Protein, fat, carbs
Replies
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lemurcat12 wrote: »Premium allows you to do it by grams, but anyone can set their macros (OP already has, as those aren't the default macros).
Good rule of thumb for protein is .65-.85 g per lb of healthy (or goal) body weight. 50% is almost certainly much more than you need. But if you like eating that much and feel good doing it, no harm. Carbs and fat are fine, both could be higher if you wanted to experiment and cut protein some. Like the other poster said, what matters for weight loss is a calorie deficit, the rest is about nutrition (and choice of fats and carbs matter more for that than how much of both you eat) and satiety.
Cosigned.
@Jozzmenia you may have misunderstood your nutritionist when she said to match your weight - it's your goal weight, and not 100 % of that. Or she may have misunderstood and passed her confusion along to you.
But if eating this much protein is working for you, carry on.0 -
50% protein is completely unnecessary.
I did 30% protein while losing, 40% carbs and 30% fat.0 -
Oh, wow, they also found decreased insulin, decreased triglycerides, and elevated HDL with the carbohydrate restricted diet - all known benefits!1
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GaleHawkins wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »If you're concerned about high body fat percentage, you should be concerned about your carbohydrate intake, not fat.
"People who avoid carbohydrates and eat more fat, even saturated fat, lose more body fat and have fewer cardiovascular risks than people who follow the low-fat diet that health authorities have favored for decades, a major new study shows."
A Call for a Low-Carb Diet That Embraces Fat
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/02/health/low-carb-vs-low-fat-diet.html?_r=0
Many people will say only calorie restriction matters. This is overly simplistic. Do the research yourself. The low carb real food is the way to go for life-long health!
Wow please don't listen to this. Low carb is one route that works for people but is in no way the only way to go for life long health. Calorie deficit is literally the only thing that matters to lose weight, except for some special circumstances.
Edit: don't listen to the you have to eat low carb, healthy fats I agree are very good for you but you can encorporate more then enough of these and still eat carbs.
So not surprised by this comment. If you are concerned about fatty liver and losing body fat, cutting down on dietary fat is the last thing you want to do. Check out dietdoctor.com for some excellent resources.
I agree about not cutting down on fat. But why are you saying the only way is to go low carb?
@tillerstouch "low carb" can mean 20, 50 or up to 150 grams of carbs daily. To go Low Carb and be in a state of Nutritional Ketosis (running muscles, heart and brain more on ketones than glucose) one typically must eat <50 grams of carbs daily. Protein can not be HIGH (70-90 grams daily in my case) since about 1/2 of protein is converted by the body into glucose (brain and red blood cells both require glucose). We do not require carbs to make all of the glucose required for full health as long as we eat some protein and enough fats. Well we have to have a source of vitamins and minerals. In nature carbs can be a good source of vitamins and minerals but not so much in processed carbs. While carbs are not 'required' I for one still eat carbs within the 50 gram limit to live in a state of Nutritional Ketosis. I do not do this to lose weight but to managing my pain and reduce my risk of diabetes, cancer, heart disease, etc. Weight loss can be a side effect if calories are low enough. I maintain at 200 pounds on 2500+ calories daily average. With a macro of 5% carbs, 15% protein I have to go high fat to get in my 2500 calories per day. I can ONLY stay in Nutritional Ketosis Way Of Eating by going high fat.
Does that help you understand the ONLY WAY statement?
120g of protein isn't going to be converted into glucose and knock you out of ketosis.
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aqsylvester wrote: »blues4miles wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »If you're concerned about high body fat percentage, you should be concerned about your carbohydrate intake, not fat.
"People who avoid carbohydrates and eat more fat, even saturated fat, lose more body fat and have fewer cardiovascular risks than people who follow the low-fat diet that health authorities have favored for decades, a major new study shows."
A Call for a Low-Carb Diet That Embraces Fat
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/02/health/low-carb-vs-low-fat-diet.html?_r=0
Many people will say only calorie restriction matters. This is overly simplistic. Do the research yourself. The low carb real food is the way to go for life-long health!
Actually calorie-for-calorie in a controlled environment, low fat is better than low carb at weight loss.
http://www.cell.com/cell-metabolism/fulltext/S1550-4131(15)00350-2
I say that not because I am pro-low-fat. But because there's a lot of info out there that disproves the pro-low-carb. Which is to say, you have to experiment and do what works well for you. If a person has a medical issue, they should be speaking with their doctor. OP stated her concern was setting and reaching her protein goals. And suddenly a bunch of low-carb evangelists are speculating on medical conditions they don't know she has and preaching their vision of the macro afterlife.
hmmm...
an experiment with no control group on 19 obese individuals followed for a total of two 2-week periods
vs.
a randomized controlled trial with 150 racially diverse men and women followed for 1 year
Do you understand much about evidence hierarchy?
And again with the strawman, please stop.
Here's a good discussion of that low carb vs. "low fat" (not really) study:
http://www.weightymatters.ca/2014/09/what-i-learned-by-actually-reading-that.html
Of course, turning this into yet another thread about how low carb is best is really off-topic, but I am glad you gave me an excuse to post this, as I think it might be helpful to OP. From the link:So for me this study's overarching take home messages are firstly that our overly saturated-fat phobic national dietary guidelines that still steer people to diets consisting of 55% carbohydrates probably aren't necessary. Secondly, it would seem that for individuals, if you're not planning on tracking calories, having a daily meal replacement while reducing carbs somewhat may well be a viable way to go for a modest amount of weight loss, and perhaps more importantly, for improvements in many metabolic parameters. And thirdly, if the aforementioned approach only leads you to lose a little bit of weight (remember, in this study the average loss for the so-called low-carb dieters after a full year of dieting was only 11.7lbs) [my note: both approaches had far worse results than many of us had counting calories] I'd encourage you to start keeping a food diary (with more on that from me here), to ensure you include protein with every meal and snack, to markedly reduce liquid calories, to make a concentrated effort to include more produce than products and to re-relegate restaurant meals to special occasions only.
Lastly, it's important to note that if the question is whether you personally should go low-carb, low-fat, or in-between this study certainly doesn't answer that. Ultimately the best diet for you is the one you actually enjoy enough to keep living with, as merely tolerable diets won't last, and any and all can work so long as you enjoy them enough to sustain them as seen in this meta-analysis published yesterday in JAMA.
Putting this all another way it's important not to forget that one person's best diet is undoubtedly another person's worst, and that folks who are stuck dogmatically promoting only one "best" diet can be safely ignored.8 -
GaleHawkins wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »If you're concerned about high body fat percentage, you should be concerned about your carbohydrate intake, not fat.
"People who avoid carbohydrates and eat more fat, even saturated fat, lose more body fat and have fewer cardiovascular risks than people who follow the low-fat diet that health authorities have favored for decades, a major new study shows."
A Call for a Low-Carb Diet That Embraces Fat
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/02/health/low-carb-vs-low-fat-diet.html?_r=0
Many people will say only calorie restriction matters. This is overly simplistic. Do the research yourself. The low carb real food is the way to go for life-long health!
Wow please don't listen to this. Low carb is one route that works for people but is in no way the only way to go for life long health. Calorie deficit is literally the only thing that matters to lose weight, except for some special circumstances.
Edit: don't listen to the you have to eat low carb, healthy fats I agree are very good for you but you can encorporate more then enough of these and still eat carbs.
So not surprised by this comment. If you are concerned about fatty liver and losing body fat, cutting down on dietary fat is the last thing you want to do. Check out dietdoctor.com for some excellent resources.
I agree about not cutting down on fat. But why are you saying the only way is to go low carb?
@tillerstouch "low carb" can mean 20, 50 or up to 150 grams of carbs daily. To go Low Carb and be in a state of Nutritional Ketosis (running muscles, heart and brain more on ketones than glucose) one typically must eat <50 grams of carbs daily. Protein can not be HIGH (70-90 grams daily in my case) since about 1/2 of protein is converted by the body into glucose (brain and red blood cells both require glucose). We do not require carbs to make all of the glucose required for full health as long as we eat some protein and enough fats. Well we have to have a source of vitamins and minerals. In nature carbs can be a good source of vitamins and minerals but not so much in processed carbs. While carbs are not 'required' I for one still eat carbs within the 50 gram limit to live in a state of Nutritional Ketosis. I do not do this to lose weight but to managing my pain and reduce my risk of diabetes, cancer, heart disease, etc. Weight loss can be a side effect if calories are low enough. I maintain at 200 pounds on 2500+ calories daily average. With a macro of 5% carbs, 15% protein I have to go high fat to get in my 2500 calories per day. I can ONLY stay in Nutritional Ketosis Way Of Eating by going high fat.
Does that help you understand the ONLY WAY statement?
120g of protein isn't going to be converted into glucose and knock you out of ketosis.GaleHawkins wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »If you're concerned about high body fat percentage, you should be concerned about your carbohydrate intake, not fat.
"People who avoid carbohydrates and eat more fat, even saturated fat, lose more body fat and have fewer cardiovascular risks than people who follow the low-fat diet that health authorities have favored for decades, a major new study shows."
A Call for a Low-Carb Diet That Embraces Fat
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/02/health/low-carb-vs-low-fat-diet.html?_r=0
Many people will say only calorie restriction matters. This is overly simplistic. Do the research yourself. The low carb real food is the way to go for life-long health!
Wow please don't listen to this. Low carb is one route that works for people but is in no way the only way to go for life long health. Calorie deficit is literally the only thing that matters to lose weight, except for some special circumstances.
Edit: don't listen to the you have to eat low carb, healthy fats I agree are very good for you but you can encorporate more then enough of these and still eat carbs.
So not surprised by this comment. If you are concerned about fatty liver and losing body fat, cutting down on dietary fat is the last thing you want to do. Check out dietdoctor.com for some excellent resources.
I agree about not cutting down on fat. But why are you saying the only way is to go low carb?
@tillerstouch "low carb" can mean 20, 50 or up to 150 grams of carbs daily. To go Low Carb and be in a state of Nutritional Ketosis (running muscles, heart and brain more on ketones than glucose) one typically must eat <50 grams of carbs daily. Protein can not be HIGH (70-90 grams daily in my case) since about 1/2 of protein is converted by the body into glucose (brain and red blood cells both require glucose). We do not require carbs to make all of the glucose required for full health as long as we eat some protein and enough fats. Well we have to have a source of vitamins and minerals. In nature carbs can be a good source of vitamins and minerals but not so much in processed carbs. While carbs are not 'required' I for one still eat carbs within the 50 gram limit to live in a state of Nutritional Ketosis. I do not do this to lose weight but to managing my pain and reduce my risk of diabetes, cancer, heart disease, etc. Weight loss can be a side effect if calories are low enough. I maintain at 200 pounds on 2500+ calories daily average. With a macro of 5% carbs, 15% protein I have to go high fat to get in my 2500 calories per day. I can ONLY stay in Nutritional Ketosis Way Of Eating by going high fat.
Does that help you understand the ONLY WAY statement?
120g of protein isn't going to be converted into glucose and knock you out of ketosis.
@ketorach why would you make such a statement? Do you not know the work of Dr. Peter Attia?1 -
aqsylvester is EXACTLY bang on with her carb/fat message in my humble opinion! I ate low fat high carbs thinking I could eat whatever and I ganed 30 lbs. I bought all the "No Fat" items I could find and ate and ate. I thought I could because there was not fat. But guess what? Huge in simple carbs (sugar). Insulin spikes and whammo! When I went high protein and low carb I lost weight easily. Fat DOES NOT make me fat. ( I hate to admit it here but I use my deep fryer 3 times a week for protein and have lost 8 llbs in a week doing it)! But that's me. It may be different for others. Cheers3
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Jeffrey300050 wrote: »aqsylvester is EXACTLY bang on with her carb/fat message in my humble opinion! I ate low fat high carbs thinking I could eat whatever and I ganed 30 lbs. I bought all the "No Fat" items I could find and ate and ate. I thought I could because there was not fat. But guess what? Huge in simple carbs (sugar). Insulin spikes and whammo! When I went high protein and low carb I lost weight easily. Fat DOES NOT make me fat. ( I hate to admit it here but I use my deep fryer 3 times a week for protein and have lost 8 llbs in a week doing it)! But that's me. It may be different for others. Cheers
You seem to be the poster child for how low fat can be done unhealthfully, but that doesn't at all mean every moderate or low fat diet is not healthful or sustainable.
Nutrition isn't that complicated; macro obsessions really don't need to substitute for exercising good sense re nutrition. (Or just read the link from Yoni Freedhoff.)
The claim that everyone should be high fat/low carb is wrong.6 -
It also really depends on what kind of activity and/or exercise you participate in.
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Would like to be wt loss buddy0
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I like the term "Not For Everybody". This should be a Peer Support Environment which means advice that "Works For Me". I can't say what will work for you or what's best and I'm not a Dr. or a Nutritionist. All I know is what works for me and that may be the "Golden Ticket" for someone else. Or not! Weight loss "for me" is always a Work In Progress and Trial And Error, but I think I have found what works best over time! Now I can control my weight easily whenever I Iike which is Raw Power:) P.S. For me, it's a simple equation after ALL the books and diets! Calories in vs. caloeies out:) And for me, a low carb high protein moderate fat diet works awesome with pleanty of walking, (3 hours a day). I had 4 Back Surgeries and was laid up for a year so gained and am just getting back on track. Also beat 4th stage cancer!2
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I always find it frustrating in threads like this that low carb/keto evangelists always seem to assume that if you aren't eating low carb, you are eating a high carb low fat diet. And many of the studies used as evidence for LC being the holy grail compare LCHF to HCLF. But there is a huge variety to choose from in between these two extremes.
I have never heard ANYONE here argue that people should be eating a low-fat diet. I'd bet we could all agree that the 80's-90's low fat craze had a horrible affect on the average person's understanding about diet, weight, and health that still lingers.
I don't eat low carb, and I don't eat low fat, so I always end up walking away from these threads wondering what all the hubub was about. Sure, eating LCHF is better than eating low fat. Eating balanced macros is better than eating low fat too. I still haven't seen anything that says that my dinner tonight of chicken, zucchini, and pasta in marinara followed by a little gelato is anything other than a healthy, well-balanced meal.3 -
michelle172415 wrote: »quiksylver296 wrote: »I think you're asking how to reset your MFP macros, right? You have to buy the premium, I believe.
Not true, you can reset your macros in the free version, but only in I believe 5% increments, the premium allows you to do it in 1% increments.
I do have premium but I wasn't sure what my percentages should be. Sounds like they are good now?
@Jozzmenia
As you enter the percentages, the program should do the math and tell you how many grams this works into. I've had to change them a couple times to find the numbers I wanted, but it will wok out for you.
You don't need to be afraid of fat. Fats are healthy. The are needed for absorption of certain vitamins and many body functions. Balance is important. Good luck.0 -
GaleHawkins wrote: »GaleHawkins wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »If you're concerned about high body fat percentage, you should be concerned about your carbohydrate intake, not fat.
"People who avoid carbohydrates and eat more fat, even saturated fat, lose more body fat and have fewer cardiovascular risks than people who follow the low-fat diet that health authorities have favored for decades, a major new study shows."
A Call for a Low-Carb Diet That Embraces Fat
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/02/health/low-carb-vs-low-fat-diet.html?_r=0
Many people will say only calorie restriction matters. This is overly simplistic. Do the research yourself. The low carb real food is the way to go for life-long health!
Wow please don't listen to this. Low carb is one route that works for people but is in no way the only way to go for life long health. Calorie deficit is literally the only thing that matters to lose weight, except for some special circumstances.
Edit: don't listen to the you have to eat low carb, healthy fats I agree are very good for you but you can encorporate more then enough of these and still eat carbs.
So not surprised by this comment. If you are concerned about fatty liver and losing body fat, cutting down on dietary fat is the last thing you want to do. Check out dietdoctor.com for some excellent resources.
I agree about not cutting down on fat. But why are you saying the only way is to go low carb?
@tillerstouch "low carb" can mean 20, 50 or up to 150 grams of carbs daily. To go Low Carb and be in a state of Nutritional Ketosis (running muscles, heart and brain more on ketones than glucose) one typically must eat <50 grams of carbs daily. Protein can not be HIGH (70-90 grams daily in my case) since about 1/2 of protein is converted by the body into glucose (brain and red blood cells both require glucose). We do not require carbs to make all of the glucose required for full health as long as we eat some protein and enough fats. Well we have to have a source of vitamins and minerals. In nature carbs can be a good source of vitamins and minerals but not so much in processed carbs. While carbs are not 'required' I for one still eat carbs within the 50 gram limit to live in a state of Nutritional Ketosis. I do not do this to lose weight but to managing my pain and reduce my risk of diabetes, cancer, heart disease, etc. Weight loss can be a side effect if calories are low enough. I maintain at 200 pounds on 2500+ calories daily average. With a macro of 5% carbs, 15% protein I have to go high fat to get in my 2500 calories per day. I can ONLY stay in Nutritional Ketosis Way Of Eating by going high fat.
Does that help you understand the ONLY WAY statement?
120g of protein isn't going to be converted into glucose and knock you out of ketosis.GaleHawkins wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »If you're concerned about high body fat percentage, you should be concerned about your carbohydrate intake, not fat.
"People who avoid carbohydrates and eat more fat, even saturated fat, lose more body fat and have fewer cardiovascular risks than people who follow the low-fat diet that health authorities have favored for decades, a major new study shows."
A Call for a Low-Carb Diet That Embraces Fat
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/02/health/low-carb-vs-low-fat-diet.html?_r=0
Many people will say only calorie restriction matters. This is overly simplistic. Do the research yourself. The low carb real food is the way to go for life-long health!
Wow please don't listen to this. Low carb is one route that works for people but is in no way the only way to go for life long health. Calorie deficit is literally the only thing that matters to lose weight, except for some special circumstances.
Edit: don't listen to the you have to eat low carb, healthy fats I agree are very good for you but you can encorporate more then enough of these and still eat carbs.
So not surprised by this comment. If you are concerned about fatty liver and losing body fat, cutting down on dietary fat is the last thing you want to do. Check out dietdoctor.com for some excellent resources.
I agree about not cutting down on fat. But why are you saying the only way is to go low carb?
@tillerstouch "low carb" can mean 20, 50 or up to 150 grams of carbs daily. To go Low Carb and be in a state of Nutritional Ketosis (running muscles, heart and brain more on ketones than glucose) one typically must eat <50 grams of carbs daily. Protein can not be HIGH (70-90 grams daily in my case) since about 1/2 of protein is converted by the body into glucose (brain and red blood cells both require glucose). We do not require carbs to make all of the glucose required for full health as long as we eat some protein and enough fats. Well we have to have a source of vitamins and minerals. In nature carbs can be a good source of vitamins and minerals but not so much in processed carbs. While carbs are not 'required' I for one still eat carbs within the 50 gram limit to live in a state of Nutritional Ketosis. I do not do this to lose weight but to managing my pain and reduce my risk of diabetes, cancer, heart disease, etc. Weight loss can be a side effect if calories are low enough. I maintain at 200 pounds on 2500+ calories daily average. With a macro of 5% carbs, 15% protein I have to go high fat to get in my 2500 calories per day. I can ONLY stay in Nutritional Ketosis Way Of Eating by going high fat.
Does that help you understand the ONLY WAY statement?
120g of protein isn't going to be converted into glucose and knock you out of ketosis.
@ketorach why would you make such a statement? Do you not know the work of Dr. Peter Attia?
Keto is not such a complicated thing. Eat <25g of net carbs, hit your protein macro, eat fat to satiety. If you go over your protein goal, the world isn't going to end and you're almost certainly not going to be knocked out of ketosis.
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GaleHawkins wrote: »GaleHawkins wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »If you're concerned about high body fat percentage, you should be concerned about your carbohydrate intake, not fat.
"People who avoid carbohydrates and eat more fat, even saturated fat, lose more body fat and have fewer cardiovascular risks than people who follow the low-fat diet that health authorities have favored for decades, a major new study shows."
A Call for a Low-Carb Diet That Embraces Fat
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/02/health/low-carb-vs-low-fat-diet.html?_r=0
Many people will say only calorie restriction matters. This is overly simplistic. Do the research yourself. The low carb real food is the way to go for life-long health!
Wow please don't listen to this. Low carb is one route that works for people but is in no way the only way to go for life long health. Calorie deficit is literally the only thing that matters to lose weight, except for some special circumstances.
Edit: don't listen to the you have to eat low carb, healthy fats I agree are very good for you but you can encorporate more then enough of these and still eat carbs.
So not surprised by this comment. If you are concerned about fatty liver and losing body fat, cutting down on dietary fat is the last thing you want to do. Check out dietdoctor.com for some excellent resources.
I agree about not cutting down on fat. But why are you saying the only way is to go low carb?
@tillerstouch "low carb" can mean 20, 50 or up to 150 grams of carbs daily. To go Low Carb and be in a state of Nutritional Ketosis (running muscles, heart and brain more on ketones than glucose) one typically must eat <50 grams of carbs daily. Protein can not be HIGH (70-90 grams daily in my case) since about 1/2 of protein is converted by the body into glucose (brain and red blood cells both require glucose). We do not require carbs to make all of the glucose required for full health as long as we eat some protein and enough fats. Well we have to have a source of vitamins and minerals. In nature carbs can be a good source of vitamins and minerals but not so much in processed carbs. While carbs are not 'required' I for one still eat carbs within the 50 gram limit to live in a state of Nutritional Ketosis. I do not do this to lose weight but to managing my pain and reduce my risk of diabetes, cancer, heart disease, etc. Weight loss can be a side effect if calories are low enough. I maintain at 200 pounds on 2500+ calories daily average. With a macro of 5% carbs, 15% protein I have to go high fat to get in my 2500 calories per day. I can ONLY stay in Nutritional Ketosis Way Of Eating by going high fat.
Does that help you understand the ONLY WAY statement?
120g of protein isn't going to be converted into glucose and knock you out of ketosis.GaleHawkins wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »If you're concerned about high body fat percentage, you should be concerned about your carbohydrate intake, not fat.
"People who avoid carbohydrates and eat more fat, even saturated fat, lose more body fat and have fewer cardiovascular risks than people who follow the low-fat diet that health authorities have favored for decades, a major new study shows."
A Call for a Low-Carb Diet That Embraces Fat
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/02/health/low-carb-vs-low-fat-diet.html?_r=0
Many people will say only calorie restriction matters. This is overly simplistic. Do the research yourself. The low carb real food is the way to go for life-long health!
Wow please don't listen to this. Low carb is one route that works for people but is in no way the only way to go for life long health. Calorie deficit is literally the only thing that matters to lose weight, except for some special circumstances.
Edit: don't listen to the you have to eat low carb, healthy fats I agree are very good for you but you can encorporate more then enough of these and still eat carbs.
So not surprised by this comment. If you are concerned about fatty liver and losing body fat, cutting down on dietary fat is the last thing you want to do. Check out dietdoctor.com for some excellent resources.
I agree about not cutting down on fat. But why are you saying the only way is to go low carb?
@tillerstouch "low carb" can mean 20, 50 or up to 150 grams of carbs daily. To go Low Carb and be in a state of Nutritional Ketosis (running muscles, heart and brain more on ketones than glucose) one typically must eat <50 grams of carbs daily. Protein can not be HIGH (70-90 grams daily in my case) since about 1/2 of protein is converted by the body into glucose (brain and red blood cells both require glucose). We do not require carbs to make all of the glucose required for full health as long as we eat some protein and enough fats. Well we have to have a source of vitamins and minerals. In nature carbs can be a good source of vitamins and minerals but not so much in processed carbs. While carbs are not 'required' I for one still eat carbs within the 50 gram limit to live in a state of Nutritional Ketosis. I do not do this to lose weight but to managing my pain and reduce my risk of diabetes, cancer, heart disease, etc. Weight loss can be a side effect if calories are low enough. I maintain at 200 pounds on 2500+ calories daily average. With a macro of 5% carbs, 15% protein I have to go high fat to get in my 2500 calories per day. I can ONLY stay in Nutritional Ketosis Way Of Eating by going high fat.
Does that help you understand the ONLY WAY statement?
120g of protein isn't going to be converted into glucose and knock you out of ketosis.
@ketorach why would you make such a statement? Do you not know the work of Dr. Peter Attia?
Keto is not such a complicated thing. Eat <25g of net carbs, hit your protein macro, eat fat to satiety. If you go over your protein goal, the world isn't going to end and you're almost certainly not going to be knocked out of ketosis.
@ketorach if that works for you then that is good. All I am saying medically speaking you are incorrect. I point you to Dr. Peter Attia for a better understanding of protein's relationship with living in a state of nutritional ketosis.0 -
GaleHawkins wrote: »GaleHawkins wrote: »GaleHawkins wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »If you're concerned about high body fat percentage, you should be concerned about your carbohydrate intake, not fat.
"People who avoid carbohydrates and eat more fat, even saturated fat, lose more body fat and have fewer cardiovascular risks than people who follow the low-fat diet that health authorities have favored for decades, a major new study shows."
A Call for a Low-Carb Diet That Embraces Fat
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/02/health/low-carb-vs-low-fat-diet.html?_r=0
Many people will say only calorie restriction matters. This is overly simplistic. Do the research yourself. The low carb real food is the way to go for life-long health!
Wow please don't listen to this. Low carb is one route that works for people but is in no way the only way to go for life long health. Calorie deficit is literally the only thing that matters to lose weight, except for some special circumstances.
Edit: don't listen to the you have to eat low carb, healthy fats I agree are very good for you but you can encorporate more then enough of these and still eat carbs.
So not surprised by this comment. If you are concerned about fatty liver and losing body fat, cutting down on dietary fat is the last thing you want to do. Check out dietdoctor.com for some excellent resources.
I agree about not cutting down on fat. But why are you saying the only way is to go low carb?
@tillerstouch "low carb" can mean 20, 50 or up to 150 grams of carbs daily. To go Low Carb and be in a state of Nutritional Ketosis (running muscles, heart and brain more on ketones than glucose) one typically must eat <50 grams of carbs daily. Protein can not be HIGH (70-90 grams daily in my case) since about 1/2 of protein is converted by the body into glucose (brain and red blood cells both require glucose). We do not require carbs to make all of the glucose required for full health as long as we eat some protein and enough fats. Well we have to have a source of vitamins and minerals. In nature carbs can be a good source of vitamins and minerals but not so much in processed carbs. While carbs are not 'required' I for one still eat carbs within the 50 gram limit to live in a state of Nutritional Ketosis. I do not do this to lose weight but to managing my pain and reduce my risk of diabetes, cancer, heart disease, etc. Weight loss can be a side effect if calories are low enough. I maintain at 200 pounds on 2500+ calories daily average. With a macro of 5% carbs, 15% protein I have to go high fat to get in my 2500 calories per day. I can ONLY stay in Nutritional Ketosis Way Of Eating by going high fat.
Does that help you understand the ONLY WAY statement?
120g of protein isn't going to be converted into glucose and knock you out of ketosis.GaleHawkins wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »If you're concerned about high body fat percentage, you should be concerned about your carbohydrate intake, not fat.
"People who avoid carbohydrates and eat more fat, even saturated fat, lose more body fat and have fewer cardiovascular risks than people who follow the low-fat diet that health authorities have favored for decades, a major new study shows."
A Call for a Low-Carb Diet That Embraces Fat
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/02/health/low-carb-vs-low-fat-diet.html?_r=0
Many people will say only calorie restriction matters. This is overly simplistic. Do the research yourself. The low carb real food is the way to go for life-long health!
Wow please don't listen to this. Low carb is one route that works for people but is in no way the only way to go for life long health. Calorie deficit is literally the only thing that matters to lose weight, except for some special circumstances.
Edit: don't listen to the you have to eat low carb, healthy fats I agree are very good for you but you can encorporate more then enough of these and still eat carbs.
So not surprised by this comment. If you are concerned about fatty liver and losing body fat, cutting down on dietary fat is the last thing you want to do. Check out dietdoctor.com for some excellent resources.
I agree about not cutting down on fat. But why are you saying the only way is to go low carb?
@tillerstouch "low carb" can mean 20, 50 or up to 150 grams of carbs daily. To go Low Carb and be in a state of Nutritional Ketosis (running muscles, heart and brain more on ketones than glucose) one typically must eat <50 grams of carbs daily. Protein can not be HIGH (70-90 grams daily in my case) since about 1/2 of protein is converted by the body into glucose (brain and red blood cells both require glucose). We do not require carbs to make all of the glucose required for full health as long as we eat some protein and enough fats. Well we have to have a source of vitamins and minerals. In nature carbs can be a good source of vitamins and minerals but not so much in processed carbs. While carbs are not 'required' I for one still eat carbs within the 50 gram limit to live in a state of Nutritional Ketosis. I do not do this to lose weight but to managing my pain and reduce my risk of diabetes, cancer, heart disease, etc. Weight loss can be a side effect if calories are low enough. I maintain at 200 pounds on 2500+ calories daily average. With a macro of 5% carbs, 15% protein I have to go high fat to get in my 2500 calories per day. I can ONLY stay in Nutritional Ketosis Way Of Eating by going high fat.
Does that help you understand the ONLY WAY statement?
120g of protein isn't going to be converted into glucose and knock you out of ketosis.
@ketorach why would you make such a statement? Do you not know the work of Dr. Peter Attia?
Keto is not such a complicated thing. Eat <25g of net carbs, hit your protein macro, eat fat to satiety. If you go over your protein goal, the world isn't going to end and you're almost certainly not going to be knocked out of ketosis.
@ketorach if that works for you then that is good. All I am saying medically speaking you are incorrect. I point you to Dr. Peter Attia for a better understanding of protein's relationship with living in a state of nutritional ketosis.
It is a fact that one can consume >100g of protein and remain in nutritional ketosis. Just sayin'.0 -
GaleHawkins wrote: »GaleHawkins wrote: »GaleHawkins wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »If you're concerned about high body fat percentage, you should be concerned about your carbohydrate intake, not fat.
"People who avoid carbohydrates and eat more fat, even saturated fat, lose more body fat and have fewer cardiovascular risks than people who follow the low-fat diet that health authorities have favored for decades, a major new study shows."
A Call for a Low-Carb Diet That Embraces Fat
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/02/health/low-carb-vs-low-fat-diet.html?_r=0
Many people will say only calorie restriction matters. This is overly simplistic. Do the research yourself. The low carb real food is the way to go for life-long health!
Wow please don't listen to this. Low carb is one route that works for people but is in no way the only way to go for life long health. Calorie deficit is literally the only thing that matters to lose weight, except for some special circumstances.
Edit: don't listen to the you have to eat low carb, healthy fats I agree are very good for you but you can encorporate more then enough of these and still eat carbs.
So not surprised by this comment. If you are concerned about fatty liver and losing body fat, cutting down on dietary fat is the last thing you want to do. Check out dietdoctor.com for some excellent resources.
I agree about not cutting down on fat. But why are you saying the only way is to go low carb?
@tillerstouch "low carb" can mean 20, 50 or up to 150 grams of carbs daily. To go Low Carb and be in a state of Nutritional Ketosis (running muscles, heart and brain more on ketones than glucose) one typically must eat <50 grams of carbs daily. Protein can not be HIGH (70-90 grams daily in my case) since about 1/2 of protein is converted by the body into glucose (brain and red blood cells both require glucose). We do not require carbs to make all of the glucose required for full health as long as we eat some protein and enough fats. Well we have to have a source of vitamins and minerals. In nature carbs can be a good source of vitamins and minerals but not so much in processed carbs. While carbs are not 'required' I for one still eat carbs within the 50 gram limit to live in a state of Nutritional Ketosis. I do not do this to lose weight but to managing my pain and reduce my risk of diabetes, cancer, heart disease, etc. Weight loss can be a side effect if calories are low enough. I maintain at 200 pounds on 2500+ calories daily average. With a macro of 5% carbs, 15% protein I have to go high fat to get in my 2500 calories per day. I can ONLY stay in Nutritional Ketosis Way Of Eating by going high fat.
Does that help you understand the ONLY WAY statement?
120g of protein isn't going to be converted into glucose and knock you out of ketosis.GaleHawkins wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »If you're concerned about high body fat percentage, you should be concerned about your carbohydrate intake, not fat.
"People who avoid carbohydrates and eat more fat, even saturated fat, lose more body fat and have fewer cardiovascular risks than people who follow the low-fat diet that health authorities have favored for decades, a major new study shows."
A Call for a Low-Carb Diet That Embraces Fat
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/02/health/low-carb-vs-low-fat-diet.html?_r=0
Many people will say only calorie restriction matters. This is overly simplistic. Do the research yourself. The low carb real food is the way to go for life-long health!
Wow please don't listen to this. Low carb is one route that works for people but is in no way the only way to go for life long health. Calorie deficit is literally the only thing that matters to lose weight, except for some special circumstances.
Edit: don't listen to the you have to eat low carb, healthy fats I agree are very good for you but you can encorporate more then enough of these and still eat carbs.
So not surprised by this comment. If you are concerned about fatty liver and losing body fat, cutting down on dietary fat is the last thing you want to do. Check out dietdoctor.com for some excellent resources.
I agree about not cutting down on fat. But why are you saying the only way is to go low carb?
@tillerstouch "low carb" can mean 20, 50 or up to 150 grams of carbs daily. To go Low Carb and be in a state of Nutritional Ketosis (running muscles, heart and brain more on ketones than glucose) one typically must eat <50 grams of carbs daily. Protein can not be HIGH (70-90 grams daily in my case) since about 1/2 of protein is converted by the body into glucose (brain and red blood cells both require glucose). We do not require carbs to make all of the glucose required for full health as long as we eat some protein and enough fats. Well we have to have a source of vitamins and minerals. In nature carbs can be a good source of vitamins and minerals but not so much in processed carbs. While carbs are not 'required' I for one still eat carbs within the 50 gram limit to live in a state of Nutritional Ketosis. I do not do this to lose weight but to managing my pain and reduce my risk of diabetes, cancer, heart disease, etc. Weight loss can be a side effect if calories are low enough. I maintain at 200 pounds on 2500+ calories daily average. With a macro of 5% carbs, 15% protein I have to go high fat to get in my 2500 calories per day. I can ONLY stay in Nutritional Ketosis Way Of Eating by going high fat.
Does that help you understand the ONLY WAY statement?
120g of protein isn't going to be converted into glucose and knock you out of ketosis.
@ketorach why would you make such a statement? Do you not know the work of Dr. Peter Attia?
Keto is not such a complicated thing. Eat <25g of net carbs, hit your protein macro, eat fat to satiety. If you go over your protein goal, the world isn't going to end and you're almost certainly not going to be knocked out of ketosis.
@ketorach if that works for you then that is good. All I am saying medically speaking you are incorrect. I point you to Dr. Peter Attia for a better understanding of protein's relationship with living in a state of nutritional ketosis.
It is a fact that you can consume >100g of protein and remain in nutritional ketosis. Just sayin'.
@ketorach now I know you made a statement that is not medically true about me and one that you can not prove in a legal sense. What is your point.0 -
GaleHawkins wrote: »GaleHawkins wrote: »GaleHawkins wrote: »GaleHawkins wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »If you're concerned about high body fat percentage, you should be concerned about your carbohydrate intake, not fat.
"People who avoid carbohydrates and eat more fat, even saturated fat, lose more body fat and have fewer cardiovascular risks than people who follow the low-fat diet that health authorities have favored for decades, a major new study shows."
A Call for a Low-Carb Diet That Embraces Fat
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/02/health/low-carb-vs-low-fat-diet.html?_r=0
Many people will say only calorie restriction matters. This is overly simplistic. Do the research yourself. The low carb real food is the way to go for life-long health!
Wow please don't listen to this. Low carb is one route that works for people but is in no way the only way to go for life long health. Calorie deficit is literally the only thing that matters to lose weight, except for some special circumstances.
Edit: don't listen to the you have to eat low carb, healthy fats I agree are very good for you but you can encorporate more then enough of these and still eat carbs.
So not surprised by this comment. If you are concerned about fatty liver and losing body fat, cutting down on dietary fat is the last thing you want to do. Check out dietdoctor.com for some excellent resources.
I agree about not cutting down on fat. But why are you saying the only way is to go low carb?
@tillerstouch "low carb" can mean 20, 50 or up to 150 grams of carbs daily. To go Low Carb and be in a state of Nutritional Ketosis (running muscles, heart and brain more on ketones than glucose) one typically must eat <50 grams of carbs daily. Protein can not be HIGH (70-90 grams daily in my case) since about 1/2 of protein is converted by the body into glucose (brain and red blood cells both require glucose). We do not require carbs to make all of the glucose required for full health as long as we eat some protein and enough fats. Well we have to have a source of vitamins and minerals. In nature carbs can be a good source of vitamins and minerals but not so much in processed carbs. While carbs are not 'required' I for one still eat carbs within the 50 gram limit to live in a state of Nutritional Ketosis. I do not do this to lose weight but to managing my pain and reduce my risk of diabetes, cancer, heart disease, etc. Weight loss can be a side effect if calories are low enough. I maintain at 200 pounds on 2500+ calories daily average. With a macro of 5% carbs, 15% protein I have to go high fat to get in my 2500 calories per day. I can ONLY stay in Nutritional Ketosis Way Of Eating by going high fat.
Does that help you understand the ONLY WAY statement?
120g of protein isn't going to be converted into glucose and knock you out of ketosis.GaleHawkins wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »tillerstouch wrote: »aqsylvester wrote: »If you're concerned about high body fat percentage, you should be concerned about your carbohydrate intake, not fat.
"People who avoid carbohydrates and eat more fat, even saturated fat, lose more body fat and have fewer cardiovascular risks than people who follow the low-fat diet that health authorities have favored for decades, a major new study shows."
A Call for a Low-Carb Diet That Embraces Fat
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/02/health/low-carb-vs-low-fat-diet.html?_r=0
Many people will say only calorie restriction matters. This is overly simplistic. Do the research yourself. The low carb real food is the way to go for life-long health!
Wow please don't listen to this. Low carb is one route that works for people but is in no way the only way to go for life long health. Calorie deficit is literally the only thing that matters to lose weight, except for some special circumstances.
Edit: don't listen to the you have to eat low carb, healthy fats I agree are very good for you but you can encorporate more then enough of these and still eat carbs.
So not surprised by this comment. If you are concerned about fatty liver and losing body fat, cutting down on dietary fat is the last thing you want to do. Check out dietdoctor.com for some excellent resources.
I agree about not cutting down on fat. But why are you saying the only way is to go low carb?
@tillerstouch "low carb" can mean 20, 50 or up to 150 grams of carbs daily. To go Low Carb and be in a state of Nutritional Ketosis (running muscles, heart and brain more on ketones than glucose) one typically must eat <50 grams of carbs daily. Protein can not be HIGH (70-90 grams daily in my case) since about 1/2 of protein is converted by the body into glucose (brain and red blood cells both require glucose). We do not require carbs to make all of the glucose required for full health as long as we eat some protein and enough fats. Well we have to have a source of vitamins and minerals. In nature carbs can be a good source of vitamins and minerals but not so much in processed carbs. While carbs are not 'required' I for one still eat carbs within the 50 gram limit to live in a state of Nutritional Ketosis. I do not do this to lose weight but to managing my pain and reduce my risk of diabetes, cancer, heart disease, etc. Weight loss can be a side effect if calories are low enough. I maintain at 200 pounds on 2500+ calories daily average. With a macro of 5% carbs, 15% protein I have to go high fat to get in my 2500 calories per day. I can ONLY stay in Nutritional Ketosis Way Of Eating by going high fat.
Does that help you understand the ONLY WAY statement?
120g of protein isn't going to be converted into glucose and knock you out of ketosis.
@ketorach why would you make such a statement? Do you not know the work of Dr. Peter Attia?
Keto is not such a complicated thing. Eat <25g of net carbs, hit your protein macro, eat fat to satiety. If you go over your protein goal, the world isn't going to end and you're almost certainly not going to be knocked out of ketosis.
@ketorach if that works for you then that is good. All I am saying medically speaking you are incorrect. I point you to Dr. Peter Attia for a better understanding of protein's relationship with living in a state of nutritional ketosis.
It is a fact that you can consume >100g of protein and remain in nutritional ketosis. Just sayin'.
@ketorach now I know you made a statement that is not medically true about me and one that you can not prove in a legal sense. What is your point.
I meant general "you" not you specifically, which I'm pretty sure you knew.
If you aren't in nutritional ketosis at >100g of protein and I am, then it *is* a fact that one can remain in nutritional ketosis at >100g of protein.
Not going to continue to argue this point, as I have no intention of defending ketosis in court.
3 -
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0106851
Here's something that some could find interesting here
Op , don't listen to all the hype . as you can see there's many people here who push extreme diets.
I ate 40carbs-30 protein-30 fat and was just fine. I've lost all my weight and maintained it for 2+ yrs so far.1 -
-
thorsmom01 wrote: »http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0106851
Here's something that some could find interesting here
Op , don't listen to all the hype . as you can see there's many people here who push extreme diets.
I ate 40carbs-30 protein-30 fat and was just fine. I've lost all my weight and maintained it for 2+ yrs so far.
Very important study that seems to drive home the facts carbs are fine until we process the heck out of them and they become devoid of fiber and get other matter added that was not part of the carb when it was growing.0 -
queenliz99 wrote: »
Thanks for that link. It drives home what happens to us eating SAD happens to others when they eat our way instead of they grew up eat. It stated their "traditional Tongan diet is fish, root vegetables and coconuts, as you might expect for a palm-fringed island in the middle of the Pacific. MCT's we know today can be some of the best type of fats to eat."
I grew up eating high carb at we grew ourselves and it was cooked in locally sourced natural saturated fats and there were next to no obese people in the area.
The article has some sad health stories that we know could have been avoided.0 -
aqsylvester wrote: »So now DietDoctor and Popsugar are good sources for medical info? Awesome.
OP, if you have a medical condition, I would advise not taking suggestions from the community. A nutritionist is basically a meaningless title that anyone can use, so see if you can get referred to a Registered Dietitian to discuss if there is a specific macro distribution you should be aiming for.
Macros don't directly affect weight loss or gain, but can affect satiety and play a role in medical conditions and fitness goals.
And as others have said, fat in and of itself doesn't make you fat. Excess calories of any kind make you fat.
Best of luck
Totally, agreed, do not take suggestions from the community. Most of it is total garbage. However, like I said, do you own research.
And dietdoctor.com is an exceptional resource. It is ad free, unbiased, with no industry sponsorship.
These boards tend to be so overwhelming. To clarify, I don't CURRENTLY have a medical condition, but I was saying that scare with fatty liver in the past made me fear fats. I try to eat clean and eat healthy fats currently, but since I'm trying to get more strict with logging i wanted my goals to be as accurate as possible.
Thanks for all the advice!0 -
I just use the default settings MFP gives. I'm a vegan so sometimes my protein is a little lower and carbs higher. It works for me! I've seen a very wide range of macros that people use on this site and the most important thing is keeping your calories in check.0
This discussion has been closed.
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