I really don't want to sit and argue w/ lunatics from reddit.com/r/ketoscience. My only points are:
1. Insulin. Yes I know Bikman and his near singular view on how metabolism is dictated by insulin/glucagon (or thereabouts). For 70%+ of the US population that overeats on carbs, his insulin-centric, carb avoiding mentality may have a role. For those of us already relatively healthy and pursuing 'optimal' health, his near singular focus on insulin isn't enough. And because Shawn is avoiding carbs, I don't think insulin is 'the way' to measure his health, it's not where his metabolism is being stressed. He's not being overtaxed with carbs, so why bother focusing on that.
2. HDL vs. Poor Kidney Markers (BUN/Creatinine). I point out his BUN and creatinine aren't that great and look kinda poor. An explanation is that this is 'normal' in such a high intensity athlete like Dr. Shawn Baker. OK. Then why is his HDL so mediocre, if this guy is some kind of world class athlete. To me, it looks like he's just on a high protein atkins diet. His HDL is barely acceptable, his kidneys are (mildly) stressed from the protein. I don't see how his lab values are all that great. Most of my lipid markers are way better than his, and I had clinical metabolic syndrome at one point.
3. False equivalence. Baker draws a false equivalence when talking about mtor and protein intake.
"Most of the folks that do a lot of hand wringing about mTOR, man, there's nothing about their performance or physique that I would want to emulate inthe least. They might outlive me, I don't know. You don't know untl it's all said
and done. I'll take my dirt nap earlier so long as my quality of life is beter alongthe way.
Shawn: Yeah. I think that's crucial. We also know there are some studies that show strength is ted in to longevity. There are some studies that show that strength shows increased longevity. Having muscle mass is incredibly important. It's a metabolic sync. You need that to help with insulin resistance. It's important for longevity. It's important for functon. It's important for quality of life.And I agree, if I live to 90 rather than 93, high quality of functon, I'm going to be
much happier."
The comparison he seems to be implicitly making is between himself and people like Michael Greger -- these sort of thin, wiry body-type that lack muscle mass. Well, what Dr. Baker should be doing is comparing his all meat diet, training routine, and body composition to someone like Jack LaLanne
who didn't gorge on a pure protein diet, ate tons of vegetables daily, had great body composition and lived to that 93 age that Baker is referring to. That's the 'standard' if anything. Again, I think he engages in minimizing the risks or self-indulgent excuse making to justify his dietary habits.
Aging is not about insulin. It's about inflammation and daily stress our cells through metabolism, pathogen exposure, environmental stresses and so forth. Going high protein isn't the right answer to keep your metabolism 'quiet'.