When you say the sugar/starch not fibre count which figures are you including and whereabouts in the world are you based as reported values vary depending on location?I don't test for ketones but I follow a very low carb diet and on many days the (sugar/starch but not fibre) carb count is below 20g and I'm on a calorie deficit too as I'm losing up to 2 pounds a week at present.
My general question is, are you susceptible to 'keto flu' if you don't quite keep the carbs under the threshold every day? Or is that only while initially going through keto-adaptation?
Been doing very low carb for 4 years but it's not possible to maintain this 100% every day. On some days it might be 40 or 50g.Carb flu aka keto flu is a temporary phase while your body is becoming keto adapted aka fat adapted. The human body doesn't like such big changes and complains and rebels loudly however not everyone gets keto flu. If you are already below 20g carbs per day (you don't say how long you have been keto) you are unlikely to suffer with these very short lived symptoms.
Fixed that, no idea how that happened.Hm, the forum thinks I'm insulin-dependent. I'm not, never have been, Indeed I've never taken any meds. (Heads off to profile settings!)
When you say the sugar/starch not fibre count which figures are you including and whereabouts in the world are you based as reported values vary depending on location?
When you say the sugar/starch not fibre count which figures are you including and whereabouts in the world are you based as reported values vary depending on location?
Been doing very low carb for 4 years but it's not possible to maintain this 100% every day. On some days it might be 40 or 50g.
Fixed that, no idea how that happened.
OK have you checked out the McCance and Widowson tables? They are hereSorry - my initial response go lost - this is what I wrote earlier:
I'm in the UK and I'm quite obsessive about finding nutritional data that separates non-digestible carbs from digestible starches and sugars.
When you say the sugar/starch not fibre count which figures are you including and whereabouts in the world are you based as reported values vary depending on location?
When you say the sugar/starch not fibre count which figures are you including and whereabouts in the world are you based as reported values vary depending on location?
OK have you checked out the McCance and Widowson tables? They are here
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/composition-of-foods-integrated-dataset-cofid
so far as I know its what supermarkets should base their nutrition info on... some are better than others though
So you look at carb count just to be clear?
I doubt that after 4 years you would be susceptible to carb flu. The only time I could see it happening to you is if you returned to a normal western diet and then went keto again. (Well done on your 4 years btw).
I'm thinking of my wife too as she joins in the VLC partly to support me but also to lose some weight (she's not actually fat or diabetic though!). But of course she is far less focused on being low carb.I doubt that after 4 years you would be susceptible to carb flu. The only time I could see it happening to you is if you returned to a normal western diet and then went keto again. (Well done on your 4 years btw).
In the UK it never does... at least not that I have ever seen?Not seen those before - will have a look, thanks. Yes I check carbs and calories mainly and try to be sure that the carb count doesn't include the fibre component.
Usually not on packaged food but I do a lot of my own cooking and I have to be careful when looking up nutrient info for ingredients on the Internet.In the UK it never does... at least not that I have ever seen?
Ah I see yes googling for something can be dangerous I'd use a reputable supermarket (personally I use Waitrose or Tesco for most non packaged stuff they are usually pretty ok) So long as its UK based then you should be ok.Usually not on packaged food but I do a lot of my own cooking and I have to be careful when looking up nutrient info for ingredients on the Internet.
Remember that protein - to a far lesser extent of course - can necessarily elevate insulin in the less immediate term, and thus effect ketosis to some degree or other, particularly over time or even during the following day/s. Certainly it isn’t solely about carbohydrate. The likelihood of protein being a factor appears to vary greatly among individuals. For me it’s now not really a thing, but it was when my insulin sensitivity sucked. Basically insulin will limit or block ketosis irrespective of why it’s elevated (macros, stress, dawn phenomenon etc.) This could likely cause one to be teetering on the edge of ketosis and perhaps experiencing “the flu” unexpectedly.
Also I’d personally be wary of not considering fibre. In my experience, expecting fibre to cause no glucose load is somewhat hit & miss. In my view it can cause “creep” over time even if it may not measure as a postprandial spike. Again I suspect this will vary from person-to-person.
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