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Keto or low carb and breastfeeding
System
Posts: 1,920 MFP Staff
This discussion was created from replies split from: Breastfeeding and Low Carb.
Please remember to keep comments productive. Breastfeeding and low carb have both proven to be hot topics in the past, so lets not let this blow up please.
Also, it may be beneficial if you be specific in how low is "low carb" in your posting.
Thanks for your cooperation,
4legs
Please remember to keep comments productive. Breastfeeding and low carb have both proven to be hot topics in the past, so lets not let this blow up please.
Also, it may be beneficial if you be specific in how low is "low carb" in your posting.
Thanks for your cooperation,
4legs
0
Replies
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Lillymoo01 wrote: »Low carb, in particular keto, generally is not recommended for breast feeding mums. There really has not been enough long term studies done on how it affects breast milk. If it is decreasing your milk supplies that is an indication that now is not the time to reduce carbs significantly.
I think it is the switching diets that can be a problem, behind that of too few calories. I know of low carb moms who ate that way while pg, and had no problem breastfeeding. But switching diets while breastfeeding can be a challenge for some.5 -
DomesticKat wrote: »Lillymoo01 wrote: »Low carb, in particular keto, generally is not recommended for breast feeding mums. There really has not been enough long term studies done on how it affects breast milk. If it is decreasing your milk supplies that is an indication that now is not the time to reduce carbs significantly.
I think it is the switching diets that can be a problem, behind that of too few calories. I know of low carb moms who ate that way while pg, and had no problem breastfeeding. But switching diets while breastfeeding can be a challenge for some.
No. The nutritional needs and well-being of the infant who is relying on the mother as their single source of nutrition takes precedence over the promotion of a fad diet. It doesn't matter what's causing it. There is no scientific evidence to support what you are saying beyond your own anecdotal evidence.
Low carb is typically meat, seafood, eggs, vegetables, nuts, seeds and some fruit. Processed and refined foods are normally skipped, and grains, sugars and starches are limited. What nutrition is missing, in your opinion? opinion being the key word.
I know low carbers who breastfeed. I know vegans who breast fed. I know many people who breastfed on a diet based upon processed and refined foods. It is mainly a calorie deficit that limits the nutrition available to the infant. Skipping bread and noodles will not harm any baby. Why would the mother eating over 150g of carbs in a day be crucial to the nutrition of her milk? Carbs are not nutritionally magical.9 -
DomesticKat wrote: »Lillymoo01 wrote: »Low carb, in particular keto, generally is not recommended for breast feeding mums. There really has not been enough long term studies done on how it affects breast milk. If it is decreasing your milk supplies that is an indication that now is not the time to reduce carbs significantly.
I think it is the switching diets that can be a problem, behind that of too few calories. I know of low carb moms who ate that way while pg, and had no problem breastfeeding. But switching diets while breastfeeding can be a challenge for some.
No. The nutritional needs and well-being of the infant who is relying on the mother as their single source of nutrition takes precedence over the promotion of a fad diet. It doesn't matter what's causing it. There is no scientific evidence to support what you are saying beyond your own anecdotal evidence. To say otherwise is morally repugnant.
Low carb is typically meat, seafood, eggs, vegetables, nuts, seeds and some fruit. Processed and refined foods are normally skipped, and grains, sugars and starches are limited. What nutrition is missing, in your opinion? opinion being the key word.
I know low carbers who breastfeed. I know vegans who breast fed. I know many people who breastfed on a diet based upon processed and refined foods. It is mainly a calorie deficit that limits the nutrition available to the infant. Skipping bread and noodles will not harm any baby. Why would the mother eating over 150g of carbs in a day be crucial to the nutrition of her milk? Carbs are not nutritionally magical.
Breastmilk is high in sugar, for good reason. Without sufficient carbs in your diet, your milk will not have the necessary nutritional profile to sustain your baby. Carbs, being one of the three macros that feed our bodies, ARE "nutritionally magical."3 -
DomesticKat wrote: »
I think it is the switching diets that can be a problem, behind that of too few calories. I know of low carb moms who ate that way while pg, and had no problem breastfeeding. But switching diets while breastfeeding can be a challenge for some.[/quote]
No. The nutritional needs and well-being of the infant who is relying on the mother as their single source of nutrition takes precedence over the promotion of a fad diet. It doesn't matter what's causing it. There is no scientific evidence to support what you are saying beyond your own anecdotal evidence. To say otherwise is morally repugnant. [/quote]
Low carb is typically meat, seafood, eggs, vegetables, nuts, seeds and some fruit. Processed and refined foods are normally skipped, and grains, sugars and starches are limited. What nutrition is missing, in your opinion? opinion being the key word.
I know low carbers who breastfeed. I know vegans who breast fed. I know many people who breastfed on a diet based upon processed and refined foods. It is mainly a calorie deficit that limits the nutrition available to the infant. Skipping bread and noodles will not harm any baby. Why would the mother eating over 150g of carbs in a day be crucial to the nutrition of her milk? Carbs are not nutritionally magical.[/quote]
Unless you have something of scientific merit to contribute, you are once again relying on anecdotal evidence and assumption and attempting to move goal posts related to context of this thread in order to support your WOE in-spite of the unknown harm that could cause to an infant. I suggest you stay in your own lane. [/quote]
Seriously? If you look at what I typed to the OP, I cautioned against switching to LCHF while breastfeeding, but gave advice to keep up electrolytes if the OP chooses to switch anyways.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3586783/
The only macronutrient shown to affect breast milk is protein. Not enough is bad.
Another that says the same:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5084016/
And as I already said, not enough calories is bad. Carb consumption does not play a factor in milk macronutrients or whether you make enough (unless by cutting too many calories you happen to be cutting carbs, but it's low calories that is the problem then).
Now it's your turn to show why eating fewer than 150 g of carbs a day could harm a breast feeding baby if the mother is an established In her LCHF woe. 150g of carbs from veggies and fruits is not a small amount...5 -
DomesticKat wrote: »DomesticKat wrote: »Lillymoo01 wrote: »Low carb, in particular keto, generally is not recommended for breast feeding mums. There really has not been enough long term studies done on how it affects breast milk. If it is decreasing your milk supplies that is an indication that now is not the time to reduce carbs significantly.
I think it is the switching diets that can be a problem, behind that of too few calories. I know of low carb moms who ate that way while pg, and had no problem breastfeeding. But switching diets while breastfeeding can be a challenge for some.
No. The nutritional needs and well-being of the infant who is relying on the mother as their single source of nutrition takes precedence over the promotion of a fad diet. It doesn't matter what's causing it. There is no scientific evidence to support what you are saying beyond your own anecdotal evidence. To say otherwise is morally repugnant.
Low carb is typically meat, seafood, eggs, vegetables, nuts, seeds and some fruit. Processed and refined foods are normally skipped, and grains, sugars and starches are limited. What nutrition is missing, in your opinion? opinion being the key word.
I know low carbers who breastfeed. I know vegans who breast fed. I know many people who breastfed on a diet based upon processed and refined foods. It is mainly a calorie deficit that limits the nutrition available to the infant. Skipping bread and noodles will not harm any baby. Why would the mother eating over 150g of carbs in a day be crucial to the nutrition of her milk? Carbs are not nutritionally magical.
Unless you have something of scientific merit to contribute, you are once again relying on anecdotal evidence and assumption and attempting to move goal posts related to context of this thread in order to support your WOE in-spite of the unknown harm that could cause to an infant. I suggest you stay in your own lane.
Seriously? If you look at what I typed to the OP, I cautioned against switching to LCHF while breastfeeding, but gave advice to keep up electrolytes if the OP chooses to switch anyways.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3586783/
The only macronutrient shown to affect breast milk is protein. Not enough is bad.
Another that says the same:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5084016/
And as I already said, not enough calories is bad. Carb consumption does not play a factor in milk macronutrients or whether you make enough (unless by cutting too many calories you happen to be cutting carbs, but it's low calories that is the problem then).
Now it's your turn to show why eating fewer than 150 g of carbs a day could harm a breast feeding baby if the mother is an established In her LCHF woe. 150g of carbs from veggies and fruits is not a small amount...
Neither of those articles are relevant here. Neither has anything to do with Keto. In fact, they caution against exclusionary diets while breastfeeding because they can lead to micronutrient deprivation, for starters.
There is no scientific evidence to support low carb while breastfeeding. None. To suggest otherwise is completely irresponsible and dangerous.7 -
DomesticKat wrote: »Lillymoo01 wrote: »Low carb, in particular keto, generally is not recommended for breast feeding mums. There really has not been enough long term studies done on how it affects breast milk. If it is decreasing your milk supplies that is an indication that now is not the time to reduce carbs significantly.
I think it is the switching diets that can be a problem, behind that of too few calories. I know of low carb moms who ate that way while pg, and had no problem breastfeeding. But switching diets while breastfeeding can be a challenge for some.
No. The nutritional needs and well-being of the infant who is relying on the mother as their single source of nutrition takes precedence over the promotion of a fad diet. It doesn't matter what's causing it. There is no scientific evidence to support what you are saying beyond your own anecdotal evidence. To say otherwise is morally repugnant.
Low carb is typically meat, seafood, eggs, vegetables, nuts, seeds and some fruit. Processed and refined foods are normally skipped, and grains, sugars and starches are limited. What nutrition is missing, in your opinion? opinion being the key word.
I know low carbers who breastfeed. I know vegans who breast fed. I know many people who breastfed on a diet based upon processed and refined foods. It is mainly a calorie deficit that limits the nutrition available to the infant. Skipping bread and noodles will not harm any baby. Why would the mother eating over 150g of carbs in a day be crucial to the nutrition of her milk? Carbs are not nutritionally magical.
Breastmilk is high in sugar, for good reason. Without sufficient carbs in your diet, your milk will not have the necessary nutritional profile to sustain your baby. Carbs, being one of the three macros that feed our bodies, ARE "nutritionally magical."
Gluconeogenesis would make up any extra need for glucose. Eating high or moderate carbs is not needed to create lactose. Besides, if one increases carbs you need to cut some other macro: protein or fat.
I'm not arguing for a zero carb diet, although I've seen that healthfully done too. Low carb is not no carb. If the body needs more glucose it can easily be created by the liver using fatty acid glycerol backbone, or from proteins if the body is less adept at using fat for fuel.
I just don't see the magic. A steak, salad and some roasted veggies should make quality milk. I can't see how it would be inferior to a spaghetti meal with tomato sauce, a couple of meatballs, and a salad if calories are held equal. Or a bowl of cereal with 1% milk with a glass of orange juice and a few slices of melon is not better than equal calories of an omelette with spinach, peppers and cheese in it.
I think some wrongly think that low carb must be no carb.
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Neither article you posted discussed the intentional restriction of an entire macronutrient because that's not what those studies are about. The fact that you didn't find the information you wanted in two articles doesn't mean that carbs are nutritionally irrelevant for the nursing mother. There is no study that intentionally restricts an entire macronutrient in a breastfeeding mother's diet in order to study the consequences for her milk supply and the infant. From the articles you posted, an unrestricted diet improves macro and micronutrient content in breastmilk.5
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DomesticKat wrote: »Neither article you posted discussed the intentional restriction of an entire macronutrient because that's not what those studies are about. The fact that you didn't find the information you wanted in two articles doesn't mean that carbs are nutritionally irrelevant for the nursing mother. There is no study that intentionally restricts an entire macronutrient in a breastfeeding mother's diet in order to study the consequences for her milk supply and the infant. From the articles you posted, an unrestricted diet improves macro and micronutrient content in breastmilk.
One article was titled "Maternal Diet and Nutrient Requirements in Pregnancy and Breastfeeding. An Italian Consensus Document".... It pointed out that low protein is a problem. If they've identified that, why wouldn't they have identified that low carb is a problem? There are cultures that BF while low carb, just like there are cultures that BF on moderate and higher carb. Carb intake, in an adequate calorie diet, is not a factor when it comes to BF'ing.
And the articles I posted discussed how a calorie unrestricted diet is best for BF'ing. No mention was made of carbs byond recommending a couple of of servings of veggies a day. Low carbers get that.
"The protein quality of foods is measured by their PDCAAS (Protein Digestibility Corrected Amino Acid Score), which is the score for amino acid digestibility [10]. Values close to 1 are typical of animal products, providing all nine essential amino acids, while values below 0.7 are typical of plant products. However, the consumption of two or more vegetable foods with different amino acidic composition can help improving the overall quality of their protein component"
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5084016/
It also mentions plants as a possible source of iron but suggests meat is better.
This is what it said on exclusion diets:
4.2. Exclusion Diets
In order to reduce the risk of major nutritional deficiencies, attention should be paid during pregnancy and breastfeeding to women who exclude whole categories of foods from their diet, both for health or ethical reasons. The elimination from the diet of healthy mothers even of allergenic foods (soy, cow’s milk, eggs, peanuts, fish and shellfish) has, in fact, proved to be ineffective to prevent infant allergies [4]. In the absence of a diagnosis of celiac disease or gluten sensitivity, a gluten-free diet is not appropriate for healthy pregnant and lactating women; rather it can increase the risk of micronutrient deficiencies (folate, calcium, iron and zinc) more often in those who exclude gluten containing cereals [76,77].
Vegetarian (lacto-ovo vegetarian, pesco-vegetarian, etc.) and vegan diets are becoming increasingly prevalent in the general population. In particular, diets devoid of any food of animal origin, including eggs and milk should be attentively considered during pregnancy and lactation, even though their general nutritional characteristics include lower energy intake and protein content, higher supply of unsaturated fats and fiber in comparison with Western diets [78]. The inclusion of milk and eggs is associated with the adequate supply of nutrients to pregnant women, while the exclusion of all animal foods makes the vegan diet likely inadequate in this life period, if not properly integrated. A systematic review of the literature highlighted an increased risk of iron and vitamin B 12 deficiency and low birth weight in association with vegetarian or strictly vegan diets, despite the absence of adverse effects for the fetus [79].
Calcium deficiency should also be considered in diets excluding dairy, in absence of appropriate replacement, due to the higher availability with foodstuffs of animal origin [50].
The lack of food sources of omega-3 fatty acids in the gestational period and in the weeks after childbirth should be properly monitored and corrected, in order to reach the intakes recommended in order to maintain the health status of the mother and to ensure the correct neuromotor and visual development to the offspring [27].
Another increasing issue, concerning in particular low-income populations, is the low consumption of fruits and vegetables (in absence of fortified products), associated with insufficient intakes of specific micronutrients [80]. Supplementation with a mix of vitamins and minerals effectively reduces the risk of preterm delivery and infants of low weight at birth in developing countries, especially in women with a high body mass index [81].
During lactation, exclusion diets require careful control. In fact, even though the macronutrient composition of human milk is relatively stable and reproducible [82], its micronutrient content seems to be significantly dependent upon the maternal diet [83].
As I mentioned before, Low carb does not equal no carb. Low carbers eat carbs. I think you might have some misconceptions about that.
For reference, these three plates have 150g of carbs on them in total.
from https://www.dietdoctor.com/low-carb/20-50-how-much
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This is all I can find on BF'ing on low carb diets (aka intentionally restricting an entire macronutrient):
https://www.breastfeeding.asn.au/feature-article_low-carb-diets-and-breastfeeding
The researchers found that:
- daily breastmilk production was the same regardless of diet: 829 ± 41 mL/d (HCLF) and 821 ± 33 mL/d (LCHF)
- daily infant breastmilk intake was the same regardless of diet: 611 ± 41 mL/d (HCLF) and 612 ± 41 mL/d (LCHF)
- there was no effect of diet on either breastmilk lactose or protein
- there was no difference in infants' intakes of carbohydrate (lactose) or protein between the two diets.
- the milk fat concentration (4.8 ± 0.3 and 4.3 ± 0.3 g/dL, p = 0.01) and the corresponding daily milk fat content (39 ± 2 and 34 ± 2 g/d, p = 0.02) were higher during the LCHF diet
- the energy content of milk was higher (p = 0.02) during the LCHF diet (654 ± 24 kcal/d) than during the HCLF diet (619 ± 23 kcal/d)
- infants' energy intakes expressed as kcal/d (486 ± 24 compared with 452 ± 23) or as kcal/kg/d (87 ± 4 compared with 81 ± 3) was higher (p < 0.05) during the LCHF diet
- the estimated average maternal energy expenditure was higher (P < 0.03) during the LCHF diet (1368 ± 15 kcal/d) than during the HCLF diet (1283 ± 24 kcal/d)
- the sum of maternal energy expenditure plus milk energy content was higher (P < 0.01) during the LCHF diet (2022 ± 35 kcal/d) than during the HCLF diet (1910 ± 40 kcal/d)
- the deficit in energy balance [intake — (energy expenditure + milk output)] was greater (P < 0.01) during the LCHF diet (−235 ± 39 kcal/d) than during the HCLF diet (−119 ± 48 kcal/d)
- lactating mothers who consumed the LCHF diet decreased carbohydrate oxidation and increased fat oxidation to liberate glucose.
Please note (again) that I am not advocating to switching to LCHF while BF'ing, but I think it is perfectly safe for a LCHF woman to continue with her diet while PG or BF'ing (for the vast majority of women - I'm sure there are exceptions and unusual cases out there).
If the OP wants to switch to LCHF while BFing, I advise going slowly, and adding adequate electrolytes and water, ensuring they are not in a large caloric deficit.
As I said a few times before, I will read any scientific evidence that you have that shows eating fewer than 150g of carbs a day is bad for breastmilk.2 -
The researcher's choice to highlight protein in their study does not confirm your assumptions. It simply means they did not study it. Just as choosing to use certain examples of restricted diets does not mean those are the only restricted diets one should avoid while breastfeeding.
Secondly, from the other article:
"Two moderate hypocaloric diets (1785 ± 22 kcal/day) were assessed in a cross-over design: seven, healthy lactating mothers and their infants were studied on 2 occasions in random order for 8 days separated by 1 to 2 weeks. On one occasion, the subjects received the low carb, high fat (LCHF, 30% of energy as carbohydrate and 55% as fat) and on the other occasion received the high carb, low fat diet (HCLF, 60% of energy as carbohydrate and 25% as fat). It is important to note that the amount of carbohydrates consumed during the LCHF was around 150 g per day (Table 1). This is not considered a true low carb diet — during a strict low carb diet around 20 g of carbohydrates are eaten, increasing to 40 g to maintain health (Dashti et al., 2006)."
A tiny sample size only studied on two occasions. Enough said. Please provide something with conclusive scientific merit.6 -
DomesticKat wrote: »The researcher's choice to highlight protein in their study does not confirm your assumptions. It simply means they did not study it. Just as choosing to use certain examples of restricted diets does not mean those are the only restricted diets one should avoid while breastfeeding.
Secondly, from the other article:
"Two moderate hypocaloric diets (1785 ± 22 kcal/day) were assessed in a cross-over design: seven, healthy lactating mothers and their infants were studied on 2 occasions in random order for 8 days separated by 1 to 2 weeks. On one occasion, the subjects received the low carb, high fat (LCHF, 30% of energy as carbohydrate and 55% as fat) and on the other occasion received the high carb, low fat diet (HCLF, 60% of energy as carbohydrate and 25% as fat). It is important to note that the amount of carbohydrates consumed during the LCHF was around 150 g per day (Table 1). This is not considered a true low carb diet — during a strict low carb diet around 20 g of carbohydrates are eaten, increasing to 40 g to maintain health (Dashti et al., 2006)."
A tiny sample size only studied on two occasions. Enough said. Please provide something with conclusive scientific merit.
I'm pretty sure that nothing would satisfy you on this. For some reason you think less that 150 g of carbs a day will negatively affect breast milk. Perhaps you will explain why. Or better yet, try to prove your theory. I'll accept journal articles with similarity small sample sizes.
Anything? Anything at all?
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DomesticKat wrote: »The researcher's choice to highlight protein in their study does not confirm your assumptions. It simply means they did not study it. Just as choosing to use certain examples of restricted diets does not mean those are the only restricted diets one should avoid while breastfeeding.
Secondly, from the other article:
"Two moderate hypocaloric diets (1785 ± 22 kcal/day) were assessed in a cross-over design: seven, healthy lactating mothers and their infants were studied on 2 occasions in random order for 8 days separated by 1 to 2 weeks. On one occasion, the subjects received the low carb, high fat (LCHF, 30% of energy as carbohydrate and 55% as fat) and on the other occasion received the high carb, low fat diet (HCLF, 60% of energy as carbohydrate and 25% as fat). It is important to note that the amount of carbohydrates consumed during the LCHF was around 150 g per day (Table 1). This is not considered a true low carb diet — during a strict low carb diet around 20 g of carbohydrates are eaten, increasing to 40 g to maintain health (Dashti et al., 2006)."
A tiny sample size only studied on two occasions. Enough said. Please provide something with conclusive scientific merit.
I'm pretty sure that nothing would satisfy you on this. For some reason you think less that 150 g of carbs a day will negatively affect breast milk. Perhaps you will explain why. Or better yet, try to prove your theory. I'll accept journal articles with similarity small sample sizes.
Anything? Anything at all?
Because the harm is unknown. The research doesn't exist. There is no reputable source that endorses a low carb diet for lactating mothers because of that. You are more than willing to overlook that despite having nothing to substantiate your claims and potentially cause harm to strangers on the internet and their nursing infants by not exercising caution. You are more interested in pushing your WOE instead of conducting logical application of the scientific method.7 -
DomesticKat wrote: »DomesticKat wrote: »The researcher's choice to highlight protein in their study does not confirm your assumptions. It simply means they did not study it. Just as choosing to use certain examples of restricted diets does not mean those are the only restricted diets one should avoid while breastfeeding.
Secondly, from the other article:
"Two moderate hypocaloric diets (1785 ± 22 kcal/day) were assessed in a cross-over design: seven, healthy lactating mothers and their infants were studied on 2 occasions in random order for 8 days separated by 1 to 2 weeks. On one occasion, the subjects received the low carb, high fat (LCHF, 30% of energy as carbohydrate and 55% as fat) and on the other occasion received the high carb, low fat diet (HCLF, 60% of energy as carbohydrate and 25% as fat). It is important to note that the amount of carbohydrates consumed during the LCHF was around 150 g per day (Table 1). This is not considered a true low carb diet — during a strict low carb diet around 20 g of carbohydrates are eaten, increasing to 40 g to maintain health (Dashti et al., 2006)."
A tiny sample size only studied on two occasions. Enough said. Please provide something with conclusive scientific merit.
I'm pretty sure that nothing would satisfy you on this. For some reason you think less that 150 g of carbs a day will negatively affect breast milk. Perhaps you will explain why. Or better yet, try to prove your theory. I'll accept journal articles with similarity small sample sizes.
Anything? Anything at all?
Because the harm is unknown. The research doesn't exist. There is no reputable source that endorses a low carb diet for lactating mothers because of that. You are more than willing to overlook that despite having nothing to substantiate your claims and potentially cause harm to strangers on the internet and their nursing infants by not exercising caution. You are more interested in pushing your WOE instead of conducting logical application of the scientific method.
Well, except for documents and research that I posted which did not support your hypothesis. Those sources don't endorse low carb but they don't advise against it either. Carbs seem pretty breast milk neutral to me.
You did notice how I repeatedly wrote that I do NOT recommend switching to LCHF while BF'ing? How I wrote that if the OP did wish to proceed that she should do so slowly and cautiously? You will have to point out to me where I was pushing a carnivore based ketogenic diet here; I can't remember mentioning it never mind pushing it.
This feels almost like a repeat of the Tim Noakes trial, but with focus on breastfeeding foods rather than weaning foods.
So if I understand you, the possible harm is just in not having enough research to prove that eating under 150g is healthy and safe for breastfeeding? If so, that could really limit what a BF'ing mother can eat. I doubt many foods or woes are proven safe in studies in this area, or if it is tested it is with a small sample like the one I posted earlier. Has high carb been proven safe? Moderate carb? the only study I've found is the one I linked to and both diets seem safe there, but you discounted that study....DomesticKat wrote: »And until you stop engaging in confirmation bias and cherry picking data, I'm going to continue repeating the same thing.
I'm the only one who provided any data! LOL
So you believe BFing while low carb if unsafe but you can't specify why.4 -
Breastfeeding mom to a 2month old here. I consume 130g of carbs or less/day and my babe is just fine. Science can only do so much. If baby is healthy and thriving and so is mom then eat whatever you bloody well please. There is so much out there that says don’t eat this or that for women who are pregnant or nursing it gets a wee bit ridiculous. The reserch and science is not nearly as important and the individual mom’s (and babe’s) well being if your doc has given you the go ahead to participate in a low carb diet then have at it!6
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Breastfeeding mom to a 2month old here. I consume 130g of carbs or less/day and my babe is just fine. Science can only do so much. If baby is healthy and thriving and so is mom then eat whatever you bloody well please. There is so much out there that says don’t eat this or that for women who are pregnant or nursing it gets a wee bit ridiculous. The reserch and science is not nearly as important and the individual mom’s (and babe’s) well being if your doc has given you the go ahead to participate in a low carb diet then have at it!
Congrats on the little one.
Did you start low carb while BF'ing, while PG, or earlier?
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Breastfeeding mom to a 2month old here. I consume 130g of carbs or less/day and my babe is just fine. Science can only do so much. If baby is healthy and thriving and so is mom then eat whatever you bloody well please. There is so much out there that says don’t eat this or that for women who are pregnant or nursing it gets a wee bit ridiculous. The reserch and science is not nearly as important and the individual mom’s (and babe’s) well being if your doc has given you the go ahead to participate in a low carb diet then have at it!
Research and science is what gives us a good indication of what choices to make to increase the chances of positive health outcomes. I don't understand concluding that it is not important. If we give up the idea that research and science can help us understand reality, we're left trying to piece things together through anecdotes, myth, and rumors.
(I'm not saying that low carbohydrate diets aren't good for breastfeeding, I haven't looked at the research. I'm challenging the idea that research isn't necessary or that we can dismiss information we don't like because our individual results are the only truth that is possible).2 -
janejellyroll wrote: »Breastfeeding mom to a 2month old here. I consume 130g of carbs or less/day and my babe is just fine. Science can only do so much. If baby is healthy and thriving and so is mom then eat whatever you bloody well please. There is so much out there that says don’t eat this or that for women who are pregnant or nursing it gets a wee bit ridiculous. The reserch and science is not nearly as important and the individual mom’s (and babe’s) well being if your doc has given you the go ahead to participate in a low carb diet then have at it!
Research and science is what gives us a good indication of what choices to make to increase the chances of positive health outcomes. I don't understand concluding that it is not important. If we give up the idea that research and science can help us understand reality, we're left trying to piece things together through anecdotes, myth, and rumors.
(I'm not saying that low carbohydrate diets aren't good for breastfeeding, I haven't looked at the research. I'm challenging the idea that research isn't necessary or that we can dismiss information we don't like because our individual results are the only truth that is possible).
I don't necessarily agree with the idea that "research isn't necessary", but I fully agree with trusting your gut as a momma.
The unfortunate truth is there is a huge lack of data on many things involving pregnancy. I think this is a result of 2 things. 1. No one is brave enough to promote researching healthy pregnant or breastfeeding ladies for fear of the lawsuits if anything happened (not that I blame them, nor would I even want to be the one saying "hey, try this and lets see what happens to a pregnant/nursing mom). 2. Dietary research is usually based on results in "healthy" people, and pregnant or nursing women are usually considered as having a "condition" that would make them an outlier. Even if data is available, it isn't always collected and looked at.
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4legsRbetterthan2 wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »Breastfeeding mom to a 2month old here. I consume 130g of carbs or less/day and my babe is just fine. Science can only do so much. If baby is healthy and thriving and so is mom then eat whatever you bloody well please. There is so much out there that says don’t eat this or that for women who are pregnant or nursing it gets a wee bit ridiculous. The reserch and science is not nearly as important and the individual mom’s (and babe’s) well being if your doc has given you the go ahead to participate in a low carb diet then have at it!
Research and science is what gives us a good indication of what choices to make to increase the chances of positive health outcomes. I don't understand concluding that it is not important. If we give up the idea that research and science can help us understand reality, we're left trying to piece things together through anecdotes, myth, and rumors.
(I'm not saying that low carbohydrate diets aren't good for breastfeeding, I haven't looked at the research. I'm challenging the idea that research isn't necessary or that we can dismiss information we don't like because our individual results are the only truth that is possible).
I don't necessarily agree with the idea that "research isn't necessary", but I fully agree with trusting your gut as a momma.
The unfortunate truth is there is a huge lack of data on many things involving pregnancy. I think this is a result of 2 things. 1. No one is brave enough to promote researching healthy pregnant or breastfeeding ladies for fear of the lawsuits if anything happened (not that I blame them, nor would I even want to be the one saying "hey, try this and lets see what happens to a pregnant/nursing mom). 2. Dietary research is usually based on results in "healthy" people, and pregnant or nursing women are usually considered as having a "condition" that would make them an outlier. Even if data is available, it isn't always collected and looked at.
I am not arguing against "trust your gut," as long as it isn't paired with a "my gut is more important than any research" spirit. That's the kind of thinking that winds up with huge pockets of unvaccinated children or communes that decide to "pray away" serious infections.
I agree that there isn't a whole lot of research on a lot of this stuff, which makes my response kind of moot.3 -
As for low carb diets when brestfeeding, I don't have a scientifically backed answer, but for me I would base it on common sense and what I do know.
1. Make sure you are getting the right amount of calories over all. Breastfeeding takes energy!
2. Don't drastically change stuff, so if I wasn't low carb already why go there now?. Unless you have a medical reason pop up (though the only one I can think of carb related is GD, which one would think you already developed and addressed by this point. Anyone heard of getting GD while breastfeeding, not something I have ever thought about until this moment)
3. If I was already used to low cab- an oz of breastmilk has 2.1g of carbs in it. I think I would personally go with eating that many carbs plus whatever I was used to for me previously and see how it goes. (so if I was eating 20g carbs per day, and pumping 30 oz, I would shoot for 80 g/day). In the end the only thing to do is monitor supply, keep formula on hand in case you need it, and do your best. That's what I did with calories, I would take the same approach with carbs.1 -
I think not changing things, or changing them slowly and cautiously, seems to be the safest bet too.
ETA I don't think we should rely on research to prove everything is safe to eat; I don't think some diets need more proof than knowing the diet is healthy for adults. I think a healthy diet with adequate calories and protein for the mother equals healthy, adequate breast milk (as a general rule) for the child.2 -
I lower carbed (no starches) during my last pregnancy and while breastfeeding that child. It was probably somewhere in the neighborhood of 130-150 grams a day. I ate meat, nuts, all sorts of vegetables and fruits. I didn't eliminate macronutrients, I eliminated starches and didn't eat refined sugars or any grains.
Considering that said baby is now 16 and towers over me, I think everything turned out fine.
I am not a fan of extreme or restrictive diets and am quite the queen of starchy carbs now, but there's some hyperbole going on in this thread.4 -
[quote="nvmomketo;c-42403643"
Congrats on the little one.
Did you start low carb while BF'ing, while PG, or earlier?
quote]
Thank you! I switched while breastfeeding. Now i did wait until breastfeeding was established (about 4 weeks) and not all out until given a clean bill of health and the go ahead to start dieting and exercise.
0 -
janejellyroll wrote: »Breastfeeding mom to a 2month old here. I consume 130g of carbs or less/day and my babe is just fine. Science can only do so much. If baby is healthy and thriving and so is mom then eat whatever you bloody well please. There is so much out there that says don’t eat this or that for women who are pregnant or nursing it gets a wee bit ridiculous. The reserch and science is not nearly as important and the individual mom’s (and babe’s) well being if your doc has given you the go ahead to participate in a low carb diet then have at it!
Research and science is what gives us a good indication of what choices to make to increase the chances of positive health outcomes. I don't understand concluding that it is not important. If we give up the idea that research and science can help us understand reality, we're left trying to piece things together through anecdotes, myth, and rumors.
(I'm not saying that low carbohydrate diets aren't good for breastfeeding, I haven't looked at the research. I'm challenging the idea that research isn't necessary or that we can dismiss information we don't like because our individual results are the only truth that is possible).
Agreed, what I’m hoping to accomplish more than anything is mommy support rather than mommy doubt. What works for one will not work for another. When there is a lack of research and facts one must work with doctors and “gut” to be the best mom’s we can be.1 -
I breastfed whilst restricting calorie intake and following weight watchers which is a fairly low carb diet. All fine n I made plenty of good milk with a big bouncing baby As proof! My opinion is that a woman's body is extremely smart and will put the nutritional needs of the infant first so my body will make great milk and enough milk... it will be me who is running low n will use up fat stores to compensate, hence a 22lb steady weight loss in 20 weeks whilst breastfeeding 😊2
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connallykatie10 wrote: »I breastfed whilst restricting calorie intake and following weight watchers which is a fairly low carb diet. All fine n I made plenty of good milk with a big bouncing baby As proof! My opinion is that a woman's body is extremely smart and will put the nutritional needs of the infant first so my body will make great milk and enough milk... it will be me who is running low n will use up fat stores to compensate, hence a 22lb steady weight loss in 20 weeks whilst breastfeeding 😊
I didnt restrict caloires while breastfeeding and still didnt make enough milk . I did lose a lot of weight and fat breastfeeding though. but some women no matter how they eat may not produce enough and I was breastfeeding like clockwork. so thats one thing to look for too whether doing keto or not while breastfeeding1
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