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sjmusic2 wrote:Help me here... massive weight loss is achievable using a low carb, paleo diet and limited exercise alone. Why is the recommendation to mega-dose B5 - does this augment the calorie-restriction and carb-control ? Does B5 help with insulin sensitivity ?
I have been on the paleo spectrum for many years and if I limit my carbs to 50-75g per day with no refined carbs or grains the fat melts away quickly. Maybe that's just me ?
ofonorow wrote:You do sound lucky sjmusic2. And your statement is true - assuming you have enough B5 to form coenzyme A that can then metabolize the food that you do eat. Leung wondered why when most people switch to fat burning, which should be more efficient, we usually go into the ketosis mode which wastes energy. His theory is that all the food we eat in modern society effectively creates a conezyme A deficiency. The vitamin needed to form coenzyme A is B5 (or the more complete Pantethine.) The beauty is efficient fat burning, lack of hunger, lack of ketosis, and the slow loss of about 2 lbs per week on a diet of 1000 calories daily.
But this is a side effect of vitamin B5/Coenzyme A (as is curing acne in 2-3 weeks). This information was sent to me by Dr. Levy in the hope that it would help restart my adrenal function. The reason acne starts at puberty, according to Leung's theory, is because as the adrenals begin making hormones, coenzyme A is used up in greater quantities.
But wouldn't any typical adult experience significant weight loss on only 1000 calories per day ? Are you saying that this is not the case, or maybe you are saying that B5 causes fat-loss rather than protein-loss ???
But, only when carbs are involved, right?. I wish I understood exactly how the body differentiates between a high carb meal and a high fat/protein meal, but it seems to.Weight loss is still fundamentally linked to insulin and the body's sensitivity thereof.
I guess if those 1000 calories were all from white sugar, ie. refined carbs, then you will not lose as much weight as if it were vegetables, good fat and protein.
I think you are correct, that with limited food intake in general, there is "enough" B5 which is ubiquitous in most foods. Just not enough to cover how much food we in modern civilization consume.Maybe the paleo diet delivers sufficient B5 to facilitate the dramatic weigh-loss experienced by most, if not all who stay committed to it over an extended period of time. I have never seen anyone fail to drop weight (fat) when they start paleo and continue for at least 30 days, granted my sample group is limited.
But equally as important as nutrition, are sleep and exercise (HIIT and strength), though now I'm starting to get off-topic !
ofonorow wrote:The difference is that most people would go into ketosis - an "energy wasting" state. Not only is ketosis avoided, but so is hunger. (You have to read Leung's paper, or the Jeffrey Dach article for the details. Leung claims that ketosis is the reason most diets fail - and people gain the weight back.
As long as you consume >50g of good carbs you typically will not go into ketosis and you should still lose significant weight at those levels. There are a number of instances where ketosis has been demonstrated to be beneficial, eg. epilepsy, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, atherosclerosis, age-related memory loss, even metabolic syndrome/detox..."Mitochondrial levels of the endogenous antioxidant glutathione increase on a ketogenic diet; this is likely a major reason for many of its beneficial effects." Also the actions of BHB are significant. That said, I think ketosis should be used as a short-term tool and not a long-term solution.But, only when carbs are involved, right?. I wish I understood exactly how the body differentiates between a high carb meal and a high fat/protein meal, but it seems to.
The body possesses multiple pathways to produce glucose (gluconeogenesis controlled by glucagon) from fats and proteins. Insulin deals with glucose once it is in the bloodstream, fills muscle and liver with glycogen first then stores excess as fat. It is antagonistic with glucagon. The typical SAD consumes large quantities of carbs and over time muscles and the liver will become less sensitive to insulin signalling and thus require more insulin secretion to achieve the desired effect and the circle repeats. This ultimately results in the pancreatic fatigue and type-2 diabetes when it can no longer produce sufficient insulin to control the now potentially toxic levels of glucose - ironically insulin also becomes toxic at high levels too. Insulin resistance also blocks amino acids from entering cells and the liver from converting thyroid hormone T4 to T3. Some people are more genetically disposed to insulin resistance then others.Just watched a sales video for a fat-loss program which claims this isn't true. Calories are all that matters - not the nutrients in the foods. Cites an experiment.
I find it hard to believe that continued over consumption of refined carbs will lead to anything other than pancreatic failure and possibly diabetes unless high exercise levels are involved as they will mitigate some of the insulin resistance caused by the nutritional imbalance.
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