Eating too many carbs?
Replies
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No sugar, no white/ refined carbs, limit highly processed wheat flour products like commercial breakfast cereal and many breads,
MYTH
Best tell that to all the authors of published research papers and textbooks I read for my last degree then. And all the dieticians and other medical professionals that agree highly processed carbs and sugars have deleterious health effects.
Dose and context should always be considered before making blanket statements. Recommending the complete elimination of sugar or refined carbs can be a recipe for disaster in terms of dietary adherence.
Additionally, have you seen any research suggesting that in the presence of a nutrient rich diet, the inclusion of white bread is detrimental? Consider dose and context here. How much white bread is "bad"?
In a hypocaloric diet that consists of "mostly" nutrient dense and whole foods, I have yet to see anything suggesting that a moderate amount of processed food is harmful in any way.0 -
No sugar, no white/ refined carbs, limit highly processed wheat flour products like commercial breakfast cereal and many breads,
MYTH
MYTH? BWAHAHAHAHAHA
Tell that to my blood glucose meter when I have a bowl of cereal.0 -
Agreed, except for the last part. High GI carbs are great for post-workout insulin spike and faster recovery.
Can you tell me what you mean by this?
Spiking insulin will rapidly replenish muscle glycogen. Whether or not you need to do this would depend on muscle glycogen status (are you depleted to begin with?) and whether or not you are performing another glycogen depleting event within the next day (applicable for endurance athletes in some conditions, irrelevant for most of the population).0 -
No sugar, no white/ refined carbs, limit highly processed wheat flour products like commercial breakfast cereal and many breads,
MYTH
MYTH? BWAHAHAHAHAHA
Tell that to my blood glucose meter when I have a bowl of cereal.
Once again, context.0 -
No sugar, no white/ refined carbs, limit highly processed wheat flour products like commercial breakfast cereal and many breads,
MYTH
Best tell that to all the authors of published research papers and textbooks I read for my last degree then. And all the dieticians and other medical professionals that agree highly processed carbs and sugars have deleterious health effects.0 -
I have my carbs/protein/fat set to 50/25/25. Any less carbs than that wouldn't be doable for me, and I would want to eat all the time. MFP suggests I eat 190g a day, which is usually fine. But some days, like today, I tend to go a decent way into the 200s. How much is too much?
I am the opposite, too many carbs and I crave more, so I have my macros set at 35, 35 and 30 (protein, carbs and fat)...the fat satiates me more and also helps me to up my calories substantially, if I need to (am learning to track calories now after years of not doing so, because of my ED)
Test different macro percentages and see what suits you best. That is what I suggest, a bit of flexibility is a good thing : )0 -
Everyone is different. If I ate the level of carbs you ate, I would be hungry all the time. Personally for me, I do best with Carbs / Protein / Fat at 15% / 25% / 60% for losing weight. For maintaining my weight, I do best with at these levels: 20% / 25% / 55%.
Not much of a variation, but I get my carbs from vegetables first, then nuts and seeds and lastly fruit. I no longer eat any legumes or grains.
Your intake of fat is 60% ?0 -
Everyone is different. For me, 200g is a very high day. My average is over the last 60 days is 125g. Almost all of my carbs come from vegetables plus one serving a day of either rice or potatoes. It is rare that I eat fruit other than lemons, limes and tomatoes; sugar is minimal, and I don't tollerate wheat or corn.
What type of carb you are eating may not make any difference in terms of calories in vs calories out, but for the same 100 calories and 20 grams of carbs I can either eat one piece of whole grain bread or over five cups of brocolli.
Now I know that I could eat three or four pieces of bread in one sitting, but 15 to 20 cups of brocolli? Not going to happen.
Same here. I'm not going out of my way to avoid carbs but I have noticed that I feel and operate so much better without most grains, dairy and sugar. I eat some brown rice several times a week and lots of vegetables and some fruit, along with lean meats, fish and beans. It works for me. But I rarely make it to 150 a day when it comes to carbs. I have no idea if this is good or bad; it's what works for my body.0 -
[Spiking insulin will rapidly replenish muscle glycogen. Whether or not you need to do this would depend on muscle glycogen status (are you depleted to begin with?) and whether or not you are performing another glycogen depleting event within the next day (applicable for endurance athletes in some conditions, irrelevant for most of the population).
Thank you.
How would I know what my muscle glycogen status is?0 -
It really depends on how you feel at that amount. Some people figure out their fat and protein and then use the remainder of their calories for carbs which can be high. It's hard to suggest something for somebody because some people do awesome reaching their goals on higher carbs while others have to really watch their carbs. Just play with it and pay attention to how your body is responding to it and that progress continues.0
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Keep in mind that everyone processes carbs differently. Some people are negatively sensitive to grain carbs. Then there's the whole "wheat belly" topic. Listen to your body and figure out the combination that works best for YOU.0
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[Spiking insulin will rapidly replenish muscle glycogen. Whether or not you need to do this would depend on muscle glycogen status (are you depleted to begin with?) and whether or not you are performing another glycogen depleting event within the next day (applicable for endurance athletes in some conditions, irrelevant for most of the population).
Thank you.
How would I know what my muscle glycogen status is?
Aside from tissue samples I have no idea. But if you're not training multiple times in one day I'd just disregard. Your food intake will replenish glycogen on its own.
If, lets say, you were running several miles in the AM and then doing squats later that day, I would probably get in some carbs shortly after the run to be sure. But most people don't use training protocols like this.0 -
Sun 12/16/12 08:48 AMQUOTE:
Everyone is different. If I ate the level of carbs you ate, I would be hungry all the time. Personally for me, I do best with Carbs / Protein / Fat at 15% / 25% / 60% for losing weight. For maintaining my weight, I do best with at these levels: 20% / 25% / 55%.
Not much of a variation, but I get my carbs from vegetables first, then nuts and seeds and lastly fruit. I no longer eat any legumes or grains.
Your intake of fat is 60% ?
Probably a ketogenic diet.0 -
Agreed, except for the last part. High GI carbs are great for post-workout insulin spike and faster recovery.
This is so very true!! If there is any one time that it's great to spike insulin, this is it! When this is my mode, I love a creatine dextrose drink with meat and potato or rice.0 -
Would you care to share those papers that state that processed carbs are deleterious to health, regardless of context, dosage, and the rest of the diet? I'm very interested in seeing those, especially in a textbook, as I have never read a single paper that has made such a generic, blanket statement like that. I've also never talked to a registered dietician that has held that point of view either. Processed carbs for someone with a metabolic syndrome that doesn't eat enough protein, sure, but someone who is healthy and eats a wide variety of foods, including some processes carbs? Hogwash. Please, prove me wrong, because I honestly think you are making your entire post up.
Below you will find several peer-reviewed research studies published in reputable scientific journals. No soccer mom blog references here. I have focused on articles that highlight the positives of a low-carbohydrate diet rather than the negatives of eating carbohydrates. My reasoning for that is as follows:
What I will point out, that many people in this thread seem to be overlooking, is that individual body chemistry varies greatly person-to-person.
I personally have done both low-fat (and therefore low calorie due to fat restriction), and low-carbohydrate (as not-calorie-counting, and low-calorie) and can say with 100% confidence that my body reacts favorably to a lower-carbohydrate diet. I have several older family members that are obese and have Type-2 diabetes, and thus genetically I am likely to be predisposed to that kind of metabolic difficulty.
Likewise, I feel like very super-skinny person who eats a boatload of crap (of which we can all agree is crap- fast food, cake, soda, etc.) and stays skinny automatically assumes that anyone fatter than them must also be eating worse than them, and trust me that is not the case! I am here to lose weight, but frankly my non-dieting diet was really not that terrible. Soda? Less than once a month. Dessert? Only on a birthday or holiday. 3 meals a day including packing a nutritious lunch for work. Yet the pounds keep coming on. I am learning that my body just does not react well to carbohydrates, and I will likely need to restrict them my entire life in order to maintain a healthy weight and blood chemistry.
I have a bachelors degree in biochemistry and a doctorate in microbiology, and from both those educational paths I have learned a lot about how different diets work (biochemistry), how individual body chemistries vary person-to-person (biochemistry), and most interestingly, how an individuals microbiota (the microorganisms that live within your gut) greatly influence your metabolism, likely based on how they help/hurt when you are digesting food and obtaining nutrients from that food.
Here are some studies on low-carbohydrate diets and their affects on blood chemistry and weight loss:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2716748/
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15051841
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18377783
Here are some studies on human microbiota and weightloss:
http://www.futuremedicine.com/doi/pdf/10.2217/fmb.11.142
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/196153070 -
Everyone is different. If I ate the level of carbs you ate, I would be hungry all the time. Personally for me, I do best with Carbs / Protein / Fat at 15% / 25% / 60% for losing weight. For maintaining my weight, I do best with at these levels: 20% / 25% / 55%.
Not much of a variation, but I get my carbs from vegetables first, then nuts and seeds and lastly fruit. I no longer eat any legumes or grains.
Your intake of fat is 60% ?
I have mine set at 65% and can easily hit 70% on a good day! My own macros are set to 10% carbs, 25% protein, and 65% fat.
Fat is not evil and should not be feared. The right ones are delicious and nourishing.0 -
[Spiking insulin will rapidly replenish muscle glycogen. Whether or not you need to do this would depend on muscle glycogen status (are you depleted to begin with?) and whether or not you are performing another glycogen depleting event within the next day (applicable for endurance athletes in some conditions, irrelevant for most of the population).
Thank you.
How would I know what my muscle glycogen status is?0 -
As long as you're getting enough of other nutrients, there cannot be such a thing as too many carbs! Yum!0
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Would you care to share those papers that state that processed carbs are deleterious to health, regardless of context, dosage, and the rest of the diet? I'm very interested in seeing those, especially in a textbook, as I have never read a single paper that has made such a generic, blanket statement like that. I've also never talked to a registered dietician that has held that point of view either. Processed carbs for someone with a metabolic syndrome that doesn't eat enough protein, sure, but someone who is healthy and eats a wide variety of foods, including some processes carbs? Hogwash. Please, prove me wrong, because I honestly think you are making your entire post up.
Below you will find several peer-reviewed research studies published in reputable scientific journals. No soccer mom blog references here. I have focused on articles that highlight the positives of a low-carbohydrate diet rather than the negatives of eating carbohydrates. My reasoning for that is as follows:
What I will point out, that many people in this thread seem to be overlooking, is that individual body chemistry varies greatly person-to-person.
I personally have done both low-fat (and therefore low calorie due to fat restriction), and low-carbohydrate (as not-calorie-counting, and low-calorie) and can say with 100% confidence that my body reacts favorably to a lower-carbohydrate diet. I have several older family members that are obese and have Type-2 diabetes, and thus genetically I am likely to be predisposed to that kind of metabolic difficulty.
Likewise, I feel like very super-skinny person who eats a boatload of crap (of which we can all agree is crap- fast food, cake, soda, etc.) and stays skinny automatically assumes that anyone fatter than them must also be eating worse than them, and trust me that is not the case! I am here to lose weight, but frankly my non-dieting diet was really not that terrible. Soda? Less than once a month. Dessert? Only on a birthday or holiday. 3 meals a day including packing a nutritious lunch for work. Yet the pounds keep coming on. I am learning that my body just does not react well to carbohydrates, and I will likely need to restrict them my entire life in order to maintain a healthy weight and blood chemistry.
I have a bachelors degree in biochemistry and a doctorate in microbiology, and from both those educational paths I have learned a lot about how different diets work (biochemistry), how individual body chemistries vary person-to-person (biochemistry), and most interestingly, how an individuals microbiota (the microorganisms that live within your gut) greatly influence your metabolism, likely based on how they help/hurt when you are digesting food and obtaining nutrients from that food.
Here are some studies on low-carbohydrate diets and their affects on blood chemistry and weight loss:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2716748/
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15051841
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18377783
Here are some studies on human microbiota and weightloss:
http://www.futuremedicine.com/doi/pdf/10.2217/fmb.11.142
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19615307
I got a sense of confirmation bias from those studies, that they got the results they wanted, rather than the results that were there. The second study also failed to hold protein constant, as the low carb diet consumed higher amounts of protein. Again, is it the lower carb, or the higher protein that led to the results?
Like I said, the studies are interesting, but have way too many holes in them to call them at all conclusive.0 -
Like I said, the studies are interesting, but have way too many holes in them to call them at all conclusive.
Although I agree with your points (or frankly, I trust that you interpreted them correctly because I haven't gone back to look at them since I originally posted here), I will say that I imagine being a researcher on diet and weightloss is challenging, as it is impossible to get people to eat exactly the same thing in order to keep the variables under control. I work with no-brain, no-emotion microorganisms and even they don't act the same day to day!!
Anyway, yes, the data is not solid, but hell it's not solid on almost all aspects of science,including the healthiness of a high-carbohydrate diet. Science is messy and that is why it requires study after study after study to have any confidence on whether a hypothesis is true or not. I feel like the best thing people can do is follow a diet whilst monitoring their weight, blood lipids, blood pressure, glucose, etc.,and if all looks well and the weight is coming off- all the power to them.
I am not putting down higher or high carb diets, merely defending those who choose to do a low-carb diet because that is what works for them.0 -
Er, somehow I double-posted, but it won't let me erase so..
:-) Have a nice day everyone.0 -
My carbs tend to be higher only because I have to watch my protein intake (kidney disease). I eat WAY too many of them, and have cut back....and my weight has dropped. I'm still playing with the whole eating/exercising balance thing...for me it is in a constant state of change.0
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Just be sure you are choosing healthy, whole carbs that have a gentle effect on the blood sugar levels and are reasonably nutritious. No sugar, no white/ refined carbs, limit highly processed wheat flour products like commercial breakfast cereal and many breads, eat more low sugar fruits, non starchy vegetables, beans and lentils.
Agreed, except for the last part. High GI carbs are great for post-workout insulin spike and faster recovery.
That doesn't really matter unless you're in intensive sports.
what do you categorise as intensive sports?0 -
Like I said, the studies are interesting, but have way too many holes in them to call them at all conclusive.
Although I agree with your points (or frankly, I trust that you interpreted them correctly because I haven't gone back to look at them since I originally posted here), I will say that I imagine being a researcher on diet and weightloss is challenging, as it is impossible to get people to eat exactly the same thing in order to keep the variables under control. I work with no-brain, no-emotion microorganisms and even they don't act the same day to day!!
Anyway, yes, the data is not solid, but hell it's not solid on almost all aspects of science,including the healthiness of a high-carbohydrate diet. Science is messy and that is why it requires study after study after study to have any confidence on whether a hypothesis is true or not. I feel like the best thing people can do is follow a diet whilst monitoring their weight, blood lipids, blood pressure, glucose, etc.,and if all looks well and the weight is coming off- all the power to them.
I am not putting down higher or high carb diets, merely defending those who choose to do a low-carb diet because that is what works for them.
One of the main problems I see with most of these low carb studies is that they're generally compared in a hypocaloric state. A deficit will improve most aspects of MetS, so besting a high carb diet has less impact overall, but still much better. Comparing low to high carb in isocaloric conditions would hold more water imo.0 -
Just be sure you are choosing healthy, whole carbs that have a gentle effect on the blood sugar levels and are reasonably nutritious. No sugar, no white/ refined carbs, limit highly processed wheat flour products like commercial breakfast cereal and many breads, eat more low sugar fruits, non starchy vegetables, beans and lentils.
Agreed, except for the last part. High GI carbs are great for post-workout insulin spike and faster recovery.
That doesn't really matter unless you're in intensive sports.
what do you categorise as intensive sports?
Marathon racing, exercising at high intensity multiple times a day, things of that sort.
Marathon running I agree, carb loading and back loading is beneficial. I'm not a marathon runner im not too schooled in such sports. I am a bodybuilder, hypertrophy training 6 times a week, going into my forth year training, from experience, anyone who resistence trains even as low as 3 times a week will reap the benefits of the insulin spike from High Glycemic Index carbs for post work-out recovery in conjunction with faster muscle protein synthesis.0 -
There's always a cherry to be picked.
"All the dietitians" do *NOT* agree. That's not even a myth, just something you thought up while typing.
Try reading what I actually posted, including the word THAT, instead of erroneously inferring.0 -
Never had a problem eating carbs, mine are set to 45%, but then I bike ride a lot, over hilly terrain and that seems to keep my weight in check. I have never been overweight, even when I used to eat more carbs, including more refined types, so I am presuming my body has no issue dealing with carbs. My father did, however, have type 2 diabetes for some years, reversed by diet, but he was also overweight. I do less well on higher protein than on higher carbs, oddly. I felt drained and not so able to keep up my exercise when I was consuming 130g + of protein everday and less carbs. As for fat, I couldn't even contemplate having anything near 65% of fat in my diet, I think that anything taken to an extreme level, will prove unhealthy in the long run, whether that be sooner or later.0
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