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badcat
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Awsome!Over all I have lost about 8 St 7 Lb but am now allowing my self a little leeway in carbs and calories in order to stay around the weight I am now
Awsome!Over all I have lost about 8 St 7 Lb but am now allowing my self a little leeway in carbs and calories in order to stay around the weight I am now
The reason I ask is that I am slightly concerned that if you do end up gaining weight what will you do next? Calorie restriction may be good short term but I worry about metabolic slowdown if continued for too long.Over all I have lost about 8 St 7 Lb but am now allowing my self a little leeway in carbs and calories in order to stay around the weight I am now
I think that is all true @Brunneria particularly on the 100%, cure etc. In terms of research just to be fair, there are the same questions over whether LCHF works in the long run, whether LCHF has long term effects on things we don't understand yet. There is no research thanks to poor scientific research driven by the high carb low fat marketers.
LCHF, as someone who practices it - is an amazing way of getting BGs down from 15 - 5 pretty quickly so I am far from knocking it. And weight, and BP, and cholesteral... My visceral fat is 11 - even when I was cycling 200 miles a week I never got that low - so better than exercise for shifting that weight - who would have guessed!
I don't understand why the two things, ND & LCHF are not a marriage made in heaven? Why are they always put up against each other as separate disciplines? My current plan is to LCHF to get BG in a controllable range - ND diet to try and get things working better than they are (because one slice of brown toast sends me to pluto and back) and then LCHF 46 of the 52 weeks in a year, or 5 out of 7 days a week TBC. Just a plan mind you need to take the stage 2 plunge.
What I don't get is that its perfectly possible to set up an eating protocol of 800 calories per day which is LCHF. people just need to understand that in order for a diet to be LCHF you don't actually NEED to eat the HF part- if you don't eat it - your body will supply it for you by releasing it own fats - your body won't necessarily recognise the difference between the fats its consuming because you put them in your mouth versus the ones you already possess.
When you add in the external fat to LCHF you are mainly making the diet palatable and long term repeatable, but there is nothing stopping you skipping the F part for 8 weeks if you can .
( I'm female 165 cm) I need 70g of proteins to give me enough of those - 280 calories so step one is to figure out which proteins you will eat to give you those.
Step 2 - you need stuff to go with that - above ground vegetables
so if you still want to eat LCHF but be VLC for example
breakfast - poached egg on spinach with mushrooms and onion
lunch - chicken thigh skin on with cauliflower
dinner - smoked mackerel and broccoli
snack yoghurt with a few blueberries and 10g crushed nuts
add a multi vitamin pill, and a fish oil capsule,
total result 816 calories 93 % nutrition, 70g protein, 20g carbs, fats 47g ( 35% protein 14% carbs and 50% fats inc 14% saturated)
When you want to ease up on the calorie restriction add in more and more fats as necessary, the other two can pretty much stay constant.
The issue then really becomes do you have the willpower to go that hungry, and if you don't as long as you add fats as the extra calories you will still be LCHF.
There is no need to add in carbs you wouldn't eat on LCHF and thus give yourself sugar spikes just because you do want to try VLC - do both and get the best of both worlds.
I agree that is all perfectly possible and desirable.
It is a good example of a VLCD and LCH(lowish)F diet. Something I am considering and @bulkbiker is formulating a variant to.
But it isn't the Newcastle diet as undertaken as part of the research project. That prohibits many of the things on the list above. It will be really interesting if in the second post research papers of the current extended trial they update the allowed foods on the 8 week protocol to include dairy. Or even go further and say "eat what you like for 8 weeks as long as you don't exceed 800 calories).
By my way of thinking the Newcastle Diet is simply yet another example of people starting off staring down the wrong end of the telescope.
Our dietary mantra is low fat diet, we know we need to lose weight to get healthier . So we will concoct a potion that is 800 calories and fits these criteria . Hey presto if anyone can actually stick to it - then we will have found the formula to cure diabetes and sure enough if looks like it does.
There have been formulated weight loss powders for as long as I have been alive that purport to have the magical property of losing weight fast and they have always worked IF people can comply with them - they have probably also always cured diabetes too if anyone had thought to check .
I utterly doubt that there is a magic ingredient in the formula that makes the difference. I think the only thing that makes the difference is the absolute and admirable will power of the subject in complying with the plan.
VLC and LCHF will both result in ketosis eventually, VLC with LCHF quicker with more interesting tasty foods.
My guess would be that for many of the people reporting absolutely superb results on here with an LCHF diet, they have actually already been eating pretty close to a VLC version of it - not least because we all struggle to add in the fats.
@CherryAA I totally agree with all you have said, you echo my own thoughts on the ND diet.
Yes all true I am certain.
However - whether or not the ND diet is liked or disliked - I was simply pointing out that the current protocol according to the ND web site prohibits those foods. So that makes it a VLCD diet and not an ND diet. The results, as you say are likely to be the same but important for those browsing that the scientific research currently being undertaken is really specific.
I don't know about telescopes.
Yes all true I am certain.
However - whether or not the ND diet is liked or disliked - I was simply pointing out that the current protocol according to the ND web site prohibits those foods. So that makes it a VLCD diet and not an ND diet. The results, as you say are likely to be the same but important for those browsing that the scientific research currently being undertaken is really specific.
I don't know about telescopes.
Again - I don't disagree with you at all.Yes but... and its a big but. the main reason the ND used the shakes was that it was easy to figure out how to do it (and I think Prof Taylor got them free from Optifast) because they offer a fairly precise measure. He himself has said that is doesn't matter what shakes you use and I can't therefore see why 800 calories of real food is that different from 800 calories from artificially made food replacement apart from being 1. nicer to eat 2. probably better for you. But as with all these things it depends on your perspective. As you know in my opinion the ND shakes have way too many carbs and in the early days those trying it on here have had some pretty big spikes that could be easily avoided by doing it LCHF.
I would think that there are a few reasons why the ND protocol is shakes for a prescribed period of time with v little variation
1) it is a research programme and nothing more -all it is doing is looking at the effect of a specific short term radical intervention and is not something designed for long term use
2) In all research that looks to establish widely applicable results, you necessarily need to minimise variability or your results are scienfificully and practically meaningless. If everyone is eating the same things then variability is minimised. If on the other hand people can make up their calorie count however they want, then there are way too many variables introduced. Such variability is desirable post research and Im sure the limits of that variability will be the subject of future research
I would agree that 800 cal from various sources is likely to work. It does however worry and annoy me when lchf is given as the holy graile - the lc part is,i think, Universally applicable, although the best level of that carb count will vary for individuals between ketogenic levels and under say 100g. The HF part is I think much less universal - it certainly doesnt suit my body and there are multiple reports on here and on diet doctor of others who experience weight gain and / or digestive problems with elevated fat
Again - I don't disagree with you at all.
But the facts of the study are a meal replacement shake and that is the Newcastle diet - anything else is just as valid just not the Newcastle diet (for example, the blood sugar diet, a VLCD diet).
Moreover - on the site - is a specific list of "you cannot eat" foods. If that isn't important I wonder why it is there - or still there?
Once again my disclaimer. I do not own shares in the ND diet, never tried, have tried LCHF - works really well for me (though modify down the fat) - like the idea of VLCD in any form to....
All I am doing here is trying to correct those that state the ND diet is any food - which it isn't (yet) but let us hope it will be in the big reveal in December.
http://www.ncl.ac.uk/media/wwwnclacuk/newcastlemagneticresonancecentre/files/direct-protocol.pdfWhat is the actual website link ? please![]()
http://www.ncl.ac.uk/media/wwwnclacuk/newcastlemagneticresonancecentre/files/direct-protocol.pdf
If you read it, you will see that it is not a Newcastle diet anyway. For the first 12 weeks it is the Cambridge Weight Plan, after 12 weeks, horror of horrors, there is a food reintroduction period (12 to 18 weeks) in which the subjects are given food which accords to the Eatwell plate.
https://www.food.gov.uk/sites/default/files/multimedia/pdfs/theeatwellplate.pdf
Thereafter there is an individually tailored diet for weeks 19 to 104.
Everyone seems keen to starve themselves for 3 months with the Newcastle Diet aka the Cambridge Weight Plan, but few seem that keen on the next part of the experiment, namely the Eatwell plate but this surely must be part of the "Newcastle Diet" must it not?