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This page seems to have an agenda. I'm also concerned about why it was removed from cleanup with no explaination. If no one disagrees, I'm inclined to list it there again as this is not an area of expertise for me. CHL 03:43, 21 Sep 2004 (UTC)
This article seems to be totally about the attitudes towards this regimen. But there is no description of what the diet itself consists. A glaring omission, no? -- Cimon 16:38, 28 Sep 2004 (UTC)
Why is mayonnaise listed as a dairy product? -- Anchoress 13:04, 15 April 2006 (UTC)
Why no mention of the basic research that may explain how this diet actually works? There are plenty of studies out there... Maybe if I have time I will include some of them with an explanation.
MrSandman 14:59, 27 April 2006 (UTC)
I'm not expert enough in editing Wikipedia to attempt to add the reference, but re: the "reference needed" to biblical reference to fasting and epilepsy, see Mar 9:17-29 in the King James Version, which can be found at http://www.godrules.net/library/kjv/kjvmar9.htm among other locations.
(1) "The diet of the Inuit is similar to the Ketogenic diet. Typically Inuit diets contain 15-18% protein with the remainder being fat." First of all it is difficult to talk of an "inuit diet" because it today exists only to a very limited extent - most inuit eat a combination of traditional foods and modern foods. Ideally an article dealing with THE INUIT DIET should be included in wikipedia, mainly because the notion is so widespread in articles about medicine ("alternative medicine" in particular), and there are a lot of myths and faulty ideas surrounding this. As far as I know, based on older antropological experiences such as that of Vilhjalmur Stefansson, the inuit diet typically contained about 20% proteins and 80% of energy as fats. This translates in weight ratio into about 1:1,5 between proteins (+carbs) and fats, which is very different from the typical 1:3-4 ratio between carbohydrate+proteins: fats which constitutes the typical "ketogenic diet". Others have suggested the inuit diet contained approx 20-25% proteins, 75% fats and 0-5% carbohydrates (which would constitute a 1:1,3 ratio between proteins+carbs:fats). Furthermore, the body can convert an excess of proteins into carbohydrates (glucose) in a 2:1 ratio (2 gram protein translates to 1 gram glucose). Therefore inuits may enter only light ketosis, or no ketosis at all. Zero-carb diets does not necessarily involve ketosis.
(2) "Interestingly, despite the lack of numerous vitamins in this diet, Inuit do not appear to suffer deficiency diseases. In particualr vitamin C deficiency or Scurvy, is referred to as the white mans disease." - Animal foods is usually rich in vitamins. Although low in vitamin C (e.g. 10% of the RDA), the bioavailability is probably much higher, so that scurvy don't appear. If they don't eat bones (e.g. in the form of bone stock/soup, ground or eaten from small fish), the amount of calcium may be very low however. As the RDA/RDI's are based on a high carbohydrate diet which requires a different amount/type of vitamins and minerals, it is difficult to judge such a diet. Magnesium and B-vitamins are required for carbohydrate metabolism, for example.
I added a "See Also" section with a link to the "Low carb diet" page since that's what this is (although obviously the ketogenic diet invented for epilepsy predates the recent low carb craze by several decades). I'm curious, though, why there is not much attempt in the article to link this diet with the other low carb diets (Atkins is mentioned briefly but the article seems to try to imply that this diet is a completely different thing). Granted "low carb" is a controversial term but not avoiding discussing the relationship seems a significant omission (i.e. Wikipedia should be "above the controversy"). Note that Kossoff at Johns Hopkins (see the Journal of Neurology, 2003) has specifically been investigating the efficacy of Atkins on epileptic patients (as essentially an extension of the ketogenic diet work that JHMI has been doing for decades). I think this info needs to be explicitly brought out in the article. -- Mcorazao 05:04, 17 November 2006 (UTC)
That site feels spammy, but the link has been there a while. Opinions? 68.16.179.43 16:19, 13 April 2007 (UTC)
Hi was just reading this page I am studying nutrition and the link that ketogenic diets are able to control epleptic fits are a bit hazy at best and definantly not accepted by the wider medical community. Will have a look at possibly cleaning this page up in terms of presenting information that is more neutral in its view of ketogenic diets. Will also find some literature for and against ketogenic diets.
Thanks Robert Lugton -- 60.242.240.173 23:17, 20 June 2007 (UTC)
The ketogenic diet discussed in this article is NOT comprised of 60% fats, 35% proteins and 5%, as was claimed in the introduction. The ketogenic diet should not be confused with a low carbohydrate diet or the Atkins diet. There may be some confusion among a few researchers, who seems to believe that a ketogenic diet is simply another word for a low carbohydrate diet. But the diet discussed here is one that relies on inducing a state of ketosis. Because the human body is capable of making about 0,5 gram glucose out of 1 gram of proteins, this means the above ratios may not induce ketosis. The point is therefore that both proteins and carbs should be severely restricted on this diet. This may be dangerous, yes, as is evident by the reported side-effects for children adhering to the diet (discussed in the article). I don't have time to put up references to back my claims right now, but I suppose they can be found in the references/notes for the article. Jakobat 22:45, 21 June 2007 (UTC)
I've had a go at sorting out markup for footnotes ( before & after). Also many (most) of the external links were either direct-links or indirect-mentions of single research papers; I've worked these up where possible, but should they be moved from "External links" to "References" or better still to relevent place in the artice as footnotes? David Ruben Talk 02:23, 28 December 2007 (UTC)
Thanks. I'm moving the external links (save a few) to here. Some may be useful refs; others are chaff. Colin° Talk 17:19, 28 December 2007 (UTC)
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It seems that after taking the so-called questionable links et al, there is now no mention of ketogenic diets and cancer, while previously, at least there was an indirect mention of the potential of ketogenic diets to reduce and perhaps even treat cancer... I will not even try to re-post the links, or consider writing something on ketogenic diets and cancer for article , since I believe it will be taken down... (otherwise, I would write something along the lines of the Time magazine article "Can a high-fat diet beat cancer"? <that previously existed as a pointer-link>, that mentioned the research effort at the University of Wurzburg in Germany, to treat cancer in humans, doing a limited-but-successful human trial.... Other contributions of mine to do with cancer research have been taken down from other articles in Wikipedia, "because the research was not proven enough....," and I would rather not waste my time writing content that is most likely to be redacted . regards,
Marcelo1229 (
talk)
01:36, 13 January 2008 (UTC)
Colin° Talk 22:36, 28 December 2007 (UTC)
"The diet mimics starvation by forcing the body to use fat rather than carbohydrate as an energy source." <-- this sentence is sort of POV, isn't it? It assumes the body is predisposed towards using carbohydrate as an energy source. 74.78.98.109 ( talk) 19:16, 17 January 2008 (UTC)
It is predisposed to use the easiest and most accessible form of energy available. That is glycogen from carbohydrates. It's not POV. Randomalias ( talk) 01:36, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
Seems odd to have epilepsy listed as the only contraindication when half the studies listed directly below concern how ketogenic diets can be beneficial for epileptics... Randomalias ( talk) 01:38, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
![]() | This is an archive of past discussions. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 | Archive 2 | Archive 3 | → | Archive 5 |
This page seems to have an agenda. I'm also concerned about why it was removed from cleanup with no explaination. If no one disagrees, I'm inclined to list it there again as this is not an area of expertise for me. CHL 03:43, 21 Sep 2004 (UTC)
This article seems to be totally about the attitudes towards this regimen. But there is no description of what the diet itself consists. A glaring omission, no? -- Cimon 16:38, 28 Sep 2004 (UTC)
Why is mayonnaise listed as a dairy product? -- Anchoress 13:04, 15 April 2006 (UTC)
Why no mention of the basic research that may explain how this diet actually works? There are plenty of studies out there... Maybe if I have time I will include some of them with an explanation.
MrSandman 14:59, 27 April 2006 (UTC)
I'm not expert enough in editing Wikipedia to attempt to add the reference, but re: the "reference needed" to biblical reference to fasting and epilepsy, see Mar 9:17-29 in the King James Version, which can be found at http://www.godrules.net/library/kjv/kjvmar9.htm among other locations.
(1) "The diet of the Inuit is similar to the Ketogenic diet. Typically Inuit diets contain 15-18% protein with the remainder being fat." First of all it is difficult to talk of an "inuit diet" because it today exists only to a very limited extent - most inuit eat a combination of traditional foods and modern foods. Ideally an article dealing with THE INUIT DIET should be included in wikipedia, mainly because the notion is so widespread in articles about medicine ("alternative medicine" in particular), and there are a lot of myths and faulty ideas surrounding this. As far as I know, based on older antropological experiences such as that of Vilhjalmur Stefansson, the inuit diet typically contained about 20% proteins and 80% of energy as fats. This translates in weight ratio into about 1:1,5 between proteins (+carbs) and fats, which is very different from the typical 1:3-4 ratio between carbohydrate+proteins: fats which constitutes the typical "ketogenic diet". Others have suggested the inuit diet contained approx 20-25% proteins, 75% fats and 0-5% carbohydrates (which would constitute a 1:1,3 ratio between proteins+carbs:fats). Furthermore, the body can convert an excess of proteins into carbohydrates (glucose) in a 2:1 ratio (2 gram protein translates to 1 gram glucose). Therefore inuits may enter only light ketosis, or no ketosis at all. Zero-carb diets does not necessarily involve ketosis.
(2) "Interestingly, despite the lack of numerous vitamins in this diet, Inuit do not appear to suffer deficiency diseases. In particualr vitamin C deficiency or Scurvy, is referred to as the white mans disease." - Animal foods is usually rich in vitamins. Although low in vitamin C (e.g. 10% of the RDA), the bioavailability is probably much higher, so that scurvy don't appear. If they don't eat bones (e.g. in the form of bone stock/soup, ground or eaten from small fish), the amount of calcium may be very low however. As the RDA/RDI's are based on a high carbohydrate diet which requires a different amount/type of vitamins and minerals, it is difficult to judge such a diet. Magnesium and B-vitamins are required for carbohydrate metabolism, for example.
I added a "See Also" section with a link to the "Low carb diet" page since that's what this is (although obviously the ketogenic diet invented for epilepsy predates the recent low carb craze by several decades). I'm curious, though, why there is not much attempt in the article to link this diet with the other low carb diets (Atkins is mentioned briefly but the article seems to try to imply that this diet is a completely different thing). Granted "low carb" is a controversial term but not avoiding discussing the relationship seems a significant omission (i.e. Wikipedia should be "above the controversy"). Note that Kossoff at Johns Hopkins (see the Journal of Neurology, 2003) has specifically been investigating the efficacy of Atkins on epileptic patients (as essentially an extension of the ketogenic diet work that JHMI has been doing for decades). I think this info needs to be explicitly brought out in the article. -- Mcorazao 05:04, 17 November 2006 (UTC)
That site feels spammy, but the link has been there a while. Opinions? 68.16.179.43 16:19, 13 April 2007 (UTC)
Hi was just reading this page I am studying nutrition and the link that ketogenic diets are able to control epleptic fits are a bit hazy at best and definantly not accepted by the wider medical community. Will have a look at possibly cleaning this page up in terms of presenting information that is more neutral in its view of ketogenic diets. Will also find some literature for and against ketogenic diets.
Thanks Robert Lugton -- 60.242.240.173 23:17, 20 June 2007 (UTC)
The ketogenic diet discussed in this article is NOT comprised of 60% fats, 35% proteins and 5%, as was claimed in the introduction. The ketogenic diet should not be confused with a low carbohydrate diet or the Atkins diet. There may be some confusion among a few researchers, who seems to believe that a ketogenic diet is simply another word for a low carbohydrate diet. But the diet discussed here is one that relies on inducing a state of ketosis. Because the human body is capable of making about 0,5 gram glucose out of 1 gram of proteins, this means the above ratios may not induce ketosis. The point is therefore that both proteins and carbs should be severely restricted on this diet. This may be dangerous, yes, as is evident by the reported side-effects for children adhering to the diet (discussed in the article). I don't have time to put up references to back my claims right now, but I suppose they can be found in the references/notes for the article. Jakobat 22:45, 21 June 2007 (UTC)
I've had a go at sorting out markup for footnotes ( before & after). Also many (most) of the external links were either direct-links or indirect-mentions of single research papers; I've worked these up where possible, but should they be moved from "External links" to "References" or better still to relevent place in the artice as footnotes? David Ruben Talk 02:23, 28 December 2007 (UTC)
Thanks. I'm moving the external links (save a few) to here. Some may be useful refs; others are chaff. Colin° Talk 17:19, 28 December 2007 (UTC)
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cite journal}}
: Explicit use of et al. in: |author=
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It seems that after taking the so-called questionable links et al, there is now no mention of ketogenic diets and cancer, while previously, at least there was an indirect mention of the potential of ketogenic diets to reduce and perhaps even treat cancer... I will not even try to re-post the links, or consider writing something on ketogenic diets and cancer for article , since I believe it will be taken down... (otherwise, I would write something along the lines of the Time magazine article "Can a high-fat diet beat cancer"? <that previously existed as a pointer-link>, that mentioned the research effort at the University of Wurzburg in Germany, to treat cancer in humans, doing a limited-but-successful human trial.... Other contributions of mine to do with cancer research have been taken down from other articles in Wikipedia, "because the research was not proven enough....," and I would rather not waste my time writing content that is most likely to be redacted . regards,
Marcelo1229 (
talk)
01:36, 13 January 2008 (UTC)
Colin° Talk 22:36, 28 December 2007 (UTC)
"The diet mimics starvation by forcing the body to use fat rather than carbohydrate as an energy source." <-- this sentence is sort of POV, isn't it? It assumes the body is predisposed towards using carbohydrate as an energy source. 74.78.98.109 ( talk) 19:16, 17 January 2008 (UTC)
It is predisposed to use the easiest and most accessible form of energy available. That is glycogen from carbohydrates. It's not POV. Randomalias ( talk) 01:36, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
Seems odd to have epilepsy listed as the only contraindication when half the studies listed directly below concern how ketogenic diets can be beneficial for epileptics... Randomalias ( talk) 01:38, 4 February 2008 (UTC)