I am likely looking at surgery (anything from a lumpectomy to a mastectomy) - I'll know more in a few days. Since I'm on the other side of the big pond from a lot of you, there is often a 12+ hour delay, so I'm asking in advance of having specifics about the need, because once I know what the need is things may move quickly.
I'm 2.5 weeks into a diet close to the Newcastle Diet (the Blood Sugar diet, modeled on the Newcastle but with real food, combined with 16:8 fasting). I'm guessing that the surgeon won't think 800 calories a day is an appropriate amount of nutrition for healing from surgery (I'll be asking).
I'm curious if anyone had to interrupt the 8 week diet for any reason (and what impact it had on remission/no remission), and specifically if anyone experienced a surgical interruption.
My definition of remission, by the way, is the ability to return to a isocaloric diet (roughly 33/3% of my daily calories from each of the macro groups) and maintain normal blood glucose levels.
Thank you!I know of one person who continued with the ND through her surgery and post surgical period for BC. As I recall she did up her protein a bit, but I can't recall too many more details.
As the lady hasn't posted for a while, I have sent her a PM with a link to your thread.
Fingers crossed you won't need too much intervention.
Thank you for the suggestions. I'd been hoping to be able to move away from ketogenic to moderate carbs.Guess I'd better do some more research.
Brunneria - I feel fine on the 800 calorie diet (about the same as I did on 1200). Definitely got that worn feeling, but more likely due to lack of sleep than lack of calories. Yesterday was rough. What I was concerned about was tissue repair - and bumping the protein makes sense.
I'm not concerned about weight control - that's relatively easy to stop and start without consequence. If it was just that, I'd take a break in a heartbeat. I am using the diet, plus daily 16 hour fasting, specifically as an attempt to induce restoration of the first phase insulin response & diabetic remission. My assessment of what research there is, is that one or both are critical to that outcome.If my personal experience of similar surgery, for a different reason, 6 months ago was that i had real trouble keeping my weight up, so I wouldn't worry about weight control. I was eating extremely well, and lots of it, just to just about hold my own.
The nurse monitoring my eventual healing predicted when my body would start to behave more normally, about 2 months post-surgery, and she was spot on.
When do you feel you may know more?
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