Mon 04 Aug, 2014 9:39 pm
LandSailor wrote:At the risk of sounding like a broken record (think Im way past that) this was published in Nutrition Journal a couple of weeks ago:-
Dietary Carbohydrate restriction as the first approach in diabetes management. Critical review and evidence base
Although, obviously not directly comparable to humans I still thought this was an interesting segment on Landline. To produce the best Wagyu steaks with the highest possible fat content, what do they feed the cattle? Grains, grains and more grains. In other words, an extreme high-carb diet:-
High Stakes
Mon 04 Aug, 2014 9:58 pm
geoskid wrote:Just ask a fat cow or a marbled human.![]()
Tue 05 Aug, 2014 9:04 pm
geoskid wrote:geoskid wrote:Just ask a fat cow or a marbled human.![]()
What do you reckon, NNW?....
Sat 23 Aug, 2014 12:42 pm
The Truth Behind the High-Fat-Low-Carb Cult
Proponents of the Banting diet claim that cutting carbs is the key to weight loss and improved health. There's just one problem: it'll make you slow.
Mon 25 Aug, 2014 10:27 am
geoskid wrote: There is a difference between marbling and fat.
geoskid wrote: Proponents of the Banting diet claim that cutting carbs is the key to weight loss and improved health. There's just one problem: it'll make you slow.
Mon 25 Aug, 2014 11:16 am
LandSailor wrote:geoskid wrote: There is a difference between marbling and fat.
I thought marbling is just intra-muscular fat?
Interesting segue though! Never saw that coming NNW
geoskid wrote: Proponents of the Banting diet claim that cutting carbs is the key to weight loss and improved health. There's just one problem: it'll make you slow.
Its hard to know what to believe. I think a big part of the problem is that the majority of the research into LCHF (Low-Carb, High-Fat) diets dont take into account that you need to adapt to fat intake as your primary energy source. It takes up to 3 weeks before your body is efficiently metabolising fats. Once properly fat-adapted performance significantly improves.
Anyway having said that it makes sense that for short-term, highly aerobic exercise carbohydrates would have to be of benefit. For endurance athletes probably the best performance would be a fat-adapted body that was "carb-loaded" before an event.
Here's an article making an alternative claim:-
“Before he was on the diet, at the point where he was burning 50 per cent fat and 50 per cent carbs, he was able to generate 130 watts on an exercise bike. Twelve weeks [after he switched to a LCHF diet] he was able to produce 330 watts with same fuel mix efficiency,”
So many pro athletes don’t go on about [the LCHF diet] because they don’t want to share it with the athletes that don’t do it,” .... “But among the athletes I know, 40 to 50 per cent are training their body to use fat for fuel.”
Mon 17 Nov, 2014 3:35 pm
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