Hi,
I cannot see the other half of your conversation (because of the Ignore button), but I can hazard a guess that ketogenic physiological insulin resistance is being talked about?
If that is the case, it only happens when people are in long term ketosis, which is where they eat so few carbs a day that their body switches to using fat as fuel, rather than glucose. The switch happens at different points for different people. Some get into ketosis at 50g carbs a day, others at less than 20 g carbs a day, but once in ketosis, and adjusted to it (it can take weeks), people tend to have more energy, and more endurance. There are many endurance athletes who use ketosis nowadays, because they don't 'hit the wall' where their glucose energy reserves run out.
This is, of course, very different from normal low carb eating, and is usually referred to as Very low carb or keto eating. Calling it generically 'low carb' is rather misleading.
Physiological insulin resistance happens when people have been keto for weeks or months. Their baseline blood glucose rises a little. For me, it seems to rise by about 1mmol/l. This is often described by anti-low carbers as
a bad thing, but there is no evidence for this, and it has done no one any recorded harm (I have looked for the evidence). I LIKE it. It protects me from any chance of hypos, and is a good indication of being in ketosis (fuelled by fat). No glucose hypers or hypos, no sleepiness after meals, no fatigue at all, really. Additionally, my HbA1c is lovely and low when I am in ketogenic physiological insulin resistance, so as far as I can see
it is all good.
Something else you may find useful to know, is that when people exercise their insulin resistance often drops. Doesn't happen for an unfortunate 20% (approx) according to one of the few studies on the subject (I can look the link out, if you like), but for the rest of us, when we exercise enough hard enough and long enough (for me it is a brisk dog walk), our muscles become less insulin resistant. This means that more of the glucose can enter the muscle cells and get used. Have you ever had that feeling of warmth in your muscles after exercise and the sense of feeling
goood? (before this exercise, I have a lot of insulin resistance, and asking my big muscles to do things like go upstairs, or walk fast makes my legs feel heavy and sluggish. Once the insulin resistance lowers, that feeling disappears and I feel the action takes less effort) That is what it feels like for me. Insulin resistance then stays lowered for a while post exercise, but the 'while' depends entirely on fitness, level of usual insulin resistance and activity levels, so how long is a piece of string?
Hope that helps.