Is a ketogenic diet effective for weight loss? The answer depends on
whether it achieves a reduction in total kilojoule intake or not.
What is a ketogenic diet?
A classical ketogenic diet follows a strict ratio for total grams of fat to combined grams of carbohydrate and protein and typically has 80-90% of total kilojoules coming from fat,
which is very high fat. Carbohydrate intake varies from 20 to 50 grams a
day, or 5-10% of total energy, while protein intakes are moderate.
The difference between a strict ketogenic diet and diets that are
described as low-carb is that ketogenic diets specifically aim to
achieve elevated blood levels of ketone bodies
which are chemicals produced as a consequence of your body burning fat.
Hence general low-carb diets are not as high in fat as classical
ketogenic diets.
Research on the use of classical ketogenic diets for weight loss is limited. But there are many studies that compare lower-carb diets to other approaches.
These show that aiming for a carbohydrate
restriction of 20-30 grams a day, without setting a daily kilojoule
target, leads to 2-4 kilograms greater weight loss compared to a low
kilojoule diet, in studies up to six months.
In longer studies with follow-up between one to five years there is no difference in weight loss. A review of weight loss diets with a moderate carbohydrate restriction
(45% or less of total energy intake) compared to low fat diets (under
30% fat) found they were equally effective in reducing body weight in
studies from six months to two years.
How much carbohydrate do we eat?
In Australia, current carbohydrate intakes range from approximately 210 to 260 grams a day, or about 45% of total energy intake. More than a third of what Australians currently eat comes from discretionary, or “junk” foods. It is definitely a good idea to cut down on discretionary foods. These are commonly ultra-processed
and contain refined carbohydrates and include burgers, chips, pizza,
crumbed foods, biscuits, cake, pastry, lollies, cordial, sugar sweetened
juices and soft drink.
The problem is most people do not eat enough minimally processed,
nutrient rich foods that contain carbohydrate, like legumes, wholegrain
breads, cereals and other grains, vegetables, fruit, nuts, milk and
yoghurt. These foods contain important nutrients, from dietary fibre, to
B vitamins, and minerals and trace elements like iron, zinc, magnesium,
calcium, selenium and iodine.
Your body needs these nutrients for digestion, metabolism, growth and
repair of cells and to help protect the brain, heart, muscles and
nerves.
What happens when you go on a ketogenic diet to lose weight?
If you severely limit all foods that contain carbohydrate, such as
during a ketogenic diet, you end up cutting out many foods. This means
you eat less total kilojoules and therefore lose weight.
Whether you follow a classical ketogenic diet or a very low energy diet you may end up producing “ketone bodies”, which may help with weight loss, particularly fat mass.
Carbohydrate is used in the body as the major source of fuel, like
petrol is used to fuel a car. Your body has a store of carbohydrate in
the liver and muscles called glycogen. When glycogen stores are low your body switches to burning fat, which leads to production of ketone bodies.
Glycogen becomes limited when your total energy intake is very low,
such as during a strict weight loss diet, a fast, or when you do not eat
foods containing carbohydrate. This means your body burns the fat you
eat, as well as body fat, leading to a loss of stored body fat. You
still produce small amounts of glucose through a process called gluconeogenesis by breaking down protein and some fat.
Ketogenic diets and appetite
A systematic review
evaluated how people perceived their appetite before and during a very
low energy diet that contained less than 3,300 kilojoules a day or a
ketogenic low carbohydrate diet containing less than 10% energy from
carbohydrate (50 grams or less per day). Those following the very low
energy diet reported less hunger and greater fullness and satiety during
weight loss, while those following the ketogenic diet reported feeling
less hunger and having less desire to eat. The authors concluded that
although the absolute change in subjective appetite ratings were small,
they were important in terms of helping people stick to a weight loss
diet.
One research study followed 18 obese men during eight weeks of a
ketogenic very low energy diet of 2300-2700 kilojoules per day, followed
by four weeks of weight maintenance. They measured changes in appetite and blood concentrations of appetite hormones and ketones.
While hunger increased significantly by day three and up until the men lost 5% of their starting body weight, it did not get worse
after that while they were dieting. Once they increased their food
intake during maintenance, they had an increase in hunger. The good news
was that while they were producing ketones, they appeared to be able to
tolerate feeling hungry.
Ketogenic diets and weight loss
One randomised controlled trial randomly allocated 45 obese adults
to either a ketogenic low energy diet of 2500-300 kilojoules per day
for about two months or a low kilojoule diet where total daily energy
intake was reduced by 10%.
As you would expect, those in the low energy group lost significantly
more weight after one year. After two years, and accounting for those
who dropped out, both groups lost weight (low energy 7kg versus 5.3kg
low kilojoule). Of note was that a greater number in the low energy
group lost 5% or more of their initial body weight at 12 months.
A systematic review
of nine studies in adults with type 2 diabetes following lower-carb
diets (less than 130 grams a day or less than 25% energy from
carbohydrate) compared to control weight loss diets found weight loss
was greater up to one year in the lower-carb groups.
While there was no long-term difference in weight loss between
dietary approaches, blood triglyceride concentrations were significantly
lower and HDL (good) cholesterol concentrations were higher, but there
was no reduction in total or LDL (bad) cholesterol.
Should you or shouldn’t you?
If you have a family history of bowel cancer then don’t follow a
ketogenic weight loss diet. The World Cancer Research Fund has shown convincing evidence for a higher risk of colorectal cancer in association with low fibre and higher red and processed meat intakes. Prevention guidelines recommend having greater variety, and higher intakes, of legumes, wholegrains, non-starchy vegetables and fruit.
When it comes to weight management, reduce your carbohydrate intake
by reducing energy-dense, nutrient-poor foods. Increase minimally
processed foods high in fibre and phytonutrients, including vegetables,
legumes/pulses and wholegrains and only use classical ketogenic diets
under supervision of your health care team.
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