Quick response to
@MrBigglesworth
The LCHF diet really threw my electrolytes off, and I was miserable. I finally settled on taking 150 mg magnesium citrate with each meal (for a daily intake of 450 mg), 99 mg potassium citrate with breakfast, and salt daily. My husband, who has atrial fibrillation, joined me on the LCHF diet, and it appears to have worsened his atrial fibrillation. We're not sure. And he chose to continue on the diet. While I had heart palpitations intermittently as I was sorting out the electrolyte problem and how to do the diet correctly, that problem resolved within a month or so. Getting the sodium (salt) right was the last piece for me. Hoping this problem resolves for you too.
An easy way to consume salt daily is to dissolve some in a cup of hot water and drink it. I'd start with an 1/8 teaspoon, and work up to a 1/4 or 1/2 teaspoon. By the third cup with an 1/8 or 1/4 teaspoon of salt over a period of days, I began liking it, but maybe I'm just weird. Others here drink broth which is salty (and too often has yucky preservatives in it which I prefer to avoid; ask for brand suggestions here if you go with the broth option).
I have to go now, but I encourage you to list here exactly what you're eating each day here for two or three days so the more experienced low carbers here can help you tweak what your eating.
I'm concerned that you're not eating enough of a variety of healthy fats, so your caloric intake may be too low. Which would be uncomfortable for you. Also, in the beginning, it helped me to snack on 1 ounce of raw nuts or other sources of fat and protein between meals, and before bed. 1/2 an avocado or 12 small green olives with the pimento removed are good too after dinner or before bed. This potentially will temporarily stop the weight loss, but it will help with the transition to becoming a fat burner. Over time I significantly scaled back the snacking and eating hard cheeses somewhat and my weight loss resumed.
Each meal should include a source of a carbohydrate (in the form of a non-starchy vegetable as much as possible), a fat, and a protein. I don't feel good if I don't have an egg and at least one serving of meat, poultry, or fish daily.
As for the pain, that likely will take time to sort out. Initially, I was experiencing some discomfort in my right kidney, but my lab results consistently showed no problems, and it eventually resolved too. Hopefully, you don't have a stone problem.
I'll follow your posts over the weekend.
