ('When it rains, it pours') are not generally beneficial to health. See Dr. Mercola's website for more info. No affiliation...
Reminds me of Mac-N-Cheese while following a low carb plan. We are all struggling to find answers to keep us out of hospital, make life good, keep health care costs in check. We can continue to search
Almost all awesome data in it. Unfortunately his one opinion on the lean muscle mass loss in fasting does not take into account the selective nature of autophagy. Current theory supports the notion that the body mass reduction is more likely to affect less healthy cells in general. Apoptosis and autophagy is governed by effective cellular internal resource management and by macrophages identifying cells with external protein markers indicating their state. This is current research.
Those wanting more info on the topic can check out Dr. Fung's videos. His associsate talks about their clinical findings - which show an increase in lean muscle mass among the patients fasting under their guidance: ruclips.net/video/Qk0U006YZ2w/видео.html
Anyone who's still looking for a good supply of Salt... Try Redmond's Real Salt... Out of Utah... It has an amazing array of minerals!! And tastes great!!
I saw a graph of my labs while having not been on Keto and during Keto and off Keto and on it again. The sodium levels ALWAYS dropped to the low normal line when I was on Keto. Because it wasn't below the line, my doctor said it was fine. But it was at the line. The drops were so dramatic that it made me realize I needed to intake my sodium levels so now whenever I do Keto, like now, I'm not afraid of sodium, and I take Magnesium and eat foods high in Potassium. I am hoping the labs I get done in a couple weeks will show promising levels.
My father has Prinzmetal (variant) Angina. He has a SERIOUS sugar addiction and I'm planning to start out by attempting to wean him off sugar first, maybe LCHF later. I'm afraid of making things worse for him tho, as he's on a lot of medications. Is this a good idea? I'm 99% sure a lot of his problem is inflammation!
How old is this man? I'm asking because his face says he is an old man around 70, but if you watch only the way he moves his quite energetic body language says otherwise.
The question at 34:22, does the potato change to short chain fatty acids after cooking? How do we count the carbs left, percentage wise? It sounds like the cooked potato was good for the gut, but I wonder how to add that to the carb count. Same question applies to rice, I cut out rice, now I wonder. Did he answer the question?
12 years after a VLCD (followed not for a week; for 10 years), my tested BMR was still 783. I doubt seriously it'll ever recover from hypocaloric eating. (And you cannot live on 783 calories and be healthy, nor do you have the energy to exercise to raise it.) You could not pay me to fast.
I've got a question. Im a huge fan of the ketogenic diet and I have been HFLC for years already. I notice the difference when adding more salt to my diet and how calming it is when I'm having 'keto-flu' symptoms. However, I can't find an evolutionary ''reason' for needing so much salt in the diet just to get by. Ketosis makes sense from an evolutionary perspective, because carbohydrates were not readily available in the amounts we consume them these days. So it is very likely we were in ketosis the majority of our existence as homo sapiens. Does someone have an answer for this? It is rather unlikely that our cavemen ancestors had 4g of salt per day and poured himalayan sea salt all over their wild game and leafy greens.
Hi Cynthia, Dr Phinney talks about salt in one of his other talks, he just says it's what the kidneys do when carbs are low, they flush salt, not sure about an evolutionary reason.Maybe because when we eat meat we arent eating the organs and bone marrow as well which are packed with minerals.
you are losing a LOT of salt and electrolytes and minerals with salt, this is why we need broth to replenish them. i dont know about 4 grams but salt is very important in keto diet
Cynthia B are you trying to make yourself look lean like a model? People gravitate to these high protein diets because they feel satisfaction from protein leveraging. This is the standard pattern recognized in lab animals that given higher protein the mice eat less. They wind up being leaner and even stronger but then they die off much earlier from all the standard degenerative diseases and cancer. You really should be moving toward a low protein low fat high carbohydrate diet which extends mice life by nearly 40% compared to average lifespan. To help with protein compensatory feeding you should simply eat whole unprocessed foods including the starchy staples, vegetables, some fruit. With low protein foods the tendency is too eat more and hence the term compensatory feeding. However, the Whole Foods have a great deal of bulk, fiber, volume which moderates protein compensatory feeding. Again, for longevity and good health, move towards whole low protein low fat high carbohydrate (preferably starchy) plant foods avoiding oils and sugars. High protein and high fat diets optimize for short term strength boost but it is detrimental for the long term and should be avoided unless recovering from a traumatic injury for a short period of critical healing but not as lifestyle.
I think there is a Swiss brand that seemed ok - organic, yeast-free, etc. Haven't tried it yet, but found it on Amazon. I just eat more salt, sometimes straight out of my hand ;)
Can anyone guide me to a physician in ontario canada (toronto) that will follow a Keto diet (life style?), I'm type 2, i need assistance with tracking & guidance. (I've refused medication) but my fasting levels are still high (virta health is only for Americans)…. is there something here in ontario canada?…. if not, are their individuals to guide me in the right direction?
I would think that sodium from consuming plant or animal products is far easier for the human body to absorb than minerals from the earth such as himalayan salt. (Inorganic minerals earth vs Organic vitamins from plants and animals)
I eat to satiety, weight train just about every day, never bothered counting calories. I figured I was eating my 1400 daily calories for major weight loss. Just out of curiosity, I counted them up one day I thought was rather indulgent. I was shocked to find that I barely made it to 650 calories.
More on Dr. Fung's clinical experience with fasting - including the finding that most all of his patients actually gain muscle mass: ruclips.net/video/Qk0U006YZ2w/видео.html Of course his patients are advised on how to fast, how long to fast, and are carefully monitored on longer term fasting, but almost anyone can reduce their daily eating window to 8 hours, then 6, or even less. Almost anyone can go from dinner one day to dinner the next occasionally with no problems. Fasting like this was once commonly done in most religions, and still is in many pplaces in the world, as Fung points out. (Ramadan is a little different since they can eat after sunset.) Most anyone can also fast up t about 72 hours with no problems - if they use common sense. Obviously those who are underweight, pregnant, nursing, or have other contraindications should not fast! Longer fasts should be done with medical supervision- if one can find a physician who knows something about fasting...
not an expert in fasting. great talk on ketones though. Leucine spikes insulin more than a lot of vegetables. It all depends on the protein or carb that you are eating.
Sugar is sugar regardless of its origin: Sugar from a sugar beet root is the same as sugar from a sugar cane - they are all sucrose. Table sugar = sucrose which is a two par molecule composed of one glucose and one fructose. Corn syrup made from the breakdown of corn starch= 100% glucose, high fructose corn syrup is either 58:42 or 45:55 glucose to fructose (so it is the same as sucrose to your body). An apple, pear, grape etc has a combination of sucrose (g+f) and fructose. Fructose is bad in a different way from glucose. It increases cravings for sweet foods and is only processed by the liver, and only converted into fat. The biochemical breakdown pathways and the results of the breakdown are almost identical to those for ethanol alcohol. Glucose is absorbed by all body cells and can be used directly, but it is poisonous in high concentrations in the blood so the concentration has to be taken down quickly via the action of insulin. Even a small amount of sugar/sucrose will spike your insulin. Insulin is a far reaching hormone that affects many aspects of physiology, not just glucose regulation.
The most amazing thing of all -- we get all of this content free. Incredible, and I'm very grateful.
Yep, thanks to the Down Under group. Much appreciated.
You
Well, mostly 'free'. Google is tracking everything we watch on RUclips, which they bought a few years ago... and tracks most cell phone owners, our emails, etc - for their profit, with no respect for our rights or privacy. For profit, of course; that's why corporations exist. Thought they freely share our data with government entities, aka 'law enforcement', in most cases without a warrant. So, I remain grateful for the access to the tremendous amount of quality information on RUclips, yet....
PS- Why is our right to privacy so important? Because without privacy there is no freedom. We have been trading our rights for a false sense of security - and for convenience.
Jefferdaughter As soon as your Birth Certificate was signed, you were incorporated as an asset of your country. There exists 2 “yous”. Research Maritime Law etc. without this incorporation, you cannot buy a house, have a credit card, get any loan-as the global financial system is part of this. Why are Syria, Iran etc been outside the “dollar”.
1:10:30 - Fasting - It is interesting that most of Phinney's concerns and objections to fasting do not relate to the audience member's question, which was about 'fasting' for periods within each day (really reducing the time frame during which we eat each day) and fasting for up to 4 or 5 days. Phinney said he had no problem with restricted eating periods each day. Or fasts up to 48 hours.
The rest of his remarks seem to be mostly aimed at Dr. Jason Fung. Yet Fung does not advocate long periods of fasting *except for extreme cases* and *under medical supervision^. Phinney's slide taken from published research shows that the obese are largely protected from the loss of lean body mass during longer fasts - and Fung only uses longer fasts with obese patients.
Phinney seems unaware that all lean body mass is not made of muscle.
Fung does not advocate fasting for long periods AT ALL for those who are not significantly overweight. Or fasts of any length for those who are already lean, or who may be prone to anorexia nervosa.
For those with insulin resistance, which is really an excess of insulin production, Fung does recommending reducing the number of times those people eat each day. And/or very short term fasts - maybe up to a few days. Or every other day. Refeeding syndrome is NOT an issue in these instances.
Dr. Fung does not disagree that these patients would benefit from nutritional ketosis through a well-fomulated keto diet - but states that many of his patients are unable to do so, often because of limited finances, and/or these people are already under a lot of stress and find trying to just feed themselves at all challenging enough.
Phinney says that two plastic jugs (which leach toxins into whatever they contain) from one of the large discount bulk food chains of olive oil is a cheap way to add healthy fat to the diet, and he believes that olive oil is real. However, it is not 'extra virgin' olive oil, so one must wonder if it was not pressed from the olive, but maybe extracted using chemicals? Regardless, it does take some thinking on how to add a lot more fat to the diet, and get away from the carbohydrate eating habits we have all been trained into. One does not sit down and just eat olive oil. Yes, it can be done, but Dr. Fung has a good point when he says it is faster, easier, and cheaper than re-thinking one's diet.
With deep respect for Dr. Phinney, Dr. Jason Fung's videos, books, and website idmprogram.com are all worth checking out.
Jefferdaughter I started dealing with insulin resistance with IF 18 6, and I lost all the weight I needed to but glucose level still prediabetes. So I have started Keto with IF and am making headway on glucose while keeping weight stable. I never really liked eating breakfast so it works for me. I will never go back to 3 meals plus snacks throughout the day. The two together offers an amazing tool to put together something that works for me.
great reply. plus: nitrogen depletion is NOT losing lean mass, it could come from anywhere, since those are studies from the 50's they are surely incomplete, they didn't know anything about autophagy on those years and a product of the cleaning of the cells is nitrogen. dr phinney is a great researcher but he's biased about fasting, not very well informed and a bit of a snob.
@@stefaniafei , I suspect that Dr. Stephen Phinney is very carbohydrate-tolerant. I find that carbohydrate-tolerant people have a hard time understanding that fasting does very good things for people who are very carbohydrate-intolerant (repeat: Intolerant). Also if Dr. Phinney has always lived with a lot of income, he might have problems understanding people who are scraping by on low income.
However, I do appreciate Dr. Phinney'a research and receiving his presentations free of charge.
@@stefaniafei Yep, totally agreed. I enjoy his presentation but he's got an ass-holish vibe to him...
I wanted to thank you for your interest in supporting the well-being of others by means of providing this information. I am new-ish to keto, still trying to bring down AIC, and trying to educate myself. I very much appreciate this info, and your kindness in providing it 🖖
What he says about long term fasting, I’ve lived. In 1999, I ended up in the hospital with Ketoacidosis where my doctor came in my room and told me, “if my kidneys don’t turn my pH around, my organs would start shutting down one by one.” I had been fasting for five days at this time. I was in a season where I was just eating on Saturdays. I knew nothing about the Keto lifestyle but I lost a lot of lean muscle and at sixty now, practicing a Ketogenic lifestyle, I am beginning to repair my body. I have no interest in a long term fast, although I will fast up to twenty hours daily . I don’t do the same time frame each day.
Thank you Dr Phinney
Wow ... 😲
Being bedbound is the surest way to lose lean mass regardless of diet
Another fabulous presentation by Dr Phinney. Thank you for sharing. Looking forward to
Topics covered:
inflammation | salt intake | constipation | stock cubes | differences in salt | elite athletes | circulatory volume | resistant starch | colon's needs & preferences | diversion colitis | beta-Hydroxybutyric (BYHD)-a potent health-driving hormone? | inflammation | bread & fibre | fibre vs BYHD | personalisation of nutritional ketosis | other salt excretion factors | Psoriasis cured | keto rash (1-2 in 1000 people) | gall bladder removal & bile | medium-framed body weight | sustainability | saturated fats | Omega 3 & 6 | Omega 6 pro-inflammatory | MCTs (coconut, butter, not MCT products) | H-dac enzymes | epigenetics | 13% increase in longevity in mice | alzheimer's | fasting | autophagy | meal frequency
Regarding the comments on skin conditions:
I had eczema, particularly on the insides of my elbows where there were persistent silver-dollar sized lesions. I was using topical steroids for treatment without much success. When I initially started on a ketogenic diet in 2000, the eczema dramatically improved within just 2 weeks, disappearing completely in under 2 months, and has never returned. I have maintained a more or less keto diet from then until now, with only a few short-term lapses. This genuine cure of eczema was a real convincer for me that keto was fundamentally beneficial.
I've read that all these skin issues like eczema psoriasis and even skin cancer are caused by high blood sugar and vegetable oils/trans fats which detox thru the skin. So glad you recovered! Were your lesions like sores that wouldn't heal?
39:30 -Inflammation - It's not clear whether the ingestion of carbohydrates 'up regulates' an 'inflammatory gene, OR if the ketone bodies 'down regulates' or turns off this gene... but the result is the same. This affects inflammation throughout the body, as well as the G.I. tract.
Either way, eliminating sugars and/or starches will reduce or eliminate many of the aches and pains our physicians tell us are due to 'getting older', or old injuries, or whatever. Whether they are unaware of chronic systemic inflammation, or have no idea of the role diet plays in this is unclear.
Regardless, it is worth trying dropping all sugar and starch (yes, including fruit) for 2 weeks, to see if it makes a difference. Some people find that the aches they did not even know they had go away!
Anecdotally I can confirm that. My arthritis/gout has all but dissapeared. When I reached the point when I could barely walk it was a wake up call!!!
Pecisely! I do fall for sweets/ deserts once in a while - one evening: nothing really happens, but if I digg in two or three days in a row I feel like someone beat me up with a baseball bat overnight ..... damn holiday season!
Black coffee is acidic and bitter. We were delighted to find that 'cafe con leche' is not at all bitter, but smooth and delicious. In other words, if enough cream and/or milk is used, no sugar was needed, even when we were first weaning ourselves off sugar.
The milk we use if from 100% grassfed Jersey cows, fed certified organic pasture, hay, and fermented hay, and milked once per day, so the butterfat and solids-not-fat are both very high, and relatively low in lactose, though we don't worry about that. The cream is very 'heavy', and is difficult or impossible to pour from the jar. All unpasturized, so the enzymes and naturally occuring benefical diary bacteria are present.
We used to drink black coffee, but this is now our favorite way to enjoy coffee. (But we only drink it occasionally, not every day, as we used to.)
The 'bullet proof' coffee with coconut oil and/or butter is well known, but some folks may want to try this instead, or as a variation.
Jefferdaughter Doesn't the hot water for the coffee kill the bacteria & destroy the enzymes? (essentially pasteurising it?)
I have been having between 7 and 10 grams of sodium a day and never really knowing why i would feel better on this amount. Now i have sat through both of these videos i have learned why.
As my ketones float between 3 and 5 this means my kidneys excrete sodium more efficiently so thanks for the info guys!!!
I’m three weeks in , 3kgs down , sugar cravings gone and nagging hip arthritis pain which wakes me at night! Amazing! This info from Dr is priceless, thanks.
Omg I love this guy😍 He’s so humble, so lovely..
Thank you, dr Phinney🙏
Totally explained (to my relief) why I was lightheaded to the point of near syncope during a hike today. One month into keto and I am WAY under in my intake of salt. Felt sick for hours after and already feeling a bit better having taken a few grams of sodium and sitting watching this drinking high electrolytes. Thanks!
i skipped breakfast and lunch today and i was feeling a bit lightheaded, i drank coffee with sugar, when i should have just drank water with salt:) now i learned something new about salt so next time I will not do the same mistake.
His stance on losing lean body mass while in long-term fasting seems to be contrary to more recent studies that show fasting tends to protect lean body mass. And there is anecdotal evidence that someone fasted for more than a year and only started eating when he finally felt hungry, after losing about 80% of his excess fat that he had when he started his fast
Jason Fung replied to Dr. Phinney's criticisms of fasting (somewhat over-aggressively) in a recent podcast with Jimmy Moore on their new podcast called Fasting Talk (episode 5).
His basic claim is that HGH and norepinephrine have protein sparing effects and any protein that is lost is damaged protein/excess skin (he says none of his overweight patients who lose a lot of weight from fasting ever need excess skin removed).
I would have to agree with Dr Fung on this, not that I'm an expert but I'm thinking the people doing fasting have some health issues that need to be addressed quick smart with some weight loss, I don't think losing some lean muscle would be a huge priority if somebody had 100kg to lose, nothing you can't build later when you are lighter and move around better don't you think?
Exactly. I think the difference is that Dr. Fung is typically working with obese patients on the verge of type II diabetes, whereas Dr. Phinney, from what I understand, typically works with endurance athletes and people looking to optimize their overall health.
If you're highly active, are already at a great weight, and have a well balanced diet, fasting might not be necessary (although I still think it has tremendous benefits and most people should do a long fast once or twice a year). On the flip-side, if you're obese and are looking to rapidly lose weight and re-stabilize your hormones, I think fasting is your best bet.
I'm sure Phinney and Fung would agree that Keto and Fasting are simply tools and both have different applications. They need to recognize this and work together rather than sticking in their "camps" and refusing to acknowledge the benefits of both.
that is exacly what I am thinking. As an former obese person that is about to become from overweight to "normal" (based on BMI) think that dr fung is far more interesting. I got from Keto to fasting and think both should be done at some point. If Keto work for example me I should learn that my high carb diet was bad for me for a long time. At the same aspect IF and sometime a 24 hour up to 42 hour(18 hours if + 24 hours extra) might help with the addictiove part many obese people have with food and sugar. Including eating when bored ect.
Since Dr. Fung talked about his patence alot and that they usually don't gain weight after weight loss might be a part of it.
I'm an enthusiastic follower of Jason Fung's ideas, but I recognize he is sometimes a little bit aggressive with people that disagree with him, and this attitude is not paying him a service. Maybe wisdom will come with age.
A lot of people get a bit agressive when you don't agree with high carb low fat or 3-6meals diet people discuss keto and IF.
In these discussion you propably get like this over time.
I have been experiencing a lot of fatigue so i will up my salt and broths .my son introduced me to keto a year and a half ago and i love it!My Mom had Ahlzand i will try to avoid that with keto and i love what i eat.
On salt, common table salt is overly-processed, lacks trace minerals, and contains toxic chemicals added to keep it flowing in humid weather. Sea salts are now polluted, and contain microplastics. So we choose pre-pollution sea salt - Himalayan pink, Redmonds from Utah, or Kansas grey. These natural salts taste so much better than processed salt! And they provide important trace and micro-trace minerals.
I agree about the salt - it does matter - if not for the extra minerals, definitely for the lack of toxins! Are those 'brands' you are mentioning - i.e Redmonds or Kansas grey? And is there a Himalayan salt brand you recommend (I imagine with it's popularity cheaper imitations are being made. I did read one's salt should be grey, pink, or beige -ish in color, NOT white, as that means it has minerals. I've been using Celtic Sea Salt which is supposed to be pretty good quality. I realize your comment is 2 years old, but someone might chime in :) TY!
Pre pollution salt... not happening in Utah. Our salt beds are right next to the city, with one of the worst air qualities in the world at times. All that rain has to go somewhere, and the salt is just pulled up outside in giant mountains!
I give my hat off to all the doctors whom collaborate their knowledge, findings and band together on the topic of the LCHF lifestyle ,and educating the world . You have the guts and the wisdom to go against all the bullshit we've been told and brainwashed with over the past years. Well Done 👍👍👍👍👍👍😄
Ive found that if my doctor tells me not to eat certain things if i eat more of it i get better
I get what you mean, but I bet they also tell you to stay away from sugar. And we wouldn't go AS on that just because they told us not to.
Don't eat yellow snow
I've found that doing the exact opposite of what mainstream medicine tells us will get people better - at least prevent them from getting sick.
@@yetigriff urine therapy dumbass
@@d.m.3552 Snake oil, dumbass
1:25:20 "My opinion is no good unless I have data to support it" Excellent Dr. Phinney.
I've started the KETO diet 7 years and a few months ago, at 65 years of age. When in doubt or in need of some advices to improve my condition, I to listen to some of Dr. Phinney and Jeff Volek presentations. I'm always learning something that help me.
Between them Steve and Jeff (Volek) have changed the world and of course Tim Noakes in SA. You don;t need to understand science to watch this and you don;t need to be super nerdy to get it. Watch this alongside Robert Lusti'g's seminal video and you will get the truth of what has been done to us but more importantly how we can fix it !
I love Tim Noakes!
Thank you very much for posting this, it is greatly appreciated.
I love seeing the reactions of colleagues when I eat butter in front of them 😂😁😃😄
hahahaha!!! gr8 comment!
'Priceless.'
Christopher Sorby I know! I just started keto lifestyle January 3 and have lost 12 pounds (yay) but am still obese. I love when I see the sidelong glances from friends and strangers when I eat high fat foods-meat, butter, cream in my coffee, etc. “Keto” I say and people are okay with it and ask me how it works.
Yes my fit healthy husband has an office full of work colleague's who are fat and constantly sick yet they think hes crazy for eating butter!
😂The only thing that produces more disbelief/ curious reactions is eating your steak tatar (with a butter, salt & eggyolks)..... last time when a colleague asked if was planning for a heart attack - I asked him if his jambread got his resting heart rate in the low 50s and how his 10k time was... that got him thinking! 😁
Thanks for the details about "keto-flu" I thought it was just an artifact of adaptation due to ramping up of beta-oxidation and did not know about the sodium deficiency effect. I have been recently complaining of persistent and significant chronic fatigue, and the low sodium sounds like a likely cause. I'm checking it out as I write this and drank some bullion. We'll see.
Make sure you also drink enough water, and get enough of the other minerals - especially potassium and magnesium. On salt - unprocessed salt is a much better choice than standard table salt. It is super-heated to ~1,200 F, which changes its molecular structure, has had all the trace and micro-trace minerals removed, and contains chchemicals to prevent it from caking in humid weather.
Unprocessed salt - whether Himalayan or Redmond salt from the USA, or Kansas grey, etc - contains valuable trace minerals. It has not been change by high heat in processing, and it tastes so much better!!! Unprocessed salt is also not as dessicating. Those who have had sores on their lips or in their mouths (cold sores, or abrasions, etc) know that salt burns. Natural, unprocessed salt burns very little compared to the processed stuff they put on potato chips, etc - or not at all.
Mercola.com has lots of great info on real, unprocessed salt vs the processed stuff. Yup, they have even messed up something as basic as salt!
Another issue with keyto flu is cleaning out your bowels when you fast. It is extremely hard on your body to start a fast and not clean out your bowels. I do a vitamin c flush when I start my fast and it helps my energy and it helps prevent keto flu as well. I also take magnesium and potassium and I put lemon in my water and a pinch of Himalayan sea salt in each large glass of water and I drink a gallon a day.
I wish Dr. Phinney would stop publicly attacking Dr. Fung. Each Dr. Has excellent tools to be used. To treat this spreading epidemic we need lots of options. Dr. Fung isn't wrong just because his approach is different. Dr. Phinney should know that better than anyone. I expect much more professionalism from Dr. Phinney.
Another amazing and well explained video from Dr Stephen Phinney :) Thank you.
I've just ordered some empty gelatine pill capsules on Amazon and will put ground up pink Himalayan salt in. I only eat once or twice a day and cannot use enough salt. Hopefully this way of injesting salt will help.
That's a great idea! I've just ordered a 'capsule machine', which is not really a 'machine', and 500 capsules; and am moving toward making my own supplements! So much cheaper, BUT even more importantly, none of the fillers, toxic substances that so many manufacturers put in - even the 'high quality' ones. Hope it's worked well.
Ive also found if i dont eat anything advertised on tv as healthy i get much better also
Comparing the digestion of cattle (whether they are cows, bulls, or steers) to human digestion is... risky. Unlike humans, cattle have four-chambered 'stomachs', including the rumen, which is basically a fermentation vat. Cattle regurgitate the contents of the rumen and chew it again, as these animals are designed to eat forages - grasses, forbs and other vegetation.
Cattle, and other ruminants are NOT designed to eat grains, so the guy's question about finely ground grains, aka flour, may be irrelevant. Also, when cattle are fed grain, these are generally truly whole grains (unlike the games processors can play with labeling flour), even if they are coarsely ground to decrease the percent of grains that are passed through the animals undigested. Also, as Phinney alluded, the fiber in grains is mostly or completely removed during processing for human consumption.
Very interesting about the lack of functional decline as the Ketogenic mice aged! Because I don't care how long I live if I can't keep my functionality
Huge respect for you Dr Phinney but you need to accept fasting is a vital component for both weight loss and health. You do not lose muscle mass with fasting lots of evidence for that if that’s your main worry!
I often nick a bit of butter before I put some in the frypan when I'm cooking my salmon. I just can't resist it. Love the stuff.
Thanks Dr. Phinney ... brilliant discussion ... we are not in that room, but follow your line of thought. Have researched much of this so very easy to understand your lecture. In addition, have picked up some good knowledge and filled in some blanks with this talk and provided several new treads for analysis and research ... tx
70 Going On 100 ..., the Centenarian Diet
1:23:30 "Last question, I think, unless it's very quick." She says, "Yes it is." And then proceeds to talk for 5 min -.-
I'm one full week in, mainly for the health benefits and as a giant middle finger to my sugar addiction. Maybe i'll drop some weight too, but about 7kgs max. It's just a fun learning experience thanks to LCDU videos like this one! Thanks, you are among the best Dr. Phinney!
I'd love to see an updated edition!
I can't be the only one who wants to know when such lectures are given, ehere, and to whom.
I disagree on the artificial sweetner part.
Some of them like aspartame are really just as dangerous at least for the brain than regular table sweetner.
I had depression, anxiety and agoraphobia when I started on my journey to better nutrition.
I read a book saying that MSG and aspartame were involved in those conditions and to try removing them to see if it helped, I stopped using them, I was using a tiny amount of aspartam every morning in my coffee, that's all but just stopping that for 2 weeks made my agoraphobia go away and my depression and anxiety were a bit more manageable. Dark thoughts most of all were way less frequent.
If I couldn't use safer sweetners like erythritol and stevia I would prefer to use unrefined cane sugar or honey rather than aspartame.
Artificial sweeteners are a dicey subject in the LCHF communities.
Some people can work with it, some can't. I dropped all sweets completely when I went keto. I see them as having many potential side effects I wasn't interested in interfering with my new lifestyle. And preferred to get the sweet tastes away from my palette, so that I could more easily become accustomed to the more savory foods of keto life.
YMMV
D rB
agreed, I just like to share my own experience when I can just in case someone with the same issues can get any benefits from it. That's how I learned about keto after all and that saved my life :)
JezaGaia Yeah he kind of touches on that in this video. While there are general guidelines to handle 90% of this style of eating, the remaining parts need to be ironed out on an individual basis. Some things you might be able to use and some you can't.
DrB - In addition to the challenge of weaning ourselves off of sweet flavors, Jeza makes an important point. Aspartame, if I recall correctly, is metabolized to formaldehyde. Mercola.com has excellent articles about artificial sweeteners with references to the medical literature.
Great video. When I eliminated sugar from my diet, after a short time my psoriasis disappeared.
I wish it cured my psoriasis. The condition is fickle. Congrats though. That's awesome.
Just curious, Muffin, if you also tried eliminating all starch - since starch (bread, pasta, rice, cereals, potatoes, tapioca, etc) is just sugar molecules linked together, and quickly become sugar in our digestion. Alcohol is another substance that, metabolically speaking, is essentially a sugar.
Hope you find the right balance of foods for you that helps you feel great, and also restores your skin!
@@Jefferdaughter
You need to find out what triggers flare ups, and what triggers it generally.
Many are inflammation responses, drop the inflammation, psoriasis either goes, or dramatically reduces.
If yours isn't related to inflammation then you have a harder road ahead of you.
@@muffinman8365 have you tried eliminating ALL OILS except butter and olive oil? Skin conditions are usually caused by sugar OR bad oils like canola etc in processed foods or cooking
@@gardengirl7446 Good thinking. Keep it up.
Thank you Kind Sir for these amazing and informative content, much appreciated!
Thank you so much for the great information, very valuable.
On sweeteners - Aspartame is at least as dangerous as sugar. No synthetic sweetener is 'safe'. Also, those addicted to sugar may need to go 'cold turkey' as sweetness of any kind can perpetuate thee addiction. (Are babies still being given sugar water in hospitals shortly after birth?) Others may find it helpful to wean themselves gradually by enjoying things like small amounts of low-sugar berries (blueberries or blackberries) withe cream, for instance.
We recently found that some stevia extracts have no funny aftertaste (which apparently comes from the stems). Most every commercially made desert or 'sweet' is WAAAY too sweet for our taste, anyway, even before we tried low carb living. Now just a few drops of a high-quality stevia extract per serving - at most - makes our homemade ice cream plenty sweet.
Stevia is easy to grow in warm climates, or in the summertime in colder areas.
'Fresh squeezed' 100% grassfed cream from Jersey cows, (of Devon, Ayshire, Shorthorn, etc or well-manged goats ) is so delicious that it needs very little sweetening!! It is also wonderful as a savory food - with salt, some onion and/or garlic (even the powders) sprinkled with chives, maybe some bacon crumbles... We don't miss the potato!
Have your book. Thanks for the update on a lot of recent issues.
Wow, Dr. Stephen Phinney. The man is a pioneer, a legend.
BTW - 100-7=93 93-7=86 !!
I just ordered Dr Phinney’s book, this is great info! Thank you !
Well, I suppose the saltwater drink first thing in the morning before I go riding (still fasting - breakfast after I ride, if I'm hungry) is beginning to make sense. Two large glasses of water, and a salt boost. I don't know how much a gram is, but as though I were salting a meal, just.... in the glass of water. No need for cubes - I like the taste of salt, and, it seems, I can't get enough of it.
Digital scales are pretty cheap :)
I looked up dr Phinney's Linkedin profile, from his education history he must be at least 72 years old. he looks great!
1hr 11mins fascinating insight on short and long term fasting...
Problem in Singapore beef and sausage are very expensive, keto works best in Australia and USA, also you guys have huge kitchens and fridges so can meal prep in advance. But there are still enthusiasts in Singapore now compared to 5 years ago.
Dr Phinney I've just found your yt last night and this morning I'm listening to my second video. *Here's my question:* Is there anything that affects the insomnia that some people have from fasting?
By something I guess I'm thinking of mineral or electrolyte balance but I'd like to leave the question open.
Thank you.. from the USA.
Finally part 2! I've been waiting.
I have a lot of respect for Dr. Phinney, but it is curious that he is so opposed to long term fasting. I'm not a doctor, but my understanding from the current research is that if you are fat adapted, long term fasting does not have a significant negative impact on Resting BMR or lean tissue loss. Its also curious that he cites old articles and says just because they are old doesn't mean they're wrong. That's true, but there is some newer research being done with new measurement techniques that seem to indicate fasting is not as harmful as previously thought.
How does it not have a significant negative impact on lean tissue loss, which new studies/research?
Here's one study that seems to indicate lean tissue can be preserved while fasting: ajpendo.physiology.org/content/311/1/E224
I think the study only says that obese breakdown less protein than lean people.
Ketones/Ketosis while fasting is just a way of the body to drastically reduce protein loss over time, bc too much lean mass loss = death.
Doesnt mean it can be stopped. It has been shown a lot of times that you lose a siginificant amount, especially during the first days of fasting.
Something like 20g-30g after a few days protein loss per day doesnt sound like much...but when you look at how much you have to lift weights and train to gain that amount of muscle...
thats what i was thinking Dr Jason Fung in Canada is treating type 2 diabetes with fasting, they are supervised fast for up to 14 days he's helped thousands of people so exactly how harmful is it?
I share your respect for Phinney, and respectfully disagree with him regarding sensible fasting. In another video e states that 'intermittent fasting' up to 16 hours a day is no problem. And, as Dr. Jason Fung points out, fasts of 24 hours or longer were common to nearly every culture around the world, at least until recently. We noticed that it is much easier to do when fat adapted, and sometimes forget to eat more than one meal a day... or at all! Always while drinking plenty of water, often with pre-pollution mined sea-salt and magnesium in the water, along with a Tbls of raw apple cider vinegar.
I have no gallbladder (approx at 50 mins in) and can eat keto just fine. Haven't had any issues, so it's doable at least for me and I doubt I am special in that.
Same
@ed low Same here, no problems on Keto with no Gallbladder!
I have a spare one lying around somewhere if anybody wants it..
@@paoemantega8793 Love ya, I don't have one but I don't need it either. Bloody comedian.😍😍😍😍
41:00 On fiber, and 'whole grain' bread - While truly whole grain bread *may* have some benefits over breads made from finely ground flours that are not really whole grain (as is the case with much of the so-called 'whole grain' bread sold - because it is almost impossible to make a light loaf that rises well, but usually produced a heavy bread that most of those in 'developed' nations are not used to, and/or do not like) may not be as beneficial as we have been led to believe.
The ancient Egyptians, for instance, ate bread made from whole, stone ground grain - from ancient grain. It was produced without chemical fertilizers, toxic 'cides', and was not dessicated in the field by being sprayed with herbicides when ripe, as most grains are today - which has led to the alarming rise in glyphosate, and other chemicals, in oatmeal, boxed cereals, and other products made from grain. Yet the ancient Egyptians were chubby, and the men had 'man boobs', which indicates that they had higher levels of estrogen in their bodies than is optimal for men.
Dr. Michael Eades talks about this in 'Paleopathology and the Origins of the Paleo Diet' ruclips.net/video/VSRDfkt-wJY/видео.html
Jefferdaughter
There is absolutely no need for any carbohydrates in human diet!
On salt - we all need it! Table salt is highly processed. It is heated to around 1,200 F which changes the salt. Then chemicals are added so that 'when it rains, it pours'. These chemicals are not beneficial to health. Yup, the corporate industrial food system has messed up even something as basic as salt.
Unprocessed salts TASTE better! Once you get used to it, table salt will taste funny, even bad.
This is partly due to those added chemicals. The trace and micro-trace minerals - in the proportions present in the ancient seas, and in the healthy bloodstream of animals - adds to the flavor of mined seasalts.
Sadly, due to pollution, more sea salts these days are being processed, not simply dried in the sun. However, processing does not remove chemical pollution. Or the microscopic and near microscopic bits of plastic now found in 80%+ of sea salts.
We also find that it is less dehydrating to tissues; in other words, if you have chapped lips, or a a cold sore, unprocessed salts to not burn nearly as much, if at all.
Natural salts, like Himalayan and Redmond (basically the same thing, but from Utah www.redmondagriculture.com/ ) that are mined from ancient seabed deposits are 'pre-pollution' sea salt. They are not super-heated, and they do not contain added chemicals - which is why Himalayan salt is often sold in a grinder. Even if humidity in the air makes it clump together, you can grind fine particles onto your food.
Even sun drying removes some of the beneficial natural trace and micro-trace minerals, so this may be another advantage to mined sea salt.
if you believe in evolution it still does make sense, because even 200 years ago the average person did take the "right" amount of sodium to them, because there was just no well configured industrie machine to hook us up on it.
What they didn't have was sugar however.😏That's been shoved down our necks since the slave trade began. Before that none of us ever knew anything about sugar. Then the twentieth century, at least since WW11 and supermarkets it's been put into all out foods. Now it's killing us. I'll take the salt.
Staying away from junk food and learning how much God loves you will keep depression away. Also, rebounding! There is no way to be depressed when you bounce😃
phinney quoting Dylan, i knew he was a cool guy.
fascinating presentation.
Fascinating. I had almost the exact same results after doing one year of low carb high fat diet. My question is have you found any reason why people plateau after 9 months that is what happened with me and I have not been able to lose anymore
Last high priced meal i had out at a restaurant, they hand churned their own herbed butter and served it with a little roll baked in house. The waiter when clearing the plates was confused why my butter dish was empty but the bread roll remained untouched
Various friends and myself tested several times and for carbs .... 25 g is really UPPER limit for a day. Period.
Himalayan pink salt is Purer then Seasalt. Pink salt is mined in deposits that haven’t been touched or environmentally polluted for a quarter of 1 billion years. It may not be possible to find Pure Seasalt anymore. They have been finding micro plastics in it. Also I tried resistant starch. And my glucose levels go up just the same as any starch.
On salt - Adding a natural, unprocessed salt to the diet is simple, and cheap. Himalayan and Redmond's natural trace mineral salts have wonderful flavor, contain beneficial trace and micro-trace minerals, and don't 'burn' the way processed salt does. (Yes, industrial/commercial interests have ruined even salt.) These salts are pre-pollution sea salts. Sadly, our oceans are too polluted for me to feel comfortable with sea salt any longer. Also, some sea salts are now also highly processed, super-heated like regular table salt. This exposure to temperatures in the range of 1,400F changes the structure of the salt.
Mercola dot com has articles and references on salt, for those who would like more information.
Also, the additives in regular table salt, including ant-caking agents ('When it rains, it pours') are not generally beneficial to health. See Dr. Mercola's website for more info. No affiliation...
FYI- Xylitol is DEADLY to dogs. Even the best intentions and precautions won’t keep those treats away from dogs 100% of the time.
I make and dehydrate my own bone broth. That way I know what's in it.
It is also easy to can at home in glass jars. Or freeze!
Reminds me of Mac-N-Cheese while following a low carb plan. We are all struggling to find answers to keep us out of hospital, make life good, keep health care costs in check. We can continue to search
Almost all awesome data in it. Unfortunately his one opinion on the lean muscle mass loss in fasting does not take into account the selective nature of autophagy. Current theory supports the notion that the body mass reduction is more likely to affect less healthy cells in general. Apoptosis and autophagy is governed by effective cellular internal resource management and by macrophages identifying cells with external protein markers indicating their state. This is current research.
Those wanting more info on the topic can check out Dr. Fung's videos. His associsate talks about their clinical findings - which show an increase in lean muscle mass among the patients fasting under their guidance: ruclips.net/video/Qk0U006YZ2w/видео.html
Anyone who's still looking for a good supply of Salt... Try Redmond's Real Salt... Out of Utah... It has an amazing array of minerals!! And tastes great!!
I was type 2 diabetic. I get the keto rash. I am also intolerant to alcohol. Both parents also T2D and have allergic reaction to alcohol.
wow....thats tough going. I knew a girl with Allergy to alcohol after one drink she was out for the count.
I saw a graph of my labs while having not been on Keto and during Keto and off Keto and on it again. The sodium levels ALWAYS dropped to the low normal line when I was on Keto. Because it wasn't below the line, my doctor said it was fine. But it was at the line. The drops were so dramatic that it made me realize I needed to intake my sodium levels so now whenever I do Keto, like now, I'm not afraid of sodium, and I take Magnesium and eat foods high in Potassium. I am hoping the labs I get done in a couple weeks will show promising levels.
My father has Prinzmetal (variant) Angina. He has a SERIOUS sugar addiction and I'm planning to start out by attempting to wean him off sugar first, maybe LCHF later. I'm afraid of making things worse for him tho, as he's on a lot of medications. Is this a good idea? I'm 99% sure a lot of his problem is inflammation!
Great study on sodium!
Thank you so much for posting this!!!
Just a simple THANK YOU for this invaluable info! 😊
Thank you for posting this. Great info!
How old is this man? I'm asking because his face says he is an old man around 70, but if you watch only the way he moves his quite energetic body language says otherwise.
Guy's olllddd.
The question at 34:22, does the potato change to short chain fatty acids after cooking? How do we count the carbs left, percentage wise? It sounds like the cooked potato was good for the gut, but I wonder how to add that to the carb count. Same question applies to rice, I cut out rice, now I wonder. Did he answer the question?
It is amazing that the worst thing people have to fight is bad medical advice: low sodium, low fat ...
12 years after a VLCD (followed not for a week; for 10 years), my tested BMR was still 783. I doubt seriously it'll ever recover from hypocaloric eating. (And you cannot live on 783 calories and be healthy, nor do you have the energy to exercise to raise it.) You could not pay me to fast.
I've got a question. Im a huge fan of the ketogenic diet and I have been HFLC for years already. I notice the difference when adding more salt to my diet and how calming it is when I'm having 'keto-flu' symptoms. However, I can't find an evolutionary ''reason' for needing so much salt in the diet just to get by. Ketosis makes sense from an evolutionary perspective, because carbohydrates were not readily available in the amounts we consume them these days. So it is very likely we were in ketosis the majority of our existence as homo sapiens. Does someone have an answer for this? It is rather unlikely that our cavemen ancestors had 4g of salt per day and poured himalayan sea salt all over their wild game and leafy greens.
Hi Cynthia, Dr Phinney talks about salt in one of his other talks, he just says it's what the kidneys do when carbs are low, they flush salt, not sure about an evolutionary reason.Maybe because when we eat meat we arent eating the organs and bone marrow as well which are packed with minerals.
Cynthia B maybe they utilized the blood of their wild game.
you are losing a LOT of salt and electrolytes and minerals with salt, this is why we need broth to replenish them. i dont know about 4 grams but salt is very important in keto diet
Thanks for the great explanations guys!
Cynthia B are you trying to make yourself look lean like a model? People gravitate to these high protein diets because they feel satisfaction from protein leveraging. This is the standard pattern recognized in lab animals that given higher protein the mice eat less. They wind up being leaner and even stronger but then they die off much earlier from all the standard degenerative diseases and cancer. You really should be moving toward a low protein low fat high carbohydrate diet which extends mice life by nearly 40% compared to average lifespan. To help with protein compensatory feeding you should simply eat whole unprocessed foods including the starchy staples, vegetables, some fruit. With low protein foods the tendency is too eat more and hence the term compensatory feeding. However, the Whole Foods have a great deal of bulk, fiber, volume which moderates protein compensatory feeding. Again, for longevity and good health, move towards whole low protein low fat high carbohydrate (preferably starchy) plant foods avoiding oils and sugars. High protein and high fat diets optimize for short term strength boost but it is detrimental for the long term and should be avoided unless recovering from a traumatic injury for a short period of critical healing but not as lifestyle.
wtf, as I was waiting for part2 I subscribed to this channel and pressed the alarm button yet I didnt get a message.
thx for the vid
Sag Rotan same here!
hi, will have subtitles in the future? Thank you very much
How can we get this good information into the heads of the plant based everythingers?
Such a great personality
Another AMAZING seminar! Thanks Stephen! #iatebutteroutofmyfridgelastnight #sorryNOTsorry 😋
This comment is from 2 years ago. Are you still doing this kind of eating pattern? Are you still feeling okay?
Anyone know what bullion cubes Dr Phinney has in his talk? Or a good option available in Australia without a lot of additives
Possibly Wyler's? www.wylers.com/Wdetails/wyler_home.aspx
Might try that! Thanks
Thaanks, have to look out for them!
I think there is a Swiss brand that seemed ok - organic, yeast-free, etc. Haven't tried it yet, but found it on Amazon. I just eat more salt, sometimes straight out of my hand ;)
Brett Morgan Herb-Ox, has maltodextrin but handy for travel.
Thank you Dr. Cywes
Can anyone guide me to a physician in ontario canada (toronto) that will follow a Keto diet (life style?), I'm type 2, i need assistance with tracking & guidance. (I've refused medication) but my fasting levels are still high (virta health is only for Americans)…. is there something here in ontario canada?…. if not, are their individuals to guide me in the right direction?
Did you get around to talking about magnesium in this section? Maybe I missed it.
around 1.11 he is asked about intermittent and longer fasting.
I would think that sodium from consuming plant or animal products is far easier for the human body to absorb than minerals from the earth such as himalayan salt. (Inorganic minerals earth vs Organic vitamins from plants and animals)
can one do keto diet who is on dialysis.
sure, if you are careful. watch out for the various hyper*emias kidney failure can give you
Wonderful, informative lecture.
Why I can activate automatic english subtitle in this video? Thank you for help
I eat to satiety, weight train just about every day, never bothered counting calories. I figured I was eating my 1400 daily calories for major weight loss. Just out of curiosity, I counted them up one day I thought was rather indulgent. I was shocked to find that I barely made it to 650 calories.
Wow. How was the weight loss like?
did Dr.Pinney talked about uric acid (in ketogenic diet) in this video? I'm sorry I haven't been able to finish watching the video...
What's the problem? Are you afraid of learning something?
active subtitles please!!!!
could 'keto rash' be a reaction to particular new foods ?
But what about what Dr. Fung says?
More on Dr. Fung's clinical experience with fasting - including the finding that most all of his patients actually gain muscle mass: ruclips.net/video/Qk0U006YZ2w/видео.html Of course his patients are advised on how to fast, how long to fast, and are carefully monitored on longer term fasting, but almost anyone can reduce their daily eating window to 8 hours, then 6, or even less. Almost anyone can go from dinner one day to dinner the next occasionally with no problems.
Fasting like this was once commonly done in most religions, and still is in many pplaces in the world, as Fung points out. (Ramadan is a little different since they can eat after sunset.)
Most anyone can also fast up t about 72 hours with no problems - if they use common sense. Obviously those who are underweight, pregnant, nursing, or have other contraindications should not fast! Longer fasts should be done with medical supervision- if one can find a physician who knows something about fasting...
not an expert in fasting. great talk on ketones though. Leucine spikes insulin more than a lot of vegetables. It all depends on the protein or carb that you are eating.
Why would a little bit of natural sugar be bad for you though since it is basically from a root?
Sugar is sugar regardless of its origin: Sugar from a sugar beet root is the same as sugar from a sugar cane - they are all sucrose. Table sugar = sucrose which is a two par molecule composed of one glucose and one fructose. Corn syrup made from the breakdown of corn starch= 100% glucose, high fructose corn syrup is either 58:42 or 45:55 glucose to fructose (so it is the same as sucrose to your body). An apple, pear, grape etc has a combination of sucrose (g+f) and fructose. Fructose is bad in a different way from glucose. It increases cravings for sweet foods and is only processed by the liver, and only converted into fat. The biochemical breakdown pathways and the results of the breakdown are almost identical to those for ethanol alcohol.
Glucose is absorbed by all body cells and can be used directly, but it is poisonous in high concentrations in the blood so the concentration has to be taken down quickly via the action of insulin. Even a small amount of sugar/sucrose will spike your insulin. Insulin is a far reaching hormone that affects many aspects of physiology, not just glucose regulation.
How much is little bit and how often do you propose?
I would;nt eat those bouillon cubes or use soy sauce as both are usually loaded with MSG!!
Simon Smedley agree. There are clean bouillon options
Go to health food store get good ones