The ketogenic diet means that you will run on fat all of the time (permanent ketosis).. depending how low carb you go then you may find yourself switching between running on glucose and running on fat depending on your consumption of carbs. If you are running in Low Carb mode you may still "bonk". Once you are running in keto mode "bonking" becomes a thing of the past. So for example keto marathon runners do not experience "the wall" .. at least that is what my reading on the subject has claimed. I'm neither a long distance cyclist nor marathon runner.. far too lazy for that.Thanks Guzzler. From my basic understanding of the ketogenic diet, the body adapts to burning fat for fuel instead of carbs, but does the same happen on the LCHF diet? I presume it must do so what is the benefit of the ketogenic diet?
I do a lot of cycling and cross training.
Hello, I have just been diagnoses as prediabetic. I have had two HbA1c tests 3 months apart. The first came back as 47 and the second as 46 - so that seems pretty conclusive!
It came as a surprise as I am a very fit active person with a good diet and healthy lifestyle. A recent health check up gave me a body fat percentage of 14% and all other criteria were good. But I guess that is just the way it is!
So, I have started to cut out snacks such as cakes, biscuits, etc. and cut out 'bad' carbs but I find I am hungry most of the time and am worried that I will lose weight and my energy levels will drop.
I have been looking in to the low carb and ketogenic diets but I am not sure if and how this will affect my training - I do a lot of cycling and cross training.
Does anyone have any thoughts, suggestions or experience of this?
Hello, I have just been diagnoses as prediabetic. I have had two HbA1c tests 3 months apart. The first came back as 47 and the second as 46 - so that seems pretty conclusive!
It came as a surprise as I am a very fit active person with a good diet and healthy lifestyle. A recent health check up gave me a body fat percentage of 14% and all other criteria were good. But I guess that is just the way it is!
So, I have started to cut out snacks such as cakes, biscuits, etc. and cut out 'bad' carbs but I find I am hungry most of the time and am worried that I will lose weight and my energy levels will drop.
I have been looking in to the low carb and ketogenic diets but I am not sure if and how this will affect my training - I do a lot of cycling and cross training.
Does anyone have any thoughts, suggestions or experience of this?
Check out the book by Steve Phinney and Jeff Volek The Art and Science of Low Carbohydrate PerformanceHello, I have just been diagnoses as prediabetic. I have had two HbA1c tests 3 months apart. The first came back as 47 and the second as 46 - so that seems pretty conclusive!
It came as a surprise as I am a very fit active person with a good diet and healthy lifestyle. A recent health check up gave me a body fat percentage of 14% and all other criteria were good. But I guess that is just the way it is!
So, I have started to cut out snacks such as cakes, biscuits, etc. and cut out 'bad' carbs but I find I am hungry most of the time and am worried that I will lose weight and my energy levels will drop.
I have been looking in to the low carb and ketogenic diets but I am not sure if and how this will affect my training - I do a lot of cycling and cross training.
Does anyone have any thoughts, suggestions or experience of this?
Hello, I have just been diagnoses as prediabetic. I have had two HbA1c tests 3 months apart. The first came back as 47 and the second as 46 - so that seems pretty conclusive!
It came as a surprise as I am a very fit active person with a good diet and healthy lifestyle. A recent health check up gave me a body fat percentage of 14% and all other criteria were good. But I guess that is just the way it is!
So, I have started to cut out snacks such as cakes, biscuits, etc. and cut out 'bad' carbs but I find I am hungry most of the time and am worried that I will lose weight and my energy levels will drop.
I have been looking in to the low carb and ketogenic diets but I am not sure if and how this will affect my training - I do a lot of cycling and cross training.
Does anyone have any thoughts, suggestions or experience of this?
Very interesting link, thanks! But is this book only for those going the full keto?Check out the book by Steve Phinney and Jeff Volek The Art and Science of Low Carbohydrate Performance
I am another example of this. In August, age 75, I got an A1c of 41, following on from 40 the year before and 37 before that. My GP would not have mentioned this to me, as I am still one point away from being officially pre-diabetic (in the UK). Luckily she wanted me to go on to statins to lower my LDL cholesterol, so sent me to the nurse, who dropped the bombshell. It was a very great surprise, as no-one in my family has had diabetes, though we all die of heart related problems. We are 100% English, with a smidgen of Scottish. I don't have any vascular disease, and with a BMI of 16.5 I don't have metabolic disease either, nor have I lost my spleen. I was eating the classic healthy diet and doing far more than average exercise. Given the fact that I have been gradually losing weight, I am wondering about LADA, but my GP doesn't want to do anything until I have achieved proper pre-diabetic status. I am testing my BG and weighing myself regularly, so if things start to accelerate I'll be back to the surgery at once.It is odd that someone with a healthy lifestyle, diet and weight should get pre-diabetes; it is getting more common. Do you have other risk factors such as family history, non-white ethnic origin, vascular disease or features of metabolic syndrome? The suggestion of LADA is sensible (I would never be patronising). But other things raise the Hba1c, not just abnormal glucose levels; being Afro-caribbean, anaemic or having had your spleen removed all increase the HbA1c; if you are testing for LADA, with GAD antibodies, one could also run off a fasting glucose level.
Best wishes
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?