Has anyone had any experience gaining muscle on a Keto diet?

I've been trying to research it, but there seems to be some conflicting views on it. Any experience with it? Opinions?
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Replies

  • pdxhak
    pdxhak Posts: 383 Member
    It is definitely possible to gain muscle on the keto diet. Watch your macros, be consistent and grind.
  • pdxhak
    pdxhak Posts: 383 Member
    Eat enough food to fuel your workouts and you will build muscle. Is there some reason this basic principle does not apply to keto?
  • pdxhak
    pdxhak Posts: 383 Member
    I do not think it would be that difficult to bulk with keto or consuming 3k+ calories. Curious why you think it could possibly be painful?
  • Keto_Vampire
    Keto_Vampire Posts: 1,670 Member
    edited April 2018
    I can't say it's good for bulking or weightlifting performance. Note: most people doing "keto" and weightlifting/bodybuilding use a much higher %kcal from protein (more like 30-35% protein, 60-65% fat). Maintenance and "cutting" are better suited for keto

    Lol...Jason Wittrock I believe it was consuming like 4,000 kcal/day for a month stuck @ like 145-150lbs (nice guy, just a bit too naive with pseudoscience advocating keto as superior no matter what)
  • sardelsa
    sardelsa Posts: 9,812 Member
    jflongo wrote: »
    sardelsa wrote: »
    jflongo wrote: »
    erickirb wrote: »
    pdxhak wrote: »
    I do not think it would be that difficult to bulk with keto or consuming 3k+ calories. Curious why you think it could possibly be painful?

    Carbs are king when it comes to bulking, even more so than protein, and keto centres around fat.

    When you say bulking, you mean adding FAT from too many carbs?? There are TONS of people doing keto and gaining muscle just fine. protein is king for muscles. Go out and do some research and watch tons of videos on this already.

    Too much fat gain in a bulk will come from too high a surplus calories (or poor programming/performance), and is not a result of too many carbs in and of themselves.

    Protein is necessary for building muscle, but carbs help drive it and make the process most productive. There are many people bulking on keto I'm sure, but it is not typical. And to be honest muscles without carbs tend to look more flat and not as full, which is why bodybuilders carb load before a show.

    Carb load before a show is a myth and a sign of bad dieting, to a point. This has been a result quite often of poor sodium intake. There are tons of videos out now talking about how badly bodybuilders have dieted in the past. There are tons of body builders that got horrible advice from trainers that did not know what they were talking about, or used OLD knowledge about how things work.

    Before you guys continue posting this, go out and watch youtube videos on flexible dieting, keto, etc. There are tons of bodybuilders that talk about how crappy their diets were and what horrible advice they got. I personally don't do keto, but have watch probably over 20 videos on keto and flexible dieting.

    I'm not talking eating carbs to the point of extreme bloating, but the right about of carbs do make your muscles look more full. I know I find after a refeed my muscles are popping and I look fantastic. But hey do you what works for you.. every bodybuilder is different in how they respond.

    I do my research and watch plenty of videos. Again no one is saying it is impossible... if someone finds their workout performance and muscle building best on keto, go for it, but to get the kind of results you get with carbs on a bulk, it is not easy, and I have heard many people struggle with it.

    There are a few people who have tried bulking on keto... @Gallowmere1984 is one of them, he might be able to share some insight.

    At the end of the day you do what works for you. If OP wants to try it, I encourage her to do so and she can share her results. I am always open to hearing different experiences first hand.
  • jamesakrobinson
    jamesakrobinson Posts: 2,149 Member
    I have done a very successful "re-comp" using keto... Last spring I went really deep into ketosis for 3 months and (by dexa) dropped from 24% to 8% body fat while gaining 8 or 9 pounds of lean mass...
    My scans were actually 6 months apart and the first 3 months I was lower carb but not keto the last 3 months I was consuming less than 10g per day of carbs (mostly just secondary stuff like a slice of tomato on the side or condiments or a dill pickle...) I was definitely eating in a surplus (over 4k calories total most days).
    My main observation besides the rapid fat loss and avoiding going catabolic was that I would definitely "bonk" before I was actually finished my workout. (hit the wall hard and suddenly and be completely unable to lift... just go home because there's zero in the tank)
    I tried BCAAs and that let me finish a workout but completely kicked me out of ketosis. When I got my 8% scan I started letting carbs back into my life and usually have around 200g or so a day now.
  • pdxhak
    pdxhak Posts: 383 Member
    I can't say it's good for bulking or weightlifting performance. Note: most people doing "keto" and weightlifting/bodybuilding use a much higher %kcal from protein (more like 30-35% protein, 60-65% fat). Maintenance and "cutting" are better suited for keto

    Lol...Jason Wittrock I believe it was consuming like 4,000 kcal/day for a month stuck @ like 145-150lbs (nice guy, just a bit too naive with pseudoscience advocating keto as superior no matter what)


    IMO Jason's 4k results is an edge case. There were other people that did the 4k cal keto diet and gained weight.

  • natruallycurious
    natruallycurious Posts: 359 Member
    edited April 2018
    pdxhak wrote: »
    What is optimal? Obviously that is very subjective to an individual. Especially when it comes to performance. All that data can easily be slanted towards a specific outcome. Food fuels the body. Eat enough to fuel your workout and you will either gain, maintain or lose weight depending on your goals. Eat and grind.

    This isn't 100% true. Different forms of food do different things for our bodies. It's why people pay attention to macros in the first place. Let's say someone spends a whole day eating 250 calorie protein bars that contain carbs, protein, and fat, and someone else spends a whole day eating 250 calorie rice krispie treats. These people generally perform fairly equally in typical workouts. When it comes to the end of the day, who do you think is going to have the better workout? Not all foods are created equal. Carbs are an energy source for our bodies. If you have none in your system, you're far more likely to crash during a workout or not be able to produce as much work as you would have been able to had your body had a more balanced nutrient breakdown. That is what I mean by optimal.
  • sardelsa
    sardelsa Posts: 9,812 Member
    pdxhak wrote: »
    Performance is subjective to the individual and any test or set of tests can be skewed. What exactly is considered high intensity? Above a certain heart rate? And for a certain amount of time? When endurance is considered then at what distances? Or is it strength over time? So many factors that are very specific to the individual.

    Yes but see the meta-analysis above where they look at many studies and discuss definitions and classifications