I've never been a big believer of the ketogenic diet, and i've lost all faith in it after a few week on this forum, gathering very interesting pieces of evidence.
Colpo post a new article reviewing some studies (I don't know if it is most) on the effect of ketogenic diet and cognition. Overall, it seems like ketogenic diet tends to slightly impairs mood and deteriorate cognitive ability.
Also, some of these studies, which some were metabolic ward, looked at weight loss and... again, no metabolic advantage was found from a ketogenic diet.
Overall, Anthony seems to be back at recommanding somewhat a zone diet, with low-GI/GL carbs of good quality, which I think is probably the healthiest way to make it in the long term - with some tweaking depending on the individual. (he used to be pro low-carb, non-keto tho)
I really like the fact that he points out how people can be dogmatic about diet, making it a close religious belives and being blind to anything else.
here, from the article
Because I can’t get inside the heads of all these people (and probably wouldn’t want to even if I could!), I can’t say with any scientific sense of certainty. What I will say is this: diets that are inherently unbalanced seem to be associated with more than their fair share of extremist behavior compared with more moderate plans (as an example, I’ve yet to see any noteworthy level of shrill behaviour from followers of “Zone” or “Mediterranean”-style diets). Ketogenic diets are characterized by extremely low-carbohydrate intakes that may alter serotonergic expression[Christensen L] and induce or exacerbate deficiencies in important minerals including potassium, magnesium and selenium.
Similarly, vegan and fruitarian diets, whose followers have also been known to engage in some rather whackopathic behavior, can induce various nutrient deficiencies, including those of B12 and essential fatty acids (both crucial for neurological health). Tom Billings has talked at length about the less-than-sterling conduct evidenced by die-hard followers of these regimens:
Virtually everything Billings has reported in his observations can also be applied to the low-carb movement. Like vegans, low-carbers often display an us-versus-them mentality, a negative feature that is of course hardly exclusive to diet sectarians. Human beings in general are imbued with this trait, something that politicians and other professional manipulators are never slow to exploit. Back in the Stone Age, such a trait may have conferred survival advantages by reinforcing group cohesion and resistance to hostile tribes. In our modern complex society, it allows leaders to exploit such phenomena as patriotism and nationalism to cajole populations into highly destructive wars, the true agendas of which are often very different from those presented for public consumption.
In the dietary arena, this us-versus-them mindset leads to the development of absolutist attitudes that cause dietary devotees to brand outsiders as inferior or even evil. In the vegan arena, this may translate to the belief that avoidance of meat is virtuous while those who eat meat are “bad” (indeed, “Meat is Murder” is a popular catchcry among the vegan animal rights movement). Vegans readily embrace and cite research that appear to support their beliefs, while research unsupportive of vegan diets is reflexively derided as being biased, corrupt, and the product of dairy/meat/egg industry-sponsored researchers.
Low-carbohydrate followers meanwhile, have been so thoroughly indoctrinated about the “evils” of carbohydrates that they frequently exhibit a phobic attitude towards this naturally occurring macronutrient. Seriously, I’ve read Internet posts where the author was fretting as to whether or not they should eat liver because of it’s carbohydrate content – a miniscule five grams of glycogen-derived carbohydrate per 100 grams of cooked liver! Low-carbohydrate ‘gurus’ have so successfully convinced many of their followers that extremely-low carbohydrate ketogenic intakes are superior for fat loss that many of these hapless devotees will often completely shun carbohydrates and endure constipation (a favorite topic of discussion on low-carb forums), repulsive breath and body odor, irritability, and numerous other unpleasant symptoms.
Anyway, worth the read, and digging the references.
Just sharing foods for thought.
http://anthonycolpo...._You_Crazy.html
Edited by Mind, 04 February 2010 - 09:08 PM.