Study: A Keto Diet Can Lead to Heart Scarring and Permanent Heart Damage

Discussion in 'Health and Fitness' started by Frederick Foresight, Feb 19, 2021.

  1. Came across this article; thought I'd share:

    https://thebeet.com/study-a-keto-diet-can-lead-to-heart-scarring-and-permanent-heart-damage/

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    A new study out of China has found a deeply troubling connection between keto diets and heart damage, and it's enough to make you want to stay away from this weight loss method for good. Ketosis is the most searched diet online because it works for quick weight loss by reducing your intake of carbs to 5 to 10 percent of total calories and eating 70 to 80 percent of your calories from fat and about 20 percent from protein.

    Keto diets put your body into a state of ketosis, or burning fat for fuel, which releases acids called ketones into the bloodstream that are now believed to be damaging to your heart muscle. The scientists looked at the cellular impact of ketones on the heart and found that when ketones are formed, they can have a detrimental impact on your heart, causing permanent scar tissue to form, which itself hinders the heart's ability to pump blood properly.


    The researchers at Fudan University in Shanghai, and Sichuan University in Chengdu, were seeking to find out of going keto might benefit the immune system. Instead, they found disturbing evidence that it could lead to atrial fibrillation or irregular heartbeat due to the scarring that occurs when the body is in ketosis. Their research "has suggested that elevated [ketone levels] is linked with poorer cardiac health, alongside various other concerning correlations between ketosis and mortality," according to an article in the online medical journal IFL Science.

    The study was done on rats, not humans, and the animals were divided into three groups and fed either a keto diet (high in fat and protein, with minimal carbs), a normal diet, or a calorie-restricted diet, for four months. At the end of that time, the rats’ hearts were analyzed to look for cellular changes and among the ketogenic dieters, the rats demonstrated higher ketones which led to the activation of a gene that inhibited normal blood flow to the heart. That meant the heart muscle itself was left compromised. In humans, the scientists suggest, this would be the equivalent of "apoptosis" or cell death, of vital cardiac cells and fibrosis, which is essentially the scarring of healthy tissue, not something you would ever choose to be left with as a side effect of weight loss.

    This is not the first study to indicate that keto diets are harmful to heart health, although there is a debate over which is worse: Being overweight, which a keto diet can help solve, or staying in ketosis for long periods of time, which has been linked to compromised heart health and specific symptoms such as irregular heartbeat, and risk factors such as higher blood lipids.

    Studies such as the rat experiment have shown that in trying to solve one problem, metabolic syndrome, you may cause another, such as heart scarring. Still, there are mitigating factors. If you are at risk of heart failure from obesity, researchers have found, a keto diet may help you lose weight quickly and lower the immediate threat, but researchers now ask, at what cost?

    In a tragic case of someone suffering a fatal event related to keto dieting, the world mourned the death of 27-year-old Bollywood actress Mishti Mukherjee last year when her family announced she suffered kidney failure in connection to following a strict keto diet.

    Are keto diets safe? Not if you do it by eating animal fat, processed meat, and butter
    The way someone chooses to follow a keto diet is as important as the concept of going into ketosis, according to doctors like Dr. Andrew Freeman, the cardiologist at National Jewish in Denver, who recently released a study that keto dieting can lead to heart disease because of the foods people eat while on the diet: People on keto diets load up on red meat, processed meat like bacon, and stay away from healthy plant-based foods like fruits, vegetables, and whole grains–which are all nutrient-rich and full of antioxidants–because they happen to contain carbs.

    Dr. Freeman explained to The Beet that it's possible to eat a plant-based diet of low carbs and high fat that is healthier than the traditional keto diet which relies on a high intake of animal fat, processed meats like bacon, and eliminates fruits and vegetables to achieve ketosis. The most important thing for any long-term weight loss plan, he adds, is to eat a healthy, balanced diet, full of high fiber foods like fruits and vegetables, he explains, and not be overly concerned with fat and protein.

    Keto diets are not unhealthy, it's the way people do them that is, according to Dr. Andrew Freeman, the cardiologist at National Jewish in Denver, recently released a study that keto dieting can lead to heart disease because of the foods people eat while on the diet: People often load up on red meat, processed meat like bacon, and stay away from healthy plant-based foods like fruits, vegetables, and whole grains–which are all nutrient-rich and full of antioxidants–because they happen to contain carbs.

    Meanwhile, another leading cardiologist, Dr. Kim Williams, former president of the American College of Cardiology, told Plant Based News that "no one should do a ketogenic diet" since the way these diets are interpreted are often full of bacon and eggs, butter, and cheese, all of which are long-term threats to a healthy heart. The saturated fat in these animal foods is known to raise cholesterol and lead to blockages and plaque that can raise blood pressure and cause heart attack and stroke. His point of view: No one should adopt the ketogenic diet over the long term—unless weight loss is more important than lifespan.

    “I like the idea, the basic concept: you change your dietary habits and you change something," Williams told Plant Based News. “Unfortunately, the science of it is wrong. If all you wanted was short-term weight loss—and short-term could be a year or two—if that's all you're looking for, great."

    More study is needed on the effects of ketogenic diets on heart health
    The latest study is not the final word, medical researchers say, since it was done on rats and animal studies do not always translate to humans, so the study does not provide proof that a ketogenic diet will damage the human heart, but scientists often look to animal studies to give us an indication of whether drugs or foods or behaviors are safe. So while there is still no data on the long-term effects of ketogenic diets on humans, if losing weight is the goal, an extremely low-carb diet is not as heart-healthy as one that is based on plant-based foods such as vegetables, whole grains, fruit, nuts, and seeds.

    Bottom Line: A plant-based diet works better and is healthier for your heart. In another unrelated study, a plant-based diet of whole foods was shown to beat out keto for weight loss and burning fat faster. The people in the study lost more weight when they ate a diet of plant-based foods (of whole foods, healthy carbs, and high-fiber, nutrient-dense fruits and vegetables) than a keto diet that was based on high animal fat and protein. So choose whether you want to keep weight off and live a long, healthy life, or lose weight quickly and risk scarring your heart forever.
     
    niko79542 likes this.
  2. Baron

    Baron ET Founder

    I was doing some research yesterday and discovered that keto diets are notorious for dramatically raising SHBG which is a binding protein that causes testosterone to become unavailable for use in the body. So although a person's total testosterone level could technically be at the top of the chart, their free testosterone level is awful because their SHBG level is through the roof. And all that is fixable just by implementing carbs back into the diet.
     
  3. Good info, thanks. I knew there's good reason I love me some carbs.
     
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    Bugenhagen likes this.
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  7. I don't really like the Keto diet and thank goodness I am not a rat.
     
  8. Big AAPL

    Big AAPL

    I have tried the Keto diet at the request of my son...and it is a difficult menu to follow. I cannot base my intake on meat and cheeses only and prefer a more balanced repertoire of vegetables and low carb with a moderate amount of animal proteins. My pee stunk to hell no matter how much water I drank, and I had less energy than before my trial. Low carbs, veggies, and a decent amount of protein (a mix of animal and plant based) seems to be the perfect balance FOR ME.
     
    niko79542 likes this.
  9. Laura48

    Laura48

    I am definitely going to forward this to all my people following such mad diets, thanks for sharing it here.
     
    Frederick Foresight likes this.
  10. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao

    Just curious, but whenever I hear stuff like this, or the thread title's claim, I often wonder why a hundred thousand years of diet evolution didn't lead to these problems with hunter gathers. Or maybe our ancestors were running around with Low T all throughout history?
     
    #10     Feb 22, 2021