Not exact matches
A
low carb, high fat diet puts patients into
nutritional ketosis, a metabolic
state of burning fat and using ketones rather than glucose for energy.
Another source
of bad breath is acetone exhaled from the lungs in people who consume very
low amounts
of dietary carbohydrates and are in a
state of nutritional ketosis.
A dietary intake
of about 50 grams or less per day
of net carbs while also keeping protein
low - to - moderate is usually
low enough to allow you to make the shift to
nutritional ketosis (the metabolic
state associated with an increased production
of ketones in your liver; i.e., the biological reflection
of being able to burn fat).
Stick with highly nutritious
low - carb and high - fat meals that will nourish your body, keep you feeling well - fed, and keep you in a
state of nutritional ketosis.
ME makes a feeble step in the direction
of getting the body to be able to burn more fat relative to an athlete on a high carb /
low fat diet but it falls far short
of the true fat - adapted
state of an athlete following OFM or
Nutritional Ketosis.
Also, to mention the Atkins diet, in the book I read, the diet begins with a two week very
low carb diet [20 grams
of carbo perday] in order to transition the body into a
state of nutritional ketosis, using ketones not glucose / insulin for energy generation; however, it is not intended to be a permanent such
state but rather for the dieter to gradually add in carbs; however, is one added in only up to the limit, which varies from person to person,
of carbs to just below the lvel that would transition out
of ketosis, then Atkins would work with that in mind and requiring monitoring for blood or urine ketone levels and must needs be high fat,, moderate protein, and
low carbs