turbin3
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Since you've read quite a bit on this topic @turbin3 , I'd be interested in hearing your perspective on this article:
http://dietrebel.com/what-is-ketosis/
That's a pretty solid article, and covers most bases of most of the common or controversial topics with Ketosis.
They also hit on an important subject in the final thoughts. Namely, potential for nutritional deficiencies. It's true of just about any diet. People often take a rather indiscriminate approach when getting on a diet, and it seems lots of people always end up going to one extreme or another. For example, with vegan/vegetarian diets, although many people can potentially lead relatively healthy lives, extra care needs to be taken with supplementation for certain nutrient deficiencies (vitamin B12), and significant effort needs to be taken in supplementing protein with a full spectrum of aminos.
On the flip side, with ketosis, general low carb diets, and especially paleo, people take it to the opposite extreme. I've heard of some people's macros up around as much as 230-250g of FAT (yeah, just dietary fat) per day, and a minimal amount of protein. I have one question to prove why that's a bad idea. If your body is moving into ketosis, and it is focused on converting fat to ketones for energy.....do you think it will first utilize stored fat or dietary fat? If it's someone looking to lose a bunch of weight, yeah, eating crazy amounts of dietary fat is counterproductive, as their body will be primarily utilizing dietary fat as opposed to stored fat. If it's someone that's already lean and already has great lean muscle mass, then higher dietary fat might actually be a good thing. So in that case, if I was person #1, trying to lose a bunch, I might start out on the lower end of the spectrum (lets say 60-80g fat roughly). Over time, as I've lost significant weight and begun to gain a good amount of lean mass, then I would probably increase fat.
Also, on the subject of greens and fruit, people can still have those things while on ketosis. Again, people go to extremes. I'd just keep it in moderation. A 1/2 cup of raspberries. A cup of spinach, broccoli, or some other greens, etc. Actually, if people don't take care to include a bit of greens and fruit, they'll have yet another problem....not enough dietary fiber. Ideally, the general rule of thumb is 10g of fiber per 100lbs of bodyweight.
Kegenix? I wouldn't waste your time or money James. Looking at the ingredient list, it's basically just a multivitamin, 7g of MCT oil, and no more than ~4g BCAA's......for $197/mth. That's like $30/mth worth of supplements, with an insane markup. OR, instead you could do 1 scoop of protein powder, 1/2tbsp of MCT oil, and just eat some fruit. Honestly, a supplement like that is totally unnecessary.