There Is No Best Diet
There Is No Best Diet
Apo E4/E4, Male, Age 60
Re: There Is No Best Diet
...wait what? A high-fat muffin?Three kinds of muffins were on the menu: a high-fat, low-sugar muffin
If the study was looking to determine which diet was the "best diet" based on postprandial glucose readings, then an omnivorous ketogenic diet would produce similar results across the entire cohort and maximize this supposed healthfulness metric. I would imagine that the postprandial glucose variation between twins eating something like eggs and macadamia nuts for breakfast would be minimal.
Interestingly, looking at their PREDICT 2 study (https://predict.study), they're offering to help participants find their optimal diets... while testing individuals on a selection of vegetarian foods, which may include dairy, gluten, refined carbohydrates, and sugar.
Re: There Is No Best Diet
I've been tracking my glucose response to foods for over a year now and have found it very beneficial.
APOe4/4
Functional Medicine Certified Health Coach
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Functional Medicine Certified Health Coach
National Board Certified Health & Wellness Coach
Certificate for Reversing Cognitive Decline for Coaches (FMCA)
Certified Fermentationist
Re: There Is No Best Diet
Sure, just google "keto muffin"apod wrote:...wait what? A high-fat muffin?
Re: There Is No Best Diet
It's still not quite clear to me if these were keto-friendly muffins, or muffins with additional fat (which might require more insulin to attenuate the glucose spike.) If these were ketogenic foods, the blood sugar testing is sort of moot point as you can't really eat lower-GI foods than minimal-GI foods.BrianR wrote:Sure, just google "keto muffin"apod wrote:...wait what? A high-fat muffin?
Searching High-fat muffin on pubmed brings up trials like this one, where it seems like it's a typical muffin, but with a lot of extra fat:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01906359
I'm curious how they might have worked to avoid situational variance between individuals. My glucose reaction to carbohydrates is substantially different after say, stress / low-quality sleep vs exercise. And, if someone has a high post-prandial response to a particular food, does that not change with continued ingestion and gut microbiome / enzymatic adaptation?
Re: There Is No Best Diet
Ah, yes. You're right, that's a totally different thing. And probably not a health promoting thing.apod wrote:Searching High-fat muffin on pubmed brings up trials like this one, where it seems like it's a typical muffin, but with a lot of extra fat
Re: There Is No Best Diet
Apo E4/E4, Male, Age 60