My food intake is so simplified that there is very little that I can add to what I’ve already said. I get my annual checkup and the numbers continue to support this simple lifestyle as well.
Unfortunately, my improvements have still not been as comprehensive as yours. I still have daily constipation (it improved for a couple weeks on raw ZC and then gradually relapsed, though without the other IBS-type problems I used to get), mild dehydration, mild residual toe cramps that are held at bay with low daily doses of potassium, and what most people consider underweight (currently 133 lbs at 5’11”, a narrow frame and what people tell me is an “emaciated” appearance except for a small amount of belly flab—aka “skinny fat”—however, it is about the weight that I was at in my 20s and 30s). I suspect that increasing my intake of organs and water to levels closer to yours might help some.
I try to keep my intake up in the 3 liter/day level.
I find that my bladder gets painfully bloated before I reach that point and I have to interrupt work and home life frequently with urgent runs to the bathroom. Does the bladder eventually expand to handle this intake or did you have no problem with it from the start?
I’ve pretty much come to the conclusion that our bodies will convert a good bit of all the protein we eat into glucose whether we eat carbs or not. ....
Yes, KGH, Alphagruis and the others acknowledge that, but they claim that the conversion is inefficient and that this is somehow bad.
This question seems unresolved, so I searched KGH’s blog and here is my paraphrasing of his reasons I found for eating around 50g of carbs/day, if you or anyone else has time to look at them:
KGH’s reasons for including at least 5% calories as carbs in the diet that I’ve found:
1. The body uses 50 g/day carbs (about 10% of total calories) regardless of what you eat
2. Kwasneiwski’s Optimal Diet recommends a minimum of 5% carbs (and 10% protein) because “you need the glucose anyway so why not eat it straight away” to minimize the “metabolic work” your body needs to do (making your body convert protein to carbs is less efficient, and therefore apparently more metabolically taxing than eating carbs)?
3. Even Dr. Bernstein recommends 30g carbs/day for diabetics (in a “6-12-12” plan representing the number of carbs eaten at each meal). [Note: However, according to a secondary source, Dr. Bernstein doesn’t claim that any carbs are needed, but just includes them to err on the side of caution.]
4. Carbs are “the phylogenetically oldest fuel”
5. “there is no reason to think there is any benefit to eating less than 10%” of total calories as carbs and “there is no advantage to purposely converting your extra protein to glucose”
6. The excess protein you eat is either inefficiently converted to carbs or is converted into body fat, so eat carbs to provide a safety margin that avoids these two issues
7. “all protein does not get converted to glucose” (so some apparently gets converted into fat and/or excreted)
8. People whose BG “levels are still in the 100s after meals and between meals, and not just in the AM … may have some IR going on.” [Note: however, Lex’s BG levels dropped when he increased his % fat intake, if I understand correctly.]
9. “Paleolithic man had a varied diet so modern man should be able to as well.“ [However, this sounds close to “food re-enactment.” As he has argued in the past, just because Paleo man ate something doesn’t make it optimally healthy.]
10. Alphagruis adds: avoiding nitrogen waste excretion from converting protein into glucose, which he presumably believes has a potentially deleterious health effect
So it looks like KGH’s argument for eating 50 g/day of carbs boils down to that it reduces the metabolic work your body does so it can instead do more tissue repair and Alphagruis adds that nitrogen waste excretion is reduced. The question is, how do we know that either of these things have benefits in the real world? Based on KGH’s points, it sounds like we should expect that most people will have improved muscle development by including this level of carbs, with the exception being people with IR who may not respond well to carb intake. Based on Alphagruis’ point, it sounds like we should expect increased strain on the kidneys by not including some carbs in the diet and we should look for azotemia (abnormally high levels of nitrogen-containing compounds) and symptoms like:
> Decreased or absent urine output (oliguria or anuria).
> Fatigue
> Asterixis
> Decreased alertness
> Confusion
> Pale skin color
> Tachycardia (rapid pulse)
> Dry mouth (xerostomia)
> Thirst, swelling (edema, anasarca)
> Orthostatic blood pressure (rises or falls, significantly depending on position)
> Uremic frost
Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AzotemiaLike Lex, I put more stock in real-world experience than in potential textbook problems from converting proteins into carbs, but my health is not yet as optimized as his, so I'm still somewhat interested in where this question might lead.