The science of low carb and keto

This guide is a reference for health care professionals and those interested specifically in the detailed evidence base for low-carb and ketogenic diets. While most of the guides on this site delve deeply into one individual topic, this page focuses more on communicating the breadth, types, and findings of studies that have examined the effects of low-carb nutrition on all aspects of health.

For each topic (e.g. weight loss), we briefly describe notable features of the most relevant clinical trials, meta-analyses/systematic reviews, and sometimes observational studies (when the number of intervention trials is small or the observational findings are very strong).

At the end of each section, we link to our most relevant guides, where you can further explore each topic in greater depth.

Please note that we have tried to make our list of studies comprehensive, with some qualifications. First, with respect to meta-analyses and systematic reviews, we generally focus on the most recent five years. This type of research will include most clinical trials to date, thereby making newer reviews more comprehensive than older ones. In cases where there aren’t many reviews within the last five years, we look back over ten years.

Second, we may exclude papers that we feel are not relevant to real-world or long-term clinical management. For example, in many of our sections, we exclude short trials of just several weeks; it’s simply too difficult to extrapolate their findings to many chronic medical conditions.

Third, the volume of medical literature is constantly expanding at a rate that makes it difficult to catch every relevant study. If you think we have missed an important paper, please email the citation to bret@dietdoctor.com.

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Weight loss

Weight loss

There is little evidence in the scientific literature that decisively indicates any particular diet is superior for helping people lose weight and maintain that loss for more than two years. In fact, most people who use a diet to lose weight regain most or all of it.1 With those caveats, randomized controlled trials and meta-analyses have generally found that carbohydrate restriction outperforms or is equivalent to low-fat and other diets for weight loss, in studies that follow participants for up to two years. To the best of our knowledge, no study has ever shown a low-carb diet to be inferior to any other diet for weight loss.

Meta-analyses and systematic reviews demonstrating low-carb superiority2

International Journal of Endocrinology 2021: Comparing the efficacy and safety of low-carbohydrate diets with low-fat diets for type 2 diabetes mellitus patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials [strong evidence]

This review emphasizes the point that low-carb diets tend to lead to decreased calorie intake, even when people are allowed to eat as much as they want:

Journal of Nutritional Science 2021: Restricting carbohydrates and calories in the treatment of type 2 diabetes: a systematic review of the effectiveness of ‘low-carbohydrate’ interventions with differing energy levels [strong evidence]

Current Diabetes Reports 2021: Efficacy of ketogenic diets on type 2 diabetes: a systematic review [strong evidence]

Nutrients 2020: The effect of low-fat and low-carbohydrate diets on weight loss and lipid levels: a systematic review and meta-analysis [strong evidence]

Nutrients 2020: Impact of a ketogenic diet on metabolic parameters in patients with obesity or overweight and with or without type 2 diabetes: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials [strong evidence]

The British Journal of Nutrition 2016: Effects of low-carbohydrate diets v. low-fat diets on body weight and cardiovascular risk factors: a meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials [strong evidence] Learn more

Although the weight loss findings in this meta-analysis were mixed, very low-carb diets (under 50 grams per day) resulted in more fat loss, i.e. better body composition:

Obesity Reviews 2016: Impact of low-carbohydrate diet on body composition: meta-analysis of randomized controlled studies [strong evidence]

This review showed that, in trials specifically designed to assess weight loss, low carb beat low fat. Low fat only led to better weight loss when compared to a “usual diet”:

The Lancet 2015: Effect of low-fat diet interventions versus other diet interventions on long-term weight change in adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis [strong evidence]

PLoS One 2015: Dietary intervention for overweight and obese adults: Comparison of low-carbohydrate and low-fat diets. A meta-analysis [strong evidence] Learn more

Obesity Reviews 2012: Systematic review and meta-analysis of clinical trials of the effects of low carbohydrate diets on cardiovascular risk factors [strong evidence]

Meta-analyses and systematic reviews demonstrating low-carb equivalency3

Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2022: Low-carbohydrate versus balanced-carbohydrate diets for reducing weight and cardiovascular risk [strong evidence]

Nutrition and Dietetics 2021: Exploring the highs and lows of very low carbohydrate high fat diets on weight loss and diabetes- and cardiovascular disease-related risk markers: a systematic review [strong evidence]

BMJ 2020: Comparison of dietary macronutrient patterns of 14 popular named dietary programmes for weight and cardiovascular risk factor reduction in adults: systematic review and network meta-analysis of randomised trials [strong evidence]

This review found more weight loss for low carb at the 8-16 week timeframe, but no difference in weight loss for any other timeframe, out to 2 years:

American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2018: Effects of low-carbohydrate- compared with low-fat-diet interventions on metabolic control in people with type 2 diabetes: a systematic review including GRADE assessments [strong evidence]

European Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2018: The interpretation and effect of a low-carbohydrate diet in the management of type 2 diabetes: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials [strong evidence]

Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice 2017: Efficacy of low carbohydrate diet for type 2 diabetes mellitus management: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials [strong evidence]

RCTs demonstrating low-carb superiority

As stated earlier, there isn’t a single RCT that has shown a low-fat or any other diet to result in statistically significant, greater weight loss than low carb. In the following list of clinical trials, low-carb diets resulted in significantly more weight loss than the comparator diet(s).4

PLoS One 2020: Effect of a 90 g/day low-carbohydrate diet on glycaemic control, small, dense low-density lipoprotein and carotid intima-media thickness in type 2 diabetic patients: An 18-month randomised controlled trial [moderate evidence]

Nutrition and Metabolism 2020: Effects of weight loss during a very low carbohydrate diet on specific adipose tissue depots and insulin sensitivity in older adults with obesity: a randomized clinical trial [moderate evidence]

Nutrients 2020: The effects of a low calorie ketogenic diet on glycaemic control variables in hyperinsulinemic overweight/obese females [moderate evidence]

Nutrients 2019: Non-energy-restricted low-carbohydrate diet combined with exercise intervention improved cardiometabolic health in overweight Chinese females [moderate evidence]

Nutrition & Diabetes 2017: Twelve-month outcomes of a randomized trial of a moderate-carbohydrate versus very low-carbohydrate diet in overweight adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus or prediabetes [moderate evidence]

Applied Physiology, Nutrition, and Metabolism 2017: A 12-week low-carbohydrate, high-fat diet improves metabolic health outcomes over a control diet in a randomised controlled trial with overweight defence force personnel [moderate evidence]

Obesity (Silver Spring) 2017: PROP nontaster women lose more weight following a low-carbohydrate versus a low-fat diet in a randomized controlled trial [moderate evidence]

Journal of Medical Internet Research 2017: An online intervention comparing a very low-carbohydrate ketogenic diet and lifestyle recommendations versus a plate method diet in overweight individuals with type 2 diabetes: a randomized controlled trial [moderate evidence]

Diabetes & Metabolic Syndrome 2017: Induced and controlled dietary ketosis as a regulator of obesity and metabolic syndrome pathologies [moderate evidence]

Clinical Nutrition 2017: A randomized controlled trial of 130 g/day low-carbohydrate diet in type 2 diabetes with poor glycemic control [moderate evidence]

Nutrition and Diabetes 2017: Short-term safety, tolerability and efficacy of a very low-calorie-ketogenic diet interventional weight loss program versus hypocaloric diet in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus [moderate evidence]

The Journal of Nutrition 2015: A lower-carbohydrate, higher-fat diet reduces abdominal and intermuscular fat and increases insulin sensitivity in adults at risk of type 2 diabet [moderate evidence]

In this one-year study, 148 people were randomized to consume a low-carb diet (less than 40 grams of carbohydrate per day) or a low-fat diet (less than 30% of energy from fat per day). In addition to losing 3.5 kg (7.7 lbs) more than the low-fat group, the low-carb group also had greater improvements in high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, triglycerides (TG), and other cardiovascular disease risk factors:

Annals of Internal Medicine 2014: Effects of low-carbohydrate and low-fat diets: a randomized trial [moderate evidence] 

PloS One 2014: A randomized pilot trial of a moderate carbohydrate diet compared to a very low carbohydrate diet in overweight or obese individuals with type 2 diabetes mellitus or prediabetes [moderate evidence]

Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism 2012: Metabolic impact of a ketogenic diet compared to a hypocaloric diet in obese children and adolescents [moderate evidence]

Obesity (Silver Spring) 2011: Adiponectin changes in relation to the macronutrient composition of a weight-loss diet [moderate evidence]

The Journal of Pediatrics 2010: Efficacy and safety of a high protein, low carbohydrate diet for weight loss in severely obese adolescents [moderate evidence]

Lipids 2009: Carbohydrate restriction has a more favorable impact on the metabolic syndrome than a low fat diet [moderate evidence]

Obesity 2009: Effects of a low carbohydrate weight loss diet on exercise capacity and tolerance in obese subjects [moderate evidence]

In this two-year trial, 322 people were randomly assigned to follow a Mediterranean, low-fat, or low-carb diet. The low-carb group lost the most weight, even though they were allowed to eat until satisfied; the other two groups followed calorie-restricted diets:

New England Journal of Medicine 2008: Weight loss with a low-carbohydrate, Mediterranean, or low-fat diet [moderate evidence]

The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2008: Effects of weight loss from a very-low-carbohydrate diet on endothelial function and markers of cardiovascular disease risk in subjects with abdominal obesity [moderate evidence]

Nutrition & Metabolism 2008: The effect of a low-carbohydrate, ketogenic diet versus a low-glycemic-index diet on glycemic control in type 2 diabetes mellitus [moderate evidence]

Diabetic Medicine 2007: A low-carbohydrate diet is more effective in reducing body weight than healthy eating in both diabetic and non-diabetic subjects [moderate evidence]

American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2007: Low- and high-carbohydrate weight-loss diets have similar effects on mood [moderate evidence]

One of the best-known weight-loss trials (often referred to as the A to Z study) randomized overweight premenopausal women to a low-carb (Atkins); moderate-carb (Zone); low-fat (Ornish); or low-calorie, portion-controlled (LEARN) diet for one year. The women in the low-carb group lost twice as much weight (4.7 kg, or 10.3 lbs) as the Ornish and LEARN groups and nearly three times as much as the women in the Zone group:

Journal of the American Medical Association 2007: Comparison of the Atkins, Zone, Ornish, and LEARN diets for change in weight and related risk factors among overweight premenopausal women. The A to Z weight loss study: a randomized trial [moderate evidence]

Diabetic Medicine 2006: Short-term effects of severe dietary carbohydrate-restriction advice in Type 2 diabetes–a randomized controlled trial [moderate evidence]

Journal of the American Dietetic Association 2005: Perceived hunger is lower and weight loss is greater in overweight premenopausal women consuming a low-carbohydrate/high-protein vs high carbohydrate/low-fat diet [moderate evidence]

Diabetologia 2005: Comparison of high-fat and high-protein diets with high-carbohydrate diet in insulin-resistant obese women [moderate evidence]

The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism 2005: The role of energy expenditure in the differential weight loss in obese women on low-fat and low-carbohydrate diets [moderate evidence]

Archives of Internal Medicine 2004: The national cholesterol education program diet vs a diet lower in carbohydrates and higher in protein and monounsaturated fat. A randomized trial [moderate evidence]

Nutrition & Metabolism 2004: Comparison of energy-restricted very low-carbohydrate and low-fat diets on weight loss and body composition in overweight men and women [moderate evidence]

Annals of Internal Medicine 2004: A low-carbohydrate, ketogenic diet versus a low-fat diet to treat obesity and hyperlipidemia. A randomized, controlled trial [moderate evidence]

The Journal of Nutrition 2004: Very low-carbohydrate and low-fat diets affect fasting lipids and postprandial lipemia differently in overweight men [moderate evidence]

The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 2003: A randomized trial comparing a very low carbohydrate diet and a calorie-restricted low fat diet on body weight and cardiovascular risk factors in healthy women [moderate evidence]

The New England Journal of Medicine 2003: A low-carbohydrate as compared with a low-fat diet in severe obesity [moderate evidence]

The Journal of Pediatrics 2003: Effects of a low-carbohydrate diet on weight loss and cardiovascular risk factor in overweight adolescents [moderate evidence]

RCTs demonstrating low-carb equivalency

European Journal of Nutrition 2021: Effects of very low-carbohydrate vs. high-carbohydrate weight loss diets on psychological health in adults with obesity and type 2 diabetes: a 2-year randomized controlled trial [moderate evidence]

Diabetes, Obesity, and Metabolism 2018: Effects of an energy-restricted low-carbohydrate, high unsaturated fat/low saturated fat diet versus a high-carbohydrate, low-fat diet in type 2 diabetes: A 2-year randomized clinical trial [moderate evidence]

This 12-month study found that people who followed a low-carb or low-fat diet (both with low amounts of sugar or processed carbohydrates) lost similar amounts of weight, regardless of whether the diet “matched” their genetic predisposition to metabolize fats or carbs more effectively:

Journal of the American Medical Association 2018: Effect of low-fat vs low-carbohydrate diet on 12-month weight loss in overweight adults and the association with genotype pattern or insulin secretion: the DIETFITS randomized clinical trial [moderate evidence]

American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2017: Dynamics of intrapericardial and extrapericardial fat tissues during long-term, dietary-induced, moderate weight loss [moderate evidence]

American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2017: Visceral adiposity and metabolic syndrome after very high-fat and low-fat isocaloric diets: a randomized controlled trial [moderate evidence]

Obesity 2016: Weight loss on low-fat vs. low-carbohydrate diets by insulin resistance status among overweight adults and adults with obesity: A randomized pilot trial [moderate evidence]

In this one-year trial of people with type 2 diabetes, both low-carbohydrate and high-carbohydrate diets led to similar weight loss of about 10 kg (22 pounds):

The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2015: Comparison of low- and high-carbohydrate diets for type 2 diabetes management: a randomized trial [moderate evidence]

Diabetes/Metabolism Research and Reviews 2012: Evaluation of weight loss and adipocytokines levels after two hypocaloric diets with different macronutrient distribution in obese subjects with rs9939609 gene variant [moderate evidence]

Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism 2012: Metabolic impact of a ketogenic diet compared to a hypocaloric diet in obese children and adolescents [moderate evidence]

Nutrition, Metabolism, and Cardiovascular Diseases 2010: Long-term effects of a low carbohydrate, low fat or high unsaturated fat diet compared to a no-intervention control [moderate evidence]

Interestingly, two years before the A to Z study showed that low carb was clearly more effective for weight loss than other diets, a similar study found that weight loss was roughly the same after one year for each of the four diets studied: low-carb, low-fat, Weight Watchers, or Zone:

Journal of the American Medical Association 2005: Comparison of the Atkins, Ornish, Weight Watchers, and Zone Diets for weight loss and heart disease risk reduction [moderate evidence]

There are many more RCTs showing low-carb to be equivalent to other dietary strategies. The UK Public Health Collaboration website does a great job of collating these trials.

Learn more

How to lose weight

A low-carb diet for beginners

A keto diet for beginners

Protein on a low-carb or keto diet

High-protein diet: what it is and how to do it

What is healthy weight loss?

How to measure healthy weight loss

Low-carb videos

Weight loss

How do low-carb diets work for weight loss? Learn more below.


 

Metabolic risk factors

Low-carb diets can improve all the main features of metabolic syndrome: abdominal obesity, high blood sugar, high blood pressure (BP), low HDL-cholesterol, and high triglycerides (TG). Given that these metabolic risk factors are strongly linked to chronic diseases like type 2 diabetes, heart disease, stroke, dementia, and cancer, low-carb nutrition should be considered an important preventive tool.5

Meta-analyses6

All meta-analyses of RCTs have found that low-carb diets are either superior or equivalent to low-fat diets for improving all the metabolic risk factors listed above. With respect to LDL-cholesterol, some meta-analyses have found low carb to be equivalent to low fat, while others have found that low fat does a better job of lowering LDL.7

This meta-analysis of 8 RCTs found that a very low-carb ketogenic diet was superior for raising HDL and lowering TG:

Nutrition Reviews 2022: Effect of a very low-carbohydrate ketogenic diet vs recommended diets in patients with type 2 diabetes: a meta-analysis [strong evidence]

Unlike most earlier meta-analyses that tend to favor low carb, this systematic review of 61 RCTs found that there is likely no difference between low-carb and balanced-carb diets on cardiovascular risk markers, with up to two years of dietary intervention:

Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2022: Low-carbohydrate versus balanced-carbohydrate diets for reducing weight and cardiovascular risk [strong evidence]

This included 11 RCTs, finding that low carb was better at raising HDL, while the two diets performed the same for reducing LDL:

European Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2022: The effects of low-fat, high-carbohydrate diets vs. low-carbohydrate, high-fat diets on weight, blood pressure, serum lipids and blood glucose: a systematic review and meta-analysis [strong evidence]

This included 12 RCTs, finding that low carb was superior for lowering TG and increasing HDL:

International Journal of Endocrinology 2021: Comparing the efficacy and safety of low-carbohydrate diets with low-fat diets for type 2 diabetes mellitus patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials [strong evidence]

This unique meta-analysis included 38 RCTs and found that low-carb diets increased peak LDL particle size and reduced LDL particle number; part of low carb’s ability to shift LDL size from small to large was attributable to differences in weight loss between the diets. However, there was no statistically significant effect of low carb on mean LDL particle size:

American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2021: Effect of carbohydrate-restricted dietary interventions on LDL particle size and number in adults in the context of weight loss or weight maintenance: a systematic review and meta-analysis [strong evidence]

This systematic review included 8 RCTs, finding that low carb more effectively lowered TG and raised HDL, while low fat was better at lowering LDL:

Nutrition and Dietetics 2021: Exploring the highs and lows of very low carbohydrate high fat diets on weight loss and diabetes- and cardiovascular disease-related risk markers: a systematic review [strong evidence]

This included 38 RCTs, finding low carb to be better at reducing TG and raising HDL, while low fat was better at reducing LDL:

Nutrients 2020: The effect of low-fat and low-carbohydrate diets on weight loss and lipid levels: a systematic review and meta-analysis [strong evidence]

This included 14 RCTs, finding that ketogenic diets were better at reducing TG and raising HDL compared to low-fat diets:

Nutrients 2020: Impact of a ketogenic diet on metabolic parameters in patients with obesity or overweight and with or without type 2 diabetes: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials [strong evidence]

This included 12 RCTs and found low-carb diets led to a decrease in TG and BP, with an increase in HDL and LDL:

PLoS One 2020: The effects of low-carbohydrate diets on cardiovascular risk factors: A meta-analysis [strong evidence]

This included 8 RCTs, finding that low carb was better than low fat for raising HDL and lowering TG, without significantly raising LDL:

Nutrition Reviews 2019: Effects of carbohydrate-restricted diets on low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels in overweight and obese adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis [strong evidence]

This included 18 RCTs and found that low carb was better for reducing HbA1c, TG, and systolic BP, while raising HDL, with no effect on LDL:

European Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2017: The interpretation and effect of a low-carbohydrate diet in the management of type 2 diabetes: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials [strong evidence]

This included 11 RCTs, finding that low-carb diets led to greater weight loss, lower TG, and higher HDL compared to low-fat diets. LDL, however, increased on low carb:

British Journal of Nutrition 2016: Effects of low-carbohydrate diets v. low-fat diets on body weight and cardiovascular risk factors: a meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials
[strong evidence]

This included 17 trials of low carb vs. low fat and found that low carb led to lower TG and higher HDL, but also higher LDL:

PLoS One 2015: Dietary Intervention for Overweight and Obese Adults: Comparison of Low-Carbohydrate and Low-Fat Diets. A Meta-Analysis [strong evidence]

This included 13 RCTs, finding low carb to be better than low fat for increasing HDL and reducing TG and systolic BP. Interestingly, there was a higher attrition rate in the low-fat group, suggesting a patient preference for low-carb/high-protein over low-fat/high-carb:

Obesity Reviews 2009: Systematic review of randomized controlled trials of low-carbohydrate vs. low-fat/low-calorie diets in the management of obesity and its comorbidities [strong evidence]

This included 5 RCTs of low-carb vs. low-fat diets, finding that low carb was superior for raising HDL and lowering TG, while low fat was superior for lowering LDL:

Archives of Internal Medicine 2006: Effects of low-carbohydrate vs low-fat diets on weight loss and cardiovascular risk factors: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials [strong evidence]

Randomized controlled trials

This RCT showed that low carb better reduced HgbA1c, with no differential effect on lipids between groups:

Diabetes, Obesity, and Metabolism 2022: Effects of a 6-month, low-carbohydrate diet on glycaemic control, body composition, and cardiovascular risk factors in patients with type 2 diabetes: An open-label randomized controlled trial [moderate evidence]

This RCT kept protein constant across the three study groups and showed improvements in TG, HDL, and Lp(a) with low carb/high fat:

American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2022: Effects of a low-carbohydrate diet on insulin-resistant dyslipoproteinemia — a randomized controlled feeding trial [moderate evidence]

This 18-month trial found low carb was better at reducing HgbA1c and blood pressure, but there was no difference in lipids:

PLos One 2020: Effect of a 90 g/day low-carbohydrate diet on glycaemic control, small, dense low-density lipoprotein and carotid intima-media thickness in type 2 diabetic patients: An 18-month randomised controlled trial [moderate evidence]

This trial was designed to keep weight stable, to remove it as a variable. Low carb was still better at lowering TG, increasing HDL, and shifting LDL size from small to large. Despite being 2.5x higher in saturated fat, the low-carb diet actually reduced plasma levels of saturated fat:

JCI Insight 2019: Dietary carbohydrate restriction improves metabolic syndrome independent of weight loss [randomized trial; moderate evidence]

DIETFITS study compared 30% carb vs 48% carbs. The low-carb group had a greater reduction in TG and increase in HDL:

JAMA 2018: Effect of Low-Fat vs Low-Carbohydrate Diet on 12-Month Weight Loss in Overweight Adults and the Association With Genotype Pattern or Insulin Secretion: The DIETFITS Randomized Clinical Trial [moderate evidence]

This was a 12 month RCT of a low-carb diet (20-50g carbs) vs a diet with 45-50% carbs. Low carb showed TG decreased 10mg/dl, compared to an increase in control, and HDL was also better for low carb:

Nutrition and Diabetes 2017: Twelve-month outcomes of a randomized trial of a moderate-carbohydrate versus very low-carbohydrate diet in overweight adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus or prediabetes [moderate evidence]

This trial compared 14% carbs vs 53% carbs. Low carb was better for glycemic variability, TG reduction and HDL increase:

American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2015: Comparison of low- and high-carbohydrate diets for type 2 diabetes management: a randomized trial [moderate evidence]

This RCT compared a diet of <40g carbs to a low-fat diet with <30% fat. Low carb was better for TG and HDL: Annals of Internal Medicine 2014: Effects of low-carbohydrate and low-fat diets: a randomized trial [moderate evidence]

This RCT compared a diet with 57g of carbs vs 138g. Greater carb reduction improved TG, glucose and insulin levels:

PLoS One 2014: A randomized pilot trial of a moderate carbohydrate diet compared to a very low carbohydrate diet in overweight or obese individuals with type 2 diabetes mellitus or prediabetes [moderate evidence]

This RCT compared calorie restriction vs low carb. Low carb was better for A1c and TG:

Internal Medicine 2014: A non-calorie-restricted low-carbohydrate diet is effective as an alternative therapy for patients with type 2 diabetes [randomized trial; moderate evidence]

This trial compared 40g carbs vs 200g. Low carb was better for TG, HDL, and systolic BP:

Metabolism 2013: Consuming a hypocaloric high fat low carbohydrate diet for 12 weeks lowers C-reactive protein, and raises serum adiponectin and high density lipoprotein-cholesterol in obese subjects [randomized trial; moderate evidence]

The graphic below is a visual representation of the findings from RCTs from 2003 – 2018.

The blue (low-carb) or red (low-fat) squares signify a statistically significant advantage in improving the indicated risk factor. The pale blue or red squares signify a non-significant trend toward low carb or low fat being better.

Studies-on-low-carb
LC %kh = Percent carbohydrate intake in the low-carb group
LF %kh = Percent carbohydrate intake in the low-fat group
HDL = High density lipoprotein
TG = Triglycerides
BP = Blood pressure
A1c = HbA1c
fGluc = Fasting glucose
fIns = Fasting insulin level
InsSens = Insulin sensitivity
TC = Total cholesterol
LDL = Low density lipoprotein

Links to references from the graphic

Brehm -03, Foster -03, Samaha -03, Sondike -03, Aude -04, Volek -04, Meckling -04, Yancy -04, Stern -04, McAuley -05, Nickols-R -05, Dansinger -05, Daly -06, Truby -06, Gardner -07, Ebbeling -07, Halyburton -07, Dyson -07, Westman -08, Keogh -08, Shai -08, Tay -08, Davis -09, Bradley -09, Volek -09, Sacks -09, Brinkworth -09, Jenkins -09, Frisch -09, Elhayany -10, Iqbal -10, Lim -10, Hernandez -10, Yancy -10, Foster -10, Krebs -10, Goldstein -11, Summer -11, Guldbrand -12, Partsalaki -12, Ruth -13, Yamada -14, Saslow -14, Bazzano -14, Tay -15, Saslow -17, Gardner -18.

Learn more

How to normalize your blood pressure naturally

Cholesterol and low-carb diets

Is elevated LDL cholesterol harmful?

Low-carb LDL hyper-responders

How to treat insulin resistance

How to improve and measure your body composition

 


 

Heart disease

Saturated fat

Low-carbohydrate and ketogenic diets usually contain more saturated fat than the typical low-fat diet that has been recommended for decades. This has led many to express concern that low-carb diets might increase the risk of heart attacks and other forms of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.

But when we look critically for evidence of a causal link between saturated fat and heart disease, we find weak and inconsistent data. Although some reviews of the overall medical literature have found a weak correlation, an increasing number of meta-analyses and systematic reviews of randomized trials are finding that there is no significant connection between saturated fat and heart disease.

The authors of one review article concluded: “The preponderance of evidence indicates that low-fat diets that reduce serum cholesterol do not reduce cardiovascular events or mortality. Specifically, diets that replace saturated fat with polyunsaturated fat do not convincingly reduce cardiovascular events or mortality. These conclusions stand in contrast to current opinion.”8

Another review of the evidence linking saturated fat to heart disease, written by four prominent experts, noted that when any fat — including saturated fat – replaces carbohydrate in the diet, there is improvement in important lipid markers related to risk of heart disease.9

As a result, some world experts have been calling for a shift in focus – away from restricting total saturated fat intake – and towards the quality of food that we eat, recognizing that natural saturated fats in whole foods like meat, fish, and dairy are likely to behave differently in the body when compared to the fats found in pastries and processed foods.10

Meta-analyses of RCTs11

A 2020 Cochrane review of RCTs showed a modest reduction in cardiovascular events for lower saturated fat intake. But it found no benefit to lowering saturated fat intake for heart attack, stroke, cardiovascular death, or all-cause death:12

Cochrane Database of Systemic Reviews 2020: Reduction in saturated fat intake for cardiovascular disease [systematic review of randomized trials; strong evidence]

The following four meta-analyses of RCTs found no reduction in heart disease risk as a result of replacing saturated fats with unsaturated fats. The first one specifically noted that earlier meta-analyses that found an effect did so because they included inadequately controlled trials:

Nutrition Journal 2017: The effect of replacing saturated fat with mostly n-6 polyunsaturated fat on coronary heart disease: a meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials [strong evidence]

Open Heart 2016: Evidence from randomised controlled trials does not support current dietary fat guidelines: a systematic review and meta-analysis [strong evidence]

Annals of Internal Medicine 2014: Association of dietary, circulating, and supplement fatty acids with coronary risk: a systematic review and meta-analysis [strong evidence for the RCT portion of this meta-analysis]

British Medical Journal 2013: Dietary fatty acids in the secondary prevention of coronary heart disease: a systematic review, meta-analysis and meta-regression [strong evidence]

This review found that reducing or modifying dietary fat intake reduced the risk of heart attack and other cardiovascular events by 14 percent. The reduction in risk was seen only in studies of at least two years duration and only in men; there was no effect on total or heart disease mortality:

Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2011: Reduced or modified dietary fat for preventing cardiovascular disease [meta-analysis of RCTs; strong evidence]

This review found that substituting polyunsaturated fats for saturated fats led to a 19 percent reduction in coronary events:

PloS Med 2010: Effects on coronary heart disease of increasing polyunsaturated fat in place of saturated fat: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials [strong evidence]

Meta-analyses of observational studies

Remember that observational studies cannot prove causality, and any associations they do find may be confounded by a myriad of measured and unmeasured variables. Therefore, unless the relative risk of a finding is greater than 2, we consider this very weak evidence.

This review found that “[d]iets high in saturated fat were associated with higher mortality from all-causes, CVD, and cancer, whereas diets high in polyunsaturated fat were associated with lower mortality from all-causes, CVD, and cancer.” But the relative risks were tiny, on average about 1.05:

Clinical Nutrition 2021: Association between dietary fat intake and mortality from all-causes, cardiovascular disease, and cancer: a systematic review and meta-analysis of prospective cohort studies [very weak evidence]

This meta-analysis found that, among all types of dietary fat, only trans fatty acids were associated with the risk of cardiovascular disease. Polyunsaturated fats were found to be cardioprotective only in studies that followed subjects for more than ten years:

Lipids in Health and Disease 2019: Dietary total fat, fatty acids intake, and risk of cardiovascular disease: a dose-response meta-analysis of cohort studies [very weak evidence]

These two meta-analyses of observational studies reached the same conclusion about the lack of association between saturated fat and heart disease:

British Journal of Sports Medicine 2017: Evidence from prospective cohort studies does not support current dietary fat guidelines: a systematic review and meta-analysis [very weak evidence]

British Medical Journal 2015: Intake of saturated and trans unsaturated fatty acids and risk of all cause mortality, cardiovascular disease, and type 2 diabetes: systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies [very weak evidence]

This systematic review concluded that “…observational evidence does not support the hypothesis that dairy fat or high-fat dairy foods contribute to obesity or cardiometabolic risk…”:

European Journal of Nutrition 2012: The relationship between high-fat dairy consumption and obesity, cardiovascular, and metabolic disease [very weak evidence]

Similarly, a 2010 review of cohort studies found “…no significant evidence for concluding that dietary saturated fat is associated with an increased risk of CHD or CVD…”:

The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2010: Meta-analysis of prospective cohort studies evaluating the association of saturated fat with cardiovascular disease [very weak evidence]

This review also found that saturated fat did not correlate with heart disease risk:

Archives of Internal Medicine 2009: A systematic review of the evidence supporting a causal link between dietary factors and coronary heart disease [very weak evidence]

Randomized controlled trials of hard endpoints

Following are some of the largest and longest clinical trials that have examined the link between dietary fat and heart disease, stroke, and death.

In the Women’s Health Initiative trial, the group randomized to a low-fat diet did not show a reduction in heart attacks or strokes:

JAMA 2006: Low-fat dietary pattern and risk of cardiovascular disease: the Women’s Health Initiative randomized controlled dietary modification trial [moderate evidence]

In the Minnesota Coronary Survey, participants were randomized to one of two diets that had the same percentage of total fat. The control diet had more saturated fat, while the intervention diet had more polyunsaturated fat. While cholesterol levels fell lower in the intervention group, there were no differences between groups in cardiovascular events, cardiovascular mortality, or total mortality:

Arteriosclerosis 1989: Test of effect of lipid lowering by diet on cardiovascular risk. The Minnesota Coronary Survey [randomized controlled trial; moderate evidence]

In the Multifactor Primary Prevention Trial in Sweden, both the intervention group and the control group showed improvements in risk factors such as blood pressure, lipids, and smoking. There were no differences in heart events, strokes, or mortality of any kind:

European Heart Journal 1986: The multifactor primary prevention trial in Göteborg, Sweden [randomized controlled trial; moderate evidence]

The Helsinki Businessmen Study was originally designed as a 5-year intervention trial, but it has continued as a prospective observational study and continues to report on the original study subjects. At the end of the 5-year trial, the intervention group (diet counseling + lipid/BP lowering) showed a decreased risk of stroke but an increased risk of heart disease, as compared to the control group (no treatment at all). Over the long term, the intervention group has been shown to have increased total and cardiovascular mortality:13

JAMA 1985: Multifactorial primary prevention of cardiovascular diseases in middle-aged men. Risk factor changes, incidence, and mortality [randomized controlled trial; moderate evidence]

The MRFIT trial enrolled men at high risk for a first cardiac event. The intervention group received more than just dietary advice; they also received focused attention to their blood pressure and smoking habits. There was no difference between the groups with respect to cardiovascular or total mortality:

JAMA 1982: Multiple risk factor intervention trial. Risk factor changes and mortality results. Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial Research Group [randomized controlled trial; moderate evidence]

In the LA Veterans Trial, the intervention group received a diet that was higher in vegetable oil (unsaturated fat), and they did show a reduction in cardiovascular mortality, compared to the control group eating more saturated fat in the form of dairy. But the intervention group also showed increased mortality due to cancer. Further, the control group contained more heavy smokers, and many meals were eaten outside the institution where the men lived:

Circulation 1969: A controlled clinical trial of a diet high in unsaturated fat in preventing complications of atherosclerosis [moderate evidence]

The Medical Research Council of London’s study found that men with a prior heart attack, randomized to a low-saturated fat diet with soybean oil or their regular diet, showed no difference in future heart attacks, cardiovascular mortality, or total mortality:

Lancet 1968: Controlled trial of soya-bean oil in myocardial infarction [moderate evidence]

In the Oslo Diet-Heart study, men who had previously had a heart attack were randomized to a low-fat or control diet. Men in the low-fat group reduced their cholesterol and showed a reduction in both non-fatal and fatal heart attacks:

Acta Medica Scandinavica Supplementum 1966: The effect of plasma cholesterol lowering diet in male survivors of myocardial infarction. A controlled clinical trial [moderate evidence]

Randomized controlled trials of surrogate endpoints

It is significantly more challenging to study hard endpoints like heart attacks, strokes, and death, as compared to surrogate endpoints like the amount of plaque in arteries. Hard endpoint studies, like the ones in the section above, require larger numbers of people and longer periods of time. That said, some surrogate endpoints may be better than others at predicting hard endpoints. Following are a few trials that examined such endpoints.

This trial showed no difference in carotid IMT between a low-carb diet and a traditional diabetes diet for those with type 2 diabetes:

PLos One 2020: Effect of a 90 g/day low-carbohydrate diet on glycaemic control, small, dense low-density lipoprotein and carotid intima-media thickness in type 2 diabetic patients: An 18-month randomised controlled trial [moderate evidence]

This trial found that there was no change in vascular endothelial function, whether randomized to a low-carb, low-saturated fat diet or a high-carb, low-fat diet:

Atherosclerosis 2016: Long-term effects of weight loss with a very-low carbohydrate, low saturated fat diet on flow mediated dilatation in patients with type 2 diabetes: A randomised controlled trial [moderate evidence]

This RCT tracked signs of carotid atherosclerosis during two years of advice to eat a low-carb, high-fat diet; low-fat diet; or Mediterranean diet. There was significant regression of carotid vessel wall volume seen in all three diet groups, implying a reduction of atherosclerosis. One possible explanation, according to the researchers, weight loss-induced reduction in blood pressure resulting from the diets:

Circulation 2010: Dietary intervention to reverse carotid atherosclerosis [moderate evidence]

This trial found that a low-fat diet was better than a low-carb diet for improving vascular endothelial function in obese subjects. Unfortunately, this small study had 8 dropouts in the low-carb group vs none in the low-fat group. In addition, the subjects in the low-carb group skewed younger and male, potentially affecting the results.14

Hypertension 2008: Benefit of low-fat over low-carbohydrate diet on endothelial health in obesity [moderate evidence]

Learn more

A user guide to saturated fat

Vegetable oils: Are they healthy?

“Healthy” whole grains: What the evidence really shows

Cholesterol and low-carb diets

Is elevated LDL cholesterol harmful?

Low-carb LDL hyper-responders

Guide to red meat: Is it healthy?

The Nutrition Coalition: The disputed science on saturated fats

Low-carb videos

Fats, cholesterol and dietary guidelines

What’s wrong with our current carb-heavy official dietary recommendations, and their fear of natural saturated fats? Learn more below.


 

Type 2 diabetes

In 2019, the American Diabetes Association (ADA) stated that reducing carbohydrate intake is the most effective nutritional strategy for improving blood sugar control in those with diabetes.15

This statement is based on numerous randomized controlled trials and meta-analyses of such trials supporting the use of a low-carb diet in the treatment of type 2 diabetes.

Meta-analyses

Nutrition Reviews 2022: Effect of a very low-carbohydrate ketogenic diet vs recommended diets in patients with type 2 diabetes: a meta-analysis [strong evidence]

International Journal of Endocrinology 2021: Comparing the efficacy and safety of low-carbohydrate diets with low-fat diets for type 2 diabetes mellitus patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials [strong evidence]

Journal of Nutritional Science 2021: Restricting carbohydrates and calories in the treatment of type 2 diabetes: a systematic review of the effectiveness of ‘low-carbohydrate’ interventions with differing energy levels [strong evidence]

The following paper found that low carb shows significant benefit at 6 months that disappears by 12 months. However, even meta-analyses of RCTs can have issues with scientific quality as we explained in our post about this publication:

BMJ 2021: Efficacy and safety of low and very low carbohydrate diets for type 2 diabetes remission: systematic review and meta-analysis of published and unpublished randomized trial data [strong evidence]

Nutrients 2020: Impact of a ketogenic diet on metabolic parameters in patients with obesity or overweight and with or without type 2 diabetes: A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials [strong evidence]

Diabetes, Obesity & Metabolism 2019: An evidence‐based approach to developing low‐carbohydrate diets for type 2 diabetes management: a systematic review of interventions and methods [strong evidence]

Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice 2018: Effect of dietary carbohydrate restriction on glycemic control in adults with diabetes: A systematic review and meta-analysis [strong evidence]

The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2018: Effects of low-carbohydrate- compared with low-fat-diet interventions on metabolic control in people with type 2 diabetes: a systematic review including GRADE assessments [strong evidence]

BMJ Open Diabetes Research and Care 2017: Systematic review and meta-analysis of dietary carbohydrate restriction in patients with type 2 diabetes [strong evidence]

European Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2017: The interpretation and effect of a low-carbohydrate diet in the management of type 2 diabetes: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials [strong evidence]

Randomized controlled trials

The following RCTs demonstrate the benefits of low-carbohydrate diets in people with type 2 diabetes.

Diabetes, Obesity, and Metabolism 2022: Effects of a 6-month, low-carbohydrate diet on glycaemic control, body composition, and cardiovascular risk factors in patients with type 2 diabetes: An open-label randomized controlled trial [moderate evidence]

PLos One 2021: Safety and efficacy of very low carbohydrate diet in patients with diabetic kidney disease — a randomized controlled trial [moderate evidence]

Frontiers in Endocrinology 2021: A low-carbohydrate diet realizes medication withdrawal: a possible opportunity for effective glycemic control [randomized controlled trial; moderate evidence]

PLos One 2020: Effect of a 90 g/day low-carbohydrate diet on glycaemic control, small, dense low-density lipoprotein and carotid intima-media thickness in type 2 diabetic patients: An 18-month randomised controlled trial [moderate evidence]

Nutrients 2018: The effect of low-carbohydrate diet on glycemic control in patients with type 2 diabetes [randomized controlled trial; moderate evidence]

Nutrition & Diabetes 2017: Twelve-month outcomes of a randomized trial of a moderate-carbohydrate versus very low-carbohydrate diet in overweight adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus or prediabetes [moderate evidence]

Diabetes Care 2014: A very low-carbohydrate, low–saturated fat diet for type 2 diabetes management: a randomized trial [moderate evidence]

Nutrition & Metabolism 2008: The effect of a low-carbohydrate, ketogenic diet versus a low-glycemic index diet on glycemic control in type 2 diabetes mellitus [randomized controlled trial; moderate evidence]

Non-randomized trials

Although randomized controlled trials represent a stronger level of evidence, there are a few notable non-randomized studies on this subject.

A study of a ketogenic, low-carbohydrate diet performed by Virta Health and involving about 330 people with diabetes found that, at the one-year mark, 97 percent of the participants had reduced or stopped their insulin use. Furthermore, 58 percent no longer met the criteria for a diagnosis of diabetes; in other words, they had reversed their disease.16

Frontiers in Endocrinology 2019: Long-term effects of a novel continuous remote care intervention including nutritional ketosis for the management of type 2 diabetes: A 2-year non-randomized clinical trial [weak evidence]

Diabetes Therapy 2018: Effectiveness and safety of a novel care model for the management of type 2 diabetes at 1 year: an open-label, non-randomized, controlled study [weak evidence]

The longest published study on low carb for type 2 diabetes is a non-randomized intervention trial that compared a 20% carbohydrate diet (daily intake of carbohydrate was 80-90 grams) to usual care. Although the study was quite small, with only 23 participants in the final low-carb group, a follow-up assessment at 44 months showed continued improvement in HbA1c, weight, and reduction of diabetes medications:

Nutrition & Metabolism 2008: Low-carbohydrate diet in type 2 diabetes: stable improvement of bodyweight and glycemic control during 44 months follow-up [retrospective follow-up of non-randomized study; very weak evidence]

Prediabetes

A two-year nonrandomized trial of a ketogenic diet run by Virta Health demonstrated blood sugar normalization in over 50% of participants with prediabetes.

Nutrients 2021: Type 2 Diabetes Prevention Focused on Normalization of Glycemia: A Two-Year Pilot Study [nonrandomized study, weak evidence]

Learn more

How to reverse your type 2 diabetes

Starting low carb or keto with diabetes medications

Low-carb videos

Type 2 diabetes

To learn more about type 2 diabetes and low carb, have a look at one of these videos.


 

Type 1 diabetes

Compared with the robust evidence base supporting low-carb and ketogenic diets for type 2 diabetes, research on carb restriction for type 1 diabetes is greatly lacking. Although low carb and keto are still considered controversial in the management of type 1 diabetes, the results from some existing studies are encouraging.

Meta-analyses

To date, there is only one systematic review examining low-carbohydrate diets in type 1 diabetes. Only nine studies qualified for inclusion in the review, and only two of those were RCTs. Because of the heterogeneity of the studies, no firm conclusions could be drawn about the utility and safety of low-carb diets in type 1 diabetes. The authors concluded that there is an urgent need for randomized controlled trials in this area:

PLOS One 2018: Low-carbohydrate diets for type 1 diabetes mellitus: a systematic review [weak evidence]17

Randomized controlled trials

Controlled studies have shown that people with type 1 diabetes who limit carbs to 50 to 100 grams per day experience more stable blood sugar and fewer episodes of hypoglycemia compared to people with type 1 who eat higher-carb diets — with a bonus of increased weight loss in those who are overweight:

Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism 2021: The beneficial short-term effects of a high-protein/low-carbohydrate diet on glycaemic control assessed by continuous glucose monitoring in patients with type 1 diabetes [randomized controlled trial; moderate evidence]

Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism 2019: Low versus high carbohydrate diet in type 1 diabetes: a 12-week randomized open-label crossover study [moderate evidence]
Learn more 

Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism 2017: Short-term effects of a low-carbohydrate diet on glycaemic variables and cardiovascular risk markers in patients with type 1 diabetes: a randomized open-label crossover trial [moderate evidence]

Asia Pacific Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2016: A randomised trial of the feasibility of a low-carbohydrate diet vs standard carbohydrate counting in adults with type 1 diabetes taking body weight into account [moderate evidence]

Non-controlled and observational studies

Some non-controlled and observational studies, while considered weak and very weak evidence, respectively, demonstrate excellent “real world” results for people with type 1 diabetes who follow a low-carbohydrate diet.

This observational study reported results from a survey completed by 316 people with type 1 diabetes or parents of children with type 1 diabetes who consumed roughly 30 grams of carbs per day. The group reported exceptional blood glucose control with infrequent hypoglycemic episodes and an average HbA1c of 5.67% (39 mmol/mol). Children who followed a carbohydrate-reduced diet did not show any signs of impaired growth, although the duration of time on diet was short (1.2 +/- 0.8 years):
Learn more

Pediatrics 2018: Management of type 1 diabetes with a very low–carbohydrate diet [survey data; very weak evidence]

In addition, a group of Swedish doctors reported that their patients with type 1 diabetes who followed a low-carbohydrate diet consistently had significant improvements in blood sugar, HbA1c, and reduction in hypoglycemia after one year. These effects persisted after four years in patients who stayed on the diet:

Diabetology & Metabolic Syndrome 2012: Low-carbohydrate diet in type 1 diabetes, long-term improvement and adherence: a clinical audit  [non-controlled study; weak evidence]

Upsala Journal of Medical Sciences 2005: A low-carbohydrate diet in type 1 diabetes: clinical experience – a brief report [non-controlled study; weak evidence]

Learn more

Type 1 diabetes – how to control your blood sugar with fewer carbs

Low-carb videos

Type 1 diabetes

To learn more about type 1 diabetes and low carb, have a look at one of these videos.


 

Long-term safety of low carb

Some health experts have raised concerns about the long-term effects of low carb. All diets can be done well or poorly, and a risk of nutritional inadequacy exists with all ways of eating. However, a well-planned, nutritionally adequate low-carb diet has not shown evidence of risk, to the best of our knowledge, as dietary carbohydrate is not an essential nutrient.

Bone health

Some concerns have been raised about the perceived risks of protein intake on the acid-base balance of the body and how that could affect bones. No evidence supports this concern. The internal pH of the body is firmly regulated and is not significantly affected by diet.18

The International Osteoporosis Foundation published a narrative review of systematic reviews and meta-analyses, concluding: “There is no evidence that diet-derived acid load is deleterious for bone health. Thus, insufficient dietary protein intakes may be a more severe problem than protein excess in the elderly.”19

Meta-analyses

A meta-analysis of RCTs and cohort studies concluded that higher protein intake isn’t harmful for bone health and may even be beneficial for preventing bone loss:

The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2017: Dietary protein and bone health: a systematic review and meta-analysis from the National Osteoporosis Foundation [moderate evidence]

This meta-analysis of nutritional epidemiology studies showed that higher protein consumption can decrease the risk of hip fracture. There was no differential risk between animal vs vegetable protein:

Scientific Reports 2015: The relationship between dietary protein consumption and risk of fracture: a subgroup and dose-response meta-analysis of prospective cohort studies [very weak evidence]

Randomized controlled trials

Finally, three controlled trials show that low-carb is safe for bones, even when followed for up to two years:

Nutrition 2016: Long-term effects of a very-low-carbohydrate weight-loss diet and an isocaloric low-fat diet on bone health in obese adults [moderate evidence]

Annals of Internal Medicine 2010: Weight and metabolic outcomes after 2 years on a low-carbohydrate versus low-fat diet: a randomized trial [moderate evidence]

The Journal of Pediatrics 2010: Efficacy and safety of a high protein, low carbohydrate diet for weight loss in severely obese adolescents [moderate evidence]

The above evidence against harm is far stronger than the evidence suggesting harm, as we detail in a news post about a study showing increased markers of bone turnover after 3 weeks on a keto diet in highly trained race walkers.

Learn more

Top 17 low carb & keto controversies

How to improve your bone health

Kidney health

Concerns have been raised about whether low-carb and ketogenic diets may increase the risk of kidney stones, as well as whether they can cause impaired filtering function (reduced glomerular filtration rate). While the mechanisms by which low carb can increase kidney stones are more speculative, it is specifically the perception that low-carb diets contain more protein that concerns researchers, given that people with moderate-severe kidney disease are advised to restrict protein to slow the progression of disease.

Meta-analyses

This meta-analysis of clinical trials and observational studies reported a pooled incidence of kidney stones at 5.6% after 4 years on a ketogenic diet. Compared to the kidney stone incidence in the general population of 0.3% per year for men and 0.25% per year for women, it seems that ketogenic diets do increase the risk:

Diseases 2021: Incidence and characteristics of kidney stones in patients on ketogenic diet: a systematic review and meta-analysis [moderate evidence]

This meta-analysis of RCTs examining stage 1-3 diabetic kidney disease showed that restricting protein intake to < 0.8 g/kg/day did confer protective benefits on kidney function. It should be noted that the strength of the authors’ conclusions are somewhat diminished by the trials’ low quality, small sizes, and heterogeneity of study populations. Nonetheless, this does serve as a reminder that the data regarding the safety of low-carb diets in early-stage kidney disease should not be considered to be conclusive:

Diabetes Therapy 2021: Diabetic kidney disease benefits from intensive low-protein diet: updated systematic review and meta-analysis [strong evidence]

The following meta-analysis of RCTs found no impact on kidney function followed out to two years, though the ketogenic phases of the included studies were generally much shorter than two years, limiting the strength of the conclusion:

Reviews in Endocrine and Metabolic Disorders 2020: Efficacy and safety of very low calorie ketogenic diet (VLCKD) in patients with overweight and obesity: A systematic review and meta-analysis [moderate evidence, downgraded due to short-term dietary interventions]

A similar meta-analysis looking at the effect of low-carb diets on renal function in people with type 2 diabetes found no effect. Again, study durations were variable, ranging from 5 weeks to 24 months, so it’s possible that follow-up was not long enough to see a negative effect:

Diabetes/Metabolism Research and Reviews 2018: Effect of low-carbohydrate diet on markers of renal function in patients with type 2 diabetes: A meta-analysis [strong evidence]

Another meta-analysis found a minimal improvement in eGFR with low carb:

British Journal of Nutrition 2016: Impact of low-carbohydrate diet on renal function: a meta-analysis of over 1000 individuals from nine randomised controlled trials [strong evidence]

Randomized controlled trials

There isn’t much high-quality research looking specifically at the risk of kidney stones with low-carb diets, which is why we need to rely on the pooled analysis of the first meta-analysis in the previous section. But there are some RCTs examining whether low-carb/high-protein diets can negatively impact kidney function.

This two-year trial found no adverse effects on kidney function of low carb:

Diabetes, Obesity, and Metabolism 2018: Effects of an energy-restricted low-carbohydrate, high unsaturated fat/low saturated fat diet versus a high-carbohydrate, low-fat diet in type 2 diabetes: A 2-year randomized clinical trial [moderate evidence]

This study looked at five healthy bodybuilders who continued to consume a high-protein diet (> 2.2 grams/kg/day) for a total of two years without any change in their normal kidney function measurements or other negative effects:

Journal of Exercise Physiology 2018: Case reports on well-trained bodybuilders: two years on a high protein diet [very weak evidence]

This randomized cross-over study followed 14 male bodybuilders for a year. The men ate their normal diet for a total of six months and a high protein diet for a total of six months. The study found no harmful effects on kidney function on the high protein diet:

Journal of Nutrition & Metabolism 2016: A high protein diet has no harmful effects: a one-year crossover study in resistance-trained males [randomized cross-over trial; moderate evidence]

This two-year trial randomized about 300 obese people without serious medical problems to a low-carb/high-protein weight-loss diet or a low-fat weight-loss diet. At two years, there were no significant differences between groups regarding kidney stones or overall kidney function:

Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology 2012: Comparative effects of low-carbohydrate high-protein versus low-fat diets on the kidney [moderate evidence]

Learn more

What you need to know about a low-carb diet and your kidneys


 

Epilepsy

Ketogenic diets have been studied extensively in children (and less extensively in adults) with epilepsy. In fact, they have been used since 1921 and are often recommended for those who either fail to respond adequately to anti-seizure medications or can’t tolerate their side effects.

Meta-analyses

The evidence in support of using ketogenic diets for children with drug-resistant epilepsy is generally strong:

Current Nutrition Reports 2022: The efficacy and safety of ketogenic diets in drug-resistant epilepsy in children and adolescents: a systematic review of randomized controlled trials [strong evidence]

This systematic review found that the evidence for effectiveness of keto in children was more certain than in adults:

Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2020: Ketogenic diets for drug-resistant epilepsy [strong evidence]

Randomized controlled trials

RCTs have shown that ketogenic diets (including a less-strict version known as the modified Atkins diet, or MAD) can be very effective for seizure control in some, but not all, children and adults with epilepsy. The strength of the studies’ conclusions are often hurt by high dropout rates and significant variability of responses among individuals:

Epilepsia 2018: Effect of modified Atkins diet in adults with drug-resistant focal epilepsy: a randomized controlled trial [moderate evidence]

Acta Neurologica Scandinavica 2017: A randomized controlled trial of the ketogenic diet in refracatory childhood epilepsy [moderate evidence]

Epilepsy Research 2016: Evaluation of a simplified modified Atkins diet for use by parents with low levels of literacy in children with refractory epilepsy: a randomized controlled trial [moderate evidence]


 

Liver disease

Can low carb help reverse fatty liver disease? There is a growing body of evidence suggesting that low-carb and ketogenic diets do effectively reduce liver fat. At this time, much of the evidence comes from older non-randomized trials and observational studies, though the number of positive RCTs has been increasing. Meta-analyses and systematic reviews have generally come to weak conclusions, based on the small numbers of included trials and significant heterogeneity among those trials.

Meta-analyses

This systematic review included only three randomized trials comprising a total of 128 subjects. There was moderate evidence that a low-carb diet was better than a low-calorie diet for reducing liver fat, but this was based mainly on the findings from only one study of 18 people:

Metabolism 2022: The effect of dietary patterns on non-alcoholic fatty liver disease diagnosed by biopsy or magnetic resonance in adults: a systematic review of randomised controlled trials [moderate evidence, downgraded due to inclusion of only 3 small trials]

Interestingly, the next two papers (one meta-analysis and one systematic review) were both published in 2019, yet they didn’t include any clinical trials in common. The meta-analysis included both RCTs and non-randomized trials, finding little evidence that low carb is superior for reducing fat in the liver, even when accounting for the degree of carb restriction in the studies. The systematic review found the most evidence for benefit using a Mediterranean diet, though most of the included studies examined that diet vs a control diet, and none of the included studies used a true low-carb diet:

Clinical Nutrition 2019: Critical appraisal for low-carbohydrate diet in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease: Review and meta-analyses [moderate evidence, downgraded due to inclusion of some non-randomized studies]

Nutrients 2019: Evaluation of dietary approaches for the treatment of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease: a systematic review [moderate evidence, downgraded due to heterogeneity of included studies with no true low-carb study]

This meta-analysis included non-randomized trials, finding that low carb (defined as less than 50% of calories in this review) reduced liver fat but didn’t reduce liver enzymes:

Journal of Research in Medical Sciences 2016: The effects of low carbohydrate diets on liver function tests in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease: A systematic review and meta-analysis of clinical trials [moderate evidence, downgraded due to inclusion of non-randomized studies]

Randomized controlled trials

One RCT found that a keto diet was equivalent to a 5:2 intermittent fasting diet, and both were better than standard dietary advice for improving fatty liver:

Journal of Hepatology Reports 2021: Treatment of NAFLD with intermittent calorie restriction or low-carb high-fat diet – a randomized controlled trial[moderate evidence]

This 2-month RCT found that a very low-calorie ketogenic diet was superior to a standard low-calorie diet with respect to liver and abdominal fat loss, as well as overall weight loss:

Frontiers in Endocrinology 2020: Efficacy of a 2-month very low-calorie ketogenic diet (VLCKD) compared to a standard low-calorie diet in reducing visceral and liver fat accumulation in patients with obesity[randomized controlled trial; moderate evidence]

Another 2-month RCT showed better visceral fat loss and improvement in liver enzymes with a low-carb, high-fiber diet compared to a standard diet:

Asia Pacific Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2020: Impact of a low-carbohydrate and high-fiber diet on nonalcoholic fatty liver disease[randomized controlled trial; moderate evidence]

This RCT showed that a Mediterranean low-carb diet was more effective than a low-fat diet for reducing fat in the liver. Importantly, even after controlling for abdominal fat loss, low carb was still better at reducing liver fat than was low fat:

Journal of Hepatology: 2019 The beneficial effects of Mediterranean diet over low-fat diet may be mediated by decreasing hepatic fat content [randomized controlled trial; moderate evidence]

In an eight-week RCT of 106 people with NAFLD, those who ate a low-carb diet had greater reductions in liver fat. Although there were not statistically significant differences in body weight by the end of the trial, the low-carb group had a greater reduction in abdominal fat:

Hepatology Research 2018: Comparison of efficacy of low-carbohydrate and low-fat diet education programs in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease: A randomized controlled study [moderate evidence]

Nonrandomized trials

Proceedings of the National Academy of Science U.S.A 2020: Effect of a ketogenic diet on hepatic steatosis and hepatic mitochondrial metabolism in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease [nonrandomized study; weak evidence]

This study examined the effect of a low-carbohydrate diet with increased protein and no reduction in calories on obese subjects with fatty liver disease. The research design was meant to separate the effects of caloric reduction and weight loss from those of carbohydrate restriction. The lead author noted, “We observed rapid and dramatic reductions of liver fat and other cardiometabolic risk factors and revealed hitherto unknown underlying molecular mechanisms:”

Cell Metabolism 2017: An integrated understanding of the rapid metabolic benefits of a carbohydrate-restricted diet on hepatic steatosis in humans [nonrandomized study; weak evidence]

The following study showed that liver fat was reduced to a greater extent with carbohydrate restriction that led to weight loss, as opposed to just calorie restriction that led to weight loss:

American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2011: Short-term weight loss and hepatic triglyceride reduction: evidence of a metabolic advantage with dietary carbohydrate restriction [nonrandomized study; weak evidence]

Journal of Medicinal Food 2011: The effect of the Spanish ketogenic Mediterranean Diet on nonalcoholic fatty liver disease: a pilot study [nonrandomized study; weak evidence]

Learn more

Fatty liver disease and keto: 5 things to know


 

PCOS

Given the strong links between excess weight, high insulin levels, and other metabolic problems, a low-carb diet should be an ideal treatment for polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) — a condition usually associated with insulin resistance and obesity. Although long-term studies are lacking, the research emerging in this field is very encouraging.

Meta-analyses

This systematic review of RCTs concluded that dietary interventions improve PCOS symptoms, and low-carb is likely superior for fertility and restoring normal menstruation.

Frontiers in Endocrinology 2021: Dietary modification for reproductive health in women with polycystic ovary syndrome: A systematic review and meta-analysis [strong evidence]

This systematic review concluded that low-carbohydrate diets tend to “reduce circulating insulin levels, improve hormonal imbalance and resume ovulation to improve pregnancy rates:”

Nutrients 2017: The effect of low-carbohydrate diets on fertility hormones and outcomes in overweight and obese women: a systematic review [systematic review of randomized and nonrandomized trials; weak evidence]

The following systematic review found that low-glycemic index and low-carb diets were particularly helpful for improving some of the features of PCOS:

Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics 2013: Dietary composition in the treatment of polycystic ovary syndrome: a systematic review to inform evidence-based guidelines [strong evidence]

Randomized controlled trials

The following study of women with PCOS, obesity, and fatty liver randomized the participants to a ketogenic diet or conventional pharmacologic therapy. Those who received the ketogenic diet demonstrated better decreases in blood sugar and weight, and greater improvement in fatty liver:

Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Research 2021: Ketogenic diet in women with polycystic ovary syndrome and liver dysfunction who are obese: A randomized, open-label, parallel-group, controlled pilot trial [moderate evidence]

Even a very modest reduction in carbohydrates (from 55 to 41 percent of energy) can result in significant improvements in hormones and other metabolic risk factors, even in the absence of weight loss:

Clinical Endocrinology 2013: Favourable metabolic effects of a eucaloric lower‐carbohydrate diet in women with PCOS [randomized crossover trial; moderate evidence]

Nonrandomized trials

This study of 14 women with PCOS showed a significant improvement in hormone levels and markers of insulin resistance:

Journal of Translational Medicine 2020: Effects of a ketogenic diet in overweight women with polycystic ovary syndrome [nonrandomized study; weak evidence]

In a 2015 study, 24 women with PCOS who ate diets containing roughly 70 grams of net carbs per day for 12 weeks had significant reductions in insulin levels, insulin resistance, TG, and testosterone, along with an average weight loss of 19 pounds (8.6 kg) by the end of the study:

Journal of Obesity & Weight Loss Therapy 2015: Low-starch/low-dairy diet results in successful treatment of obesity and co-morbidities linked to polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) [nonrandomized study; weak evidence]

Fertility & Sterility 2006: Role of diet in the treatment of polycystic ovary syndrome [nonrandomized study; weak evidence]

One small 2005 study followed 11 women with PCOS as they went on a ketogenic low-carb diet for six months. The five women who completed the study lost weight and improved some of their hormone levels. Two of them became pregnant despite previous infertility problems:

Nutrition & Metabolism 2005: The effects of a low-carbohydrate, ketogenic diet on the polycystic ovary syndrome: a pilot study [nonrandomized study; weak evidence]

Learn more

How to potentially reverse PCOS with low carb


 

Irritable bowel syndrome

In recent years, much research has been done on diets low in FODMAPs. FODMAP is an acronym for “fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharide’s and polyols.” That unwieldy name describes types of short-chain carbohydrates found in many fruits, vegetables, legumes, grains, dairy products and some processed foods. Low-carb and ketogenic diets are naturally low in FODMAPs, making them an excellent choice for the treatment of IBS.

Meta-analyses

There are now numerous meta-analyses and systematic reviews of randomized and nonrandomized trials, all showing that a low-FODMAP diet is highly effective for relieving the symptoms of IBS.

Gut 2021: Efficacy of a low FODMAP diet in irritable bowel syndrome: systematic review and network meta-analysis [strong evidence]

Frontiers in Nutrition 2021: A low-FODMAP diet improves the global symptoms and bowel habits of adult IBS patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis [strong evidence]

European Journal of Nutrition 2021: Efficacy of a low-FODMAP diet in adult irritable bowel syndrome: a systematic review and meta-analysis [strong evidence]

This meta-analysis included both randomized and nonrandomized trials, also finding that low FODMAP is effective:

Nutrients 2021: Effect of low FODMAPs diet on irritable bowel syndromes: a systematic review and meta-analysis of clinical trials [meta-analysis of randomized and nonrandomized trials; moderate evidence]

Gastroenterology Nursing 2019: Effects of low-FODMAPS diet on irritable bowel syndrome symptoms and gut microbiome [strong evidence]

One systematic review of 22 clinical trials found that a low-FODMAP approach significantly improved symptoms in people suffering from IBS:

European Journal of Nutrition 2016: Does a diet low in FODMAPs reduce symptoms associated with functional gastrointestinal disorders? A comprehensive systematic review and meta-analysis [meta-analysis of randomized and nonrandomized trials; moderate evidence]

Randomized controlled trials

The following study was designed to determine whether gluten or other components of high-FODMAP foods are responsible for exacerbating IBS symptoms. The intervention group received a low-FODMAP diet + gluten powder, while the control group received a low-FODMAP diet + rice powder. The authors found that both groups experienced the same amount of improvement in symptoms, leading them to conclude that gluten is not the culprit when it comes to the exacerbation of IBS symptoms with high-FODMAP foods:

Clinical Nutrition ESPEN 2022: The effect of low FODMAP diet with and without gluten on irritable bowel syndrome: A double blind, placebo controlled randomized clinical trial [moderate evidence]

This similar study placed subjects on a low-FODMAP diet and intermittently challenged them with FODMAPs, gluten, or placebo, finding that FODMAPs caused symptoms, while gluten and placebo did not:

American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2022: Fermentable oligo-, di-, monosaccharides, and polyols (FODMAPs), but not gluten, elicit modest symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome: a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized three-way crossover trial [moderate evidence]

This novel study out of Italy was designed to see if a Tritordeum-based diet could be as effective as a low-FODMAP diet in reducing IBS symptoms among Italians (Tritordeum is a grain derived from wheat and barley, with fewer gliadins, carbs, and fructans than traditional wheat). The authors found that both groups showed equal improvements, suggesting that this might be more palatable for Italians who eat a traditional diet higher in breads and pasta:

Nutrients 2022: A comparison of the low-FODMAPs diet and a tritordeum-based diet on the gastrointestinal symptom profile of patients suffering from irritable bowel syndrome-diarrhea variant (IBS-D): a randomized controlled trial [moderate evidence]

This study showed similar improvements between the low-FODMAP and traditional dietary advice groups. But the low-FODMAP group achieved earlier improvements in stool frequency and gas. Also, severe symptoms at baseline along with the predominance of certain kinds of bacteria predicted a favorable response to the low-FODMAP diet:

American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2021: Low fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides, and polyols diet compared with traditional dietary advice for diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome: a parallel-group, randomized controlled trial with analysis of clinical and microbiological factors associated with patient outcomes [moderate evidence]

This study showed that a low-FODMAP diet was superior to traditional dietary advice, though compliance with the diet dropped from 93% at 4 weeks to 64% at 16 weeks:

Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology 2021: Low fermentable oligosaccharide, disaccharide, monosaccharide, and polyol diet in patients with diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome: A prospective, randomized trial [moderate evidence]

Learn more

IBS and the keto diet

 

Inflammatory bowel disease

There is very little research about the effects of a low-carb or ketogenic diet on inflammatory bowel diseases like Crohn’s or ulcerative colitis. However, there are some anecdotal reports suggesting that a low-carb or low-carb Paleo diet may reduce symptoms of inflammatory bowel diseases.20

Additionally, a published case report suggests that this is an area in need of further investigation:

International Journal of Case Reports and Images 2016: Crohn’s disease successfully treated with the paleolithic ketogenic diet [very weak evidence]

Randomized controlled trials

Interestingly, the only RCTs of which we are aware are decades old.

This study recruited about 200 patients after a relapse of Crohn’s disease and treated them with steroids until they were back in remission. Then, they randomized the subjects to fish oil pills, placebo, or a low-carb (84 grams/day) diet. The authors found no significant benefit of diet or fish oil over placebo, though it should be noted that overall compliance with the diet was poor, and the study suffered from other weaknesses as well:

Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology 1996: Omega-3 fatty acids and low carbohydrate diet for maintenance of remission in Crohn’s disease. A randomized controlled multicenter trial. Study Group Members (German Crohn’s Disease Study Group) [weak evidence; downgraded due to study weaknesses]

This study specifically investigated the effect of sugar and fiber, comparing groups randomized to a diet high in sugar and low in fiber vs low in sugar and high in unrefined carbohydrate. No differences were found:

British Medical Journal 1987: Controlled multicentre therapeutic trial of an unrefined carbohydrate, fibre rich diet in Crohn’s disease [moderate evidence]

Although this tiny 18-month study of 20 people (10 randomized to low-refined sugar, 10 randomized to high-refined sugar) failed to show statistically significant results, there were a couple of promising findings. In subjects with higher disease-activity scores, the “low-carb” diet seemed to improve symptoms and the high-carb diet seemed to worsen them:

Zeitschrift fur Gastroenterologie 1981: Sugar free diet: a new perspective in the treatment of Crohn disease? Randomized, control study [moderate evidence]


 

Reflux disease / heartburn

Although anecdotal reports of low-carb diets improving reflux are common, we are aware of only two studies designed to look at the effects of a real-world very low-carb diet on GERD (gastroesophageal reflux disease).

Nonrandomized trials

This study included 42 obese women with GERD who followed a low-carb, high-fat diet for 16 weeks. By week 10, all of these woman had a complete resolution of GERD symptoms and were able to discontinue their antacid medications:

Alimentary Pharmacology and Therapeutics 2016: Dietary carbohydrate intake, insulin resistance and gastro‐oesophageal reflux disease: a pilot study in European‐ and African‐American obese women [non-controlled trial; weak evidence]

In a small study of eight obese people with GERD, participants had esophageal pH tested before and after consuming a ketogenic diet containing less than 20 grams of carbs per day for six days. The second test showed normalization of esophageal pH levels, which indicates a less acidic environment in the esophagus. In addition, participants reported improvements in chest burning and discomfort, belching, and other symptoms of reflux:

Digestive Diseases and Sciences 2006: A very low-carbohydrate diet improves gastroesophageal reflux and its symptoms [non-controlled trial; weak evidence]


 

Migraine

There are now several studies suggesting that lowering dietary carbohydrate may help reduce the frequency of migraines.

Randomized controlled trial

This was a randomized crossover trial in 35 overweight adults with migraines who followed a low-calorie ketogenic diet and a low-calorie non-ketogenic diet for one month each. Migraine frequency decreased by 50% or more in 26 people during the keto diet, but only in three people during the non-keto diet:

Nutrients 2019: A randomized double-blind, cross-over trial of very low-calorie diet in overweight migraine patients: a possible role for ketones? [moderate evidence]

Nonrandomized trials

This trial demonstrated a significant reduction in headache frequency and duration in subjects trying a ketogenic diet:

Neurological Sciences 2021: Effectiveness of ketogenic diet in treatment of patients with refractory chronic migraine [non-randomized study; weak evidence]

This study looked at brain activity changes in 18 people whose migraines became less frequent after eating a ketogenic diet for one month. The researchers concluded that the diet appeared to help reduce cortical excitability, suggesting that the cerebral cortex may be the primary site of KD-modulation:

BioMed Central Neurology 2019: A ketogenic diet normalizes interictal cortical but not subcortical responsivity in migraineurs [non-controlled study; weak evidence]

Journal of Headache and Pain 2016: Cortical functional correlates of responsiveness to short-lasting preventive intervention with ketogenic diet in migraine: a multimodal evoked potentials study [weak evidence]

In this study, 96 overweight women were assigned to a standard low-calorie diet for six months, or a low-calorie ketogenic diet for one month followed by a standard low-calorie diet for five months. By the end of the study, migraine frequency and medication usage was lower in both groups of women compared to baseline. However, all migraine parameters improved the most during the one month of ketogenic eating:

European Journal of Neurology 2015: Migraine improvement during short lasting ketogenesis: a proof-of-concept study [prospective observational study; weak evidence]

Learn more

Is a keto diet helpful for migraines and cluster headaches?


 

ADHD

Extremely limited evidence – mostly restricted to mechanistic studies and case reports — suggests that low-carb diets might be helpful for some people with attention deficit and hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and other related conditions, such as obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and Tourette syndrome.

Learn more

Can a ketogenic diet help kids with ADHD, autism and other neuropsychiatric conditions?


 

Alzheimer’s disease

Insulin resistance in the brain is well-recognized to correlate with Alzheimer’s, leading some researchers to refer to Alzheimer’s as “type 3 diabetes.”21 Research into the use of low-carb diets, as well as keto/MCT supplements, for the treatment of Alzheimer’s has been increasing.

Meta-analyses

This systematic review of randomized controlled trials concluded that being in ketosis, either using a ketogenic diet, ketone supplements, or MCT supplements, “appears promising in improving both acute and long-term cognition among patients with AD/MCI (Alzheimer’s Disease or mild cognitive impairment).” The authors also noted a greater beneficial effect in those without an ApoE4 variant of the ApoE gene:

Advances in Nutrition 2020: To Keto or Not to Keto? A Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials Assessing the Effects of Ketogenic Therapy on Alzheimer Disease [systematic review of randomized trials; strong evidence]

Randomized controlled trials

This trial showed significant improvements in quality of life and ability to perform daily activities with a keto diet, compared to when the subjects followed a low-fat diet:

Alzheimer’s Research and Therapy 2021: Randomized crossover trial of a modified ketogenic diet in Alzheimer’s disease[moderate evidence]

This 6-month RCT comparing a keto drink to placebo showed an improvement in cognitive function in subjects with mild cognitive impairment. Improvement was linked to ketone levels:

Alzheimer’s and Dementia 2021: A ketogenic drink improves cognition in mild cognitive impairment: Results of a 6-month RCT[moderate evidence]

This study did not find a benefit of MCT supplementation vs placebo in the primary analysis. But, when the authors stratified the groups by ApoE status, they found a significant improvement in cognition among ApoE -/- subjects receiving the supplement:

Clinical Nutrition 2020: Medium-chain triglycerides improved cognition and lipid metabolomics in mild to moderate Alzheimer’s disease patients with APOE4 -/-: A double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled crossover trial[moderate evidence]

This study showed no cognitive differences between participants given a single 50 gram dose of a ketogenic formula (containing 20 grams of MCT) versus control subjects fed a calorically matched placebo. However, the trial continued as a single-arm study and gave subjects 50 grams of the keto formula daily for 3 months, and some cognitive improvements were seen:

Neuroscience Letters 2019: Effects of a medium-chain triglyceride-based ketogenic formula on cognitive function in patients with mild-to-moderate Alzheimer’s disease [controlled and non-controlled studies; weak evidence]

This was a six-month randomized controlled trial of ketone supplementation (30 grams of MCT a day) in 17 patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s disease. One author remarked in an interview that he was encouraged to see the brain’s use of ketones increased with the 30g dose of MCT, and he suspects it may be even greater at higher doses:

Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease 2018: Ketogenic medium chain triglycerides increase brain energy metabolism in Alzheimer’s disease [randomized trial; moderate evidence]

This study found that performance on memory tests measurably improved in the low-carb group, with the greatest improvements among those who achieved the highest levels of blood ketones:

Neurobiology of Aging 2012: Dietary ketosis enhances memory in mild cognitive impairment [moderate evidence]

Learn more

The ketogenic diet for Alzheimer’s prevention and treatment: can it help?


 

Parkinson’s disease

There is very little research about the effect of low-carb diets on Parkinson’s.

Randomized controlled trials

One RCT found exogenous ketone esters improved exercise duration by 24% in patients with Parkinson’s:

Frontiers in Neuroscience 2020: A ketone ester drink enhances endurance exercise performance in Parkinson’s disease [randomized trial; moderate evidence]

An eight-week RCT found that people with Parkinson’s disease who ate a ketogenic diet had greater improvement in non-motor symptoms — but not motor symptoms — than those who ate a low-fat diet:

Movement Disorders 2018: Low‐fat versus ketogenic diet in parkinson’s disease: a pilot randomized controlled trial [moderate evidence]


 

Multiple sclerosis

Similar to Parkinson’s disease, high-quality evidence for benefits of carbohydrate restriction in multiple sclerosis (MS) is extremely limited. Beyond occasional positive anecdotal reports, there is some emerging clinical research.

Randomized controlled trials

This very small RCT randomized participants to a keto diet, modified Paleolithic diet, or a control/usual diet. The keto group achieved ketosis but had no clinical improvement. Only the Paleo group showed clinical improvement:

Journal of the American College of Nutrition 2021: A modified MCT-based ketogenic diet increases plasma β-hydroxybutyrate but has less effect on fatigue and quality of life in people with multiple sclerosis compared to a modified paleolithic diet: a waitlist-controlled, randomized pilot study [moderate evidence]

This 4-month RCT found that anxiety and functional disability improved in the intervention group, which received the antioxidant epigallocatechin gallate and coconut oil:

Nutrients 2020: The impact of coconut oil and epigallocatechin gallate on the levels of IL-6, anxiety and disability in multiple sclerosis patients [moderate evidence]


 

Intermittent fasting

It’s not unusual for people to combine a low-carb diet with intermittent fasting, either for convenience or to improve weight loss or blood sugar control. While there are many anecdotal reports of success with intermittent fasting, clinical trial data are mixed with respect to: whether intermittent fasting is superior to caloric restriction as a weight loss tool, intermittent fasting’s magnitude of effect when it is helpful, and whether intermittent fasting exerts its potential effect mainly through caloric restriction or mainly by flipping the metabolic switch.22

There are many reasons why the medical literature about intermittent fasting has failed to reach consensus regarding its utility, but it should suffice to say that there are numerous weaknesses of the research to date.23

Meta-analyses

This review found a benefit of intermittent fasting on all studied parameters:

International Journal of Endocrinology 2022: Effect of intermittent fasting diet on glucose and lipid metabolism and insulin resistance in patients with impaired glucose and lipid metabolism: a systematic review and meta-analysis [strong evidence]

When looking at long-term effects (greater than six months), this review found no differences between intermittent and continuous energy restriction with respect to fat mass or other anthropometric, cardiometabolic, inflammatory, or appetite outcomes:

Biological Research for Nursing 2022: Intermittent energy restriction for weight loss: a systematic review of cardiometabolic, inflammatory and appetite outcomes [strong evidence]

This review included 18 studies comprised of 1125 participants, finding no clinically meaningful benefits of intermittent fasting:

Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2021: Intermittent fasting for the prevention of cardiovascular disease [strong evidence]

This systematic review found that intermittent fasting was associated with weight loss in all 27 trials, regardless of changes in calorie intake, and most of the weight lost was fat mass. But intermittent fasting could not clearly be shown to be superior to caloric restriction:

Canadian Family Physician 2020: Intermittent fasting and weight loss: systematic review [systematic review of randomized trials; strong evidence]

This review bucks the conventional wisdom that breakfast is good for weight loss; it found the opposite:

British Medical Journal 2019: Effect of breakfast on weight and energy intake: systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials [strong evidence]

This review found that intermittent fasting improves insulin sensitivity:

Journal of Clinical Medicine 2019: The effectiveness of intermittent fasting to reduce body mass index and glucose metabolism: a systematic review and meta-analysis [strong evidence]

In these two reviews, intermittent energy restriction was comparable to continuous energy restriction for weight loss:

JBI Database of Systematic Reviews and Implementation Reports 2018: Intermittent fasting interventions for treatment of overweight and obesity in adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis [strong evidence]

Obesity Reviews 2018: Short-term intermittent energy restriction interventions for weight management: a systematic review and meta-analysis [strong evidence]

Cureus 2018: Intermittent fasting: the choice for a healthier lifestyle [systematic review of randomized controlled trials; strong evidence]

This large review had a very broad scope, looking at many forms of intermittent energy restriction that bear little resemblance to how intermittent fasting is practiced in real life. With that limitation in mind, the paper found that intermittent energy restriction had a roughly equal chance of preserving lean mass or leading to its loss:

Molecular and cellular endocrinology 2015: Do intermittent diets provide physiological benefits over continuous diets for weight loss? A systematic review of clinical trials [moderate evidence]

Randomized controlled trials

The following trials are a representative sample of what can be found in the medical literature. Most of them show that intermittent fasting is equivalent to — but no better than — a control diet. As of now, we do not know whether a shorter eating window duration (e.g. 4 hours vs 8 hours) would produce better results with respect to outcomes like weight loss and body composition. Nor do we know whether the eating window should be in the morning vs the latter part of the day. Nor do we know whether combining intermittent fasting with a low-carb diet would be superior to intermittent fasting plus a standard diet.

This RCT compared calorie-restricted time-restricted eating (TRE) with just calorie restriction and found no advantage to TRE with respect to weight loss or any of the other measured parameters:

New England Journal of Medicine 2022: Calorie restriction with or without time-restricted eating in weight loss [moderate evidence]

After six months, this trial showed no difference in weight loss between the time-restricted eating group and the standard dietary counseling group:

Nutrients 2021: The effects of time-restricted eating versus standard dietary advice on weight, metabolic health and the consumption of processed food: a pragmatic randomised controlled trial in community-based adults [moderate evidence]

Intermittent energy restriction was found to be comparable to continuous energy restriction in this trial:

Nutrients 2020: Does the energy restriction intermittent fasting diet alleviate metabolic syndrome biomarkers? A randomized controlled trial [moderate evidence]

This trial found that, when matched for weight loss, intermittent and continuous energy restriction were equally good at preventing increases in appetite and cravings:

Journal of Nutrition 2020: Matched weight loss through intermittent or continuous energy restriction does not lead to compensatory increases in appetite and eating behavior in a randomized controlled trial in women with overweight and obesity [moderate evidence]

This RCT failed to show a weight loss advantage of time-restricted eating over consistent meal timing. Unlike other studies in which intermittent fasting subjects often naturally restrict calories without aiming to do so, these subjects did not:

JAMA Internal Medicine 2020: Effects of time-restricted eating on weight loss and other metabolic parameters in women and men with overweight and obesity [moderate evidence]

A 6-week trial in women over age 60 showed 16 hours of daily fasting improved body composition compared to a usual diet:

International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 2020: Effect of a six-week intermittent fasting intervention program on the composition of the human body in women over 60 years of age [randomized trial; moderate evidence]

This trial had very high dropout in each of its three arms, ultimately showing no differences among the two different forms of intermittent energy restriction and continuous energy restriction:

International Journal of Obesity 2019: Effect of intermittent compared to continuous energy restriction on weight loss and weight maintenance after 12 months in healthy overweight or obese adults [moderate evidence]

These two studies showed that intermittent energy restriction produced similar reductions in blood sugar levels compared to continuous energy restriction:

JAMA Network Open 2018: Effect of intermittent compared with continuous energy restricted diet on glycemic control in patients with type 2 diabetes: a randomized noninferiority trial [moderate evidence]

Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice 2016: The effects of intermittent compared to continuous energy restriction on glycaemic control in type 2 diabetes; a pragmatic pilot trial [moderate evidence]

In this study, alternate day fasting produced similar results to moderate daily caloric restriction:

Obesity 2016: A randomized pilot study comparing zero-calorie alternate-day fasting to daily caloric restriction in adults with obesity [moderate evidence]

Learn more

Your complete guide to intermittent fasting

Alternate day fasting: a beginner’s guide

What you need to know about OMAD

Does intermittent fasting cause muscle loss?

Intermittent fasting side effects


 

Low carb and the environment

Low-carb diets are often described as being ecologically unsustainable, due to concerns about the impact of meat production on the environment. While it is true that cows and other ruminant animals emit methane into the atmosphere when they burp, the adverse effects of this methane are difficult to calculate.24 Further, using modern regenerative agriculture techniques, a fair amount of this methane can be sequestered in the soil, as can the carbon dioxide emissions associated with raising beef.

A 2018 study demonstrates that properly managed livestock can be made climate neutral or even carbon-negative, meaning more carbon is stored in soil than is released into the atmosphere:

Agricultural Systems 2018: Impacts of soil carbon sequestration on life cycle greenhouse gas emissions in Midwestern USA beef finishing systems [weak evidence]

Learn more

The green keto meat eater, part 1

The green keto meat eater, part 2

The green keto meat eater, part 3


 

Red meat and health

Warnings are often issued regarding the negative health effects of red meat, particularly when it comes to heart disease and cancer. However, these concerns are supported mainly by very weak nutritional epidemiology studies, with low statistical associations and high probability of confounding and bias. Many epidemiological findings like these turn out to be false when they are tested in intervention trials.25 Further, many of the meta-analyses of these nutritional epidemiology studies have shown either tiny hazard ratios or no statistically significant risk at all of red meat.26

There have been very few higher quality meta-analyses of RCTs, but those that exist have failed to show a meaningful association between the consumption of red meat and adverse health outcomes.

Meta-analyses

A meta-analysis of 24 RCTs found no differences in glycemic control, insulin sensitivity, or inflammatory markers among metabolically healthy people, comparing those whose average red meat intake was less than 0.5 servings (35 grams) per day to those who consumed more than 0.5 servings per day:

Advances in Nutrition 2021: Effects of total red meat intake on glycemic control and inflammatory biomarkers: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials [strong evidence]

This systematic review of RCTs comparing lower vs. higher red meat consumption used the GRADE system to quantify the strength of the evidence, which was deemed low to very-low. The authors concluded that restricting red meat may have little or no effect on whether a person will develop heart disease or cancer:

Annals of Internal Medicine 2019: Effect of Lower Versus Higher Red Meat Intake on Cardiometabolic and Cancer Outcomes: A Systematic Review of Randomized Trials. [strong evidence]

This meta-analysis of RCTs looked at surrogate endpoints for heart disease and found that eating three or more servings of red meat per week had no adverse effects on CVD risk factors like cholesterol, triglyceride or blood pressure values:

American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2017: Total red meat intake of ≥0.5 servings/d does not negatively influence cardiovascular disease risk factors: a systemically searched meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials [strong evidence]

Randomized controlled trials

Journal of Clinical Lipidology 2019: Impact on cardiometabolic risk of a weight loss intervention with higher protein from lean red meat: Combined results of 2 randomized controlled trials in obese middle-aged and older adults [moderate evidence]

American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2018: A Mediterranean-style eating pattern with lean, unprocessed red meat has cardiometabolic benefits for adults who are overweight or obese in a randomized, crossover, controlled feeding trial [moderate evidence]

The followup extension of the Polyp Prevention Trial continued to look at the effect of a low-fat, low-meat diet versus a usual diet on over 2,000 people for 8 years, to see if the intervention could prevent colorectal cancer. Although the experimental group changed their diets significantly, they did not have lower rates of adenoma recurrence:

Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention 2007: The polyp prevention trial continued follow-up study: no effect of a low-fat, high-fiber, high-fruit, and -vegetable diet on adenoma recurrence eight years after randomization [moderate evidence]

In the Women’s Health Initiative study, half of nearly 49,000 women were randomized to 8 years on a low-fat diet, with significantly less red meat. There was no reduction in breast or colorectal cancer incidence:

Journal of the American Medical Association 2006: Low-fat dietary pattern and risk of invasive breast cancer: the Women’s Health Initiative Randomized Controlled Dietary Modification Trial. [moderate evidence]

Journal of the American Medical Association 2006: Low-fat dietary pattern and risk of colorectal cancer [moderate evidence]

The original Polyp Prevention Trial in people with precancerous colon polyps found that cutting back on red meat over a four-year period did not decrease the risk of polyp recurrence:

European Journal of Cancer Prevention 2004: Meat intake and the recurrence of colorectal adenomas [randomized trial; moderate evidence]

Learn more

Guide to red meat: is it healthy?

Diet and cancer: what we know and what we don’t


 

Salt and health

In order to prevent heart disease, the American Heart Association recommends that everyone should aim to restrict sodium intake to less than 1500 mg per day, which equals about 3/4 teaspoon of salt.

Yet, for individuals on a low-carb diet, sodium needs may actually increase, due to increased losses via the kidneys.27

As a result of these increased needs, individuals following low-carbohydrate diets are not typically asked to restrict sodium intake. Concerns have been raised about the safety of this recommendation, given that many of these people may have hypertension or heart disease — conditions for which very-low-sodium diets have long been considered standard.

Because low-carb diets usually lower insulin levels, leading to greater sodium loss via the kidneys, it is reasonable to question whether sodium intake may be safely liberalized in this population. Although we do not have data proving the safety of such a strategy, there is now a fair body of evidence questioning whether higher sodium intakes are as dangerous as has long been thought.28

Meta-analyses

This systematic review of RCTs showed no meaningful benefit of sodium restriction among people with normal blood pressure, while people with high blood pressure did see a small decrease in pressure. However, adverse effects on multiple hormone levels, triglycerides, and cholesterol were seen across all groups, especially in those with normal blood pressure:

Cochrane Systematic Review 2020: Effects of low sodium diet versus high sodium diet on blood pressure, renin, aldosterone, catecholamines, cholesterol, and triglyceride [systematic review of randomized trials; strong evidence]

This meta-analysis of meta-analyses confirmed the lack of effect of salt restriction on all-cause mortality or cardiovascular mortality:29

Annals of Internal Medicine 2019: Effects of nutritional supplements and dietary interventions on cardiovascular outcomes: An umbrella review and evidence map [systematic review of RCTs; strong evidence]

This systematic review and meta-analysis of 11 RCTs concluded that reducing sodium by an average of 3,000 mg per day improved arterial elasticity:30

Journal of Hypertension 2018: Effect of dietary sodium restriction on arterial stiffness: systematic review and meta-analysis of the randomized controlled trials [strong evidence]

This systematic review of nine RCTs concluded that there isn’t enough high-quality evidence to either support or refute the benefit of sodium restriction for CHF:

Journal of the American Medical Internal Medicine 2018: Reduced salt intake for heart failure: a systematic review [strong evidence]

This meta-analysis found that sodium restriction in people with early to end-stage kidney disease can significantly lower blood pressure and reduce urinary albumin. This population is therefore thought to benefit more consistently from sodium restriction:31

Nutrients 2018: Dietary salt restriction in chronic kidney disease: a meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials [strong evidence]

For most hypertensive adults, sodium reduction does not lead to a dramatic decrease in blood pressure:

Global Heart 2015: A meta-analysis of dietary salt restriction on blood pressure in Chinese adults [strong evidence]

This Cochrane review showed no effect of salt restriction on total mortality or cardiovascular mortality:32

Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2014: Reduced dietary salt for the prevention of cardiovascular disease [systematic review of RCTs; strong evidence]

This meta-analysis of RCTs also showed no benefit of sodium restriction among people with normal blood pressure:

American Journal of Hypertension 2011: Reduced dietary salt for the prevention of cardiovascular disease: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials (Cochrane review) [strong evidence]

Although a meta-analysis of RCTs in people with type 1 and type 2 diabetes found that sodium restriction helped reduce blood pressure, the largest effects were seen in people with normal blood pressure, for whom further blood pressure reduction might be of limited or no value. In addition, the median duration of salt restriction was one week; we know from longer trials that the effect of salt restriction on reducing blood pressure tends to wane over time:33

Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2010: Altered dietary salt intake for preventing and treating diabetic kidney disease [sytematic review of randomized controlled trials; strong evidence]

Randomized controlled trials

This trial reported no difference in clinical heart events with very low or standard sodium intake:

Lancet 2022: Reduction of dietary sodium to less than 100 mmol in heart failure (SODIUM-HF): an international, open-label, randomised, controlled trial[moderate evidence]

Of the few RCTs looking at salt restriction for people with type 2 diabetes, some have found that sodium restriction may lead to small improvements in blood pressure and kidney function:

The Lancet 2018: Moderate salt restriction with or without paricalcitol in type 2 diabetes and losartan-resistant macroalbuminuria (PROCEED): a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover trial [moderate evidence]

Hypertension 2016: Modest salt reduction lowers blood pressure and albumin excretion in impaired glucose tolerance and type 2 diabetes mellitus: a randomized double-blind trial [moderate evidence]

This study appears to show a reduced risk of cardiovascular events and cardiovascular death with sodium restriction:

Circulation 2014: Lower levels of sodium intake and reduced cardiovascular risk[randomized trial; moderate evidence]

One of the unintended consequences of salt restriction is increased insulin resistance:

Hypertension 2014: Effect of low salt diet on insulin resistance in salt-sensitive versus salt-resistant hypertension [randomized controlled trial; moderate evidence]

Metabolism 2011: Low-salt diet increases insulin resistance in healthy subjects [randomized controlled trial; moderate evidence]

High-quality research on salt restriction in type 1 diabetes is scarce, but two small studies suggest that restricting salt may have adverse effects on kidney health:

Diabetologia 2002: Short-term moderate sodium restriction induces relative hyperfiltration in normotensive normoalbuminuric type I diabetes mellitus [randomized trial; moderate evidence]

Journal of the American Society of Nephrology 1997: Renal responses to sodium restriction in patients with early diabetes mellitus [randomized trial; moderate evidence]

Learn more

A comprehensive guide to salt

Do you need electrolyte supplementation on a low-carb or keto diet?


 

External resources about the science of low carb

 
Virta Health: A comprehensive list of low-carb research

Public Health Collaboration UK: Randomised controlled trials comparing low-carb diets to low-fat diets

The science of low carb

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Is there science to support low carb?
 
Dr. William Yancy, a researcher who investigates the effects of carbohydrate-restricted diets, shares his views on the science of low carb.

 

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The science of low carb - the evidence

This guide is written by Dr. Andreas Eenfeldt, MD, Dr. Bret Scher, MD and was last updated on June 17, 2022. It was medically reviewed by Dr. Bret Scher, MD on December 24, 2020 and Dr. Michael Tamber, MD on May 11, 2022.

The guide contains scientific references. You can find these in the notes throughout the text, and click the links to read the peer-reviewed scientific papers. When appropriate we include a grading of the strength of the evidence, with a link to our policy on this. Our evidence-based guides are updated at least once per year to reflect and reference the latest science on the topic.

All our evidence-based health guides are written or reviewed by medical doctors who are experts on the topic. To stay unbiased we show no ads, sell no physical products, and take no money from the industry. We're fully funded by the people, via an optional membership. Most information at Diet Doctor is free forever.

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  1. The American Psychologist 2007: Medicare’s search for effective obesity treatments: diets are not the answer [overview article; ungraded]

  2. Many low-carb studies and meta-analyses of low-carb studies have used a much more liberal definition of low carb than the one that we use (less than 130 grams or under 20% of total calories). Because this is pervasive throughout the medical literature in both studies that show low carb is superior to low fat and studies that show it is inferior, we do not always comment on the amount of carbohydrate in each medical paper/study. Given that “low carb” is often superior to low fat with respect to both hard and soft endpoints, it would seem that some restriction of carbohydrates can be beneficial.

  3. Many low-carb studies and meta-analyses of low-carb studies have used a much more liberal definition of low carb than the one that we use (less than 130 grams or under 20% of total calories). Because this is pervasive throughout the medical literature in both studies that show low carb is superior to low fat and studies that show it is inferior, we do not always comment on the amount of carbohydrate in each medical paper/study. Given that “low carb” is often superior to low fat with respect to both hard and soft endpoints, it would seem that some restriction of carbohydrates can be beneficial.

  4. If you are aware of a RCT that shows better weight loss with a low-fat diet compared to a low-carb diet, please send the citation to michael.tamber@dietdoctor.com

  5. Obesity Reviews 2015: Metabolic syndrome: a closer look at the growing epidemic and its associated pathologies [overview article]

  6. Many low-carb studies and meta-analyses of low-carb studies have used a much more liberal definition of low carb than the one that we use (less than 130 grams or under 20% of total calories). Because this is pervasive throughout the medical literature in both studies that show low carb is superior to low fat and studies that show it is inferior, we do not always comment on the amount of carbohydrate in each medical paper/study. Given that “low carb” is often superior to low fat with respect to both hard and soft endpoints, it would seem that some restriction of carbohydrates can be beneficial.

  7. In our guides about the effect of a low-carb diet on lipids, we explore the impact on LDL in-depth. Although LDL can go up on a low-carb diet, the size and density often shifts from small and dense (thought to be more atherogenic) to large and less-dense (thought to be less atherogenic). Read more:

    Cholesterol and low-carb diets
    Is elevated LDL cholesterol harmful?
    Low-carb LDL hyper-responders

  8. BMJ Evidence-Based Medicine 2019: Fat or fiction: the diet-heart hypothesis [overview article; ungraded]

  9. BMJ 2018: Dietary fat and cardiometabolic health: evidence, controversies, and consensus for guidance [overview article]

  10. British Medical Journal 2019: WHO draft guidelines on dietary saturated and trans fatty acids: time for a new approach? [overview article; ungraded evidence]

    Journal of the American College of Cardiology 2020: Saturated fats and health: A reassessment and proposal for food-based recommendations: JACC State-of -the-Art Review [overview article; ungraded]

  11. Many low-carb studies and meta-analyses of low-carb studies have used a much more liberal definition of low carb than the one that we use (less than 130 grams or under 20% of total calories). Because this is pervasive throughout the medical literature in both studies that show low carb is superior to low fat and studies that show it is inferior, we do not always comment on the amount of carbohydrate in each medical paper/study. Given that “low carb” is often superior to low fat with respect to both hard and soft endpoints, it would seem that some restriction of carbohydrates can be beneficial.

  12. Interestingly, when the authors controlled for study quality and cholesterol levels, the impact of saturated fat vanished.

  13. This 2018 paper marks 40 years of follow-up, finding that the intervention group continues to demonstrate excess mortality. The reasons for this are unknown, though this paper notes that there is a correlation between less vacation time and increased mortality:

    Journal of Nutrition, Health, and Aging 2018: Increased mortality despite successful multifactorial cardiovascular risk reduction in healthy men: 40-year follow-up of the Helsinki Businessmen Study Intervention Trial [upgraded to weak evidence; prospective, observational follow-up of a RCT]

  14. Standing in contrast to the RCT, this small, uncontrolled study showed that a keto diet can improve vascular endothelial function:

    Endocrine, Metabolic & Immune Disorders Drug Targets 2020: Effects of a low carb diet and whey proteins on anthropometric, hematochemical and cardiovascular parameters in subjects with obesity [non-randomized, weak evidence]

  15. Diabetes Care 2019: Nutrition therapy for adults with diabetes or prediabetes: a consensus report [overview article; ungraded]

  16. Some disagree with the use of the word “reverse” when it comes to type 2 diabetes. The concern is that it may imply the disease is completely gone, never to return. At Diet Doctor, we use the term “reverse” to indicate that blood sugar levels are no longer in the diabetic range without the use of medications. However, we acknowledge that high glucose levels will likely recur if a patient goes back to their prior high-carb eating habits. Therefore, “reverse” does not imply a forever cure.

  17. Evidence strength downgraded due to lack of high-quality studies.

  18. This includes diets in which very few carbs are consumed, such as ketogenic diets.

    Endocrine 2017: Acid–base safety during the course of a very low-calorie-ketogenic diet [non-controlled study; weak evidence]

    Nutrients 2018: Chronic ketogenic low carbohydrate high fat diet has minimal effects on acid-base status in elite athletes [non-randomized study; weak evidence]

  19. Osteoporosis International 2018: Benefits and safety of dietary protein for bone health – an expert consensus paper [narrative review; ungraded]

  20. The stories of these individuals, “Not a pill in sight and happy” and“LCHF has set me free”, serve as examples of such anecdotal reports.

  21. European neuropsychopharmacology 2014: Type 3 diabetes is sporadic Alzheimer’s disease: mini-review [overview article; ungraded]

  22. “Flipping the metabolic switch” refers to a physiologic state in which neither dietary carbohydrate nor dietary fat are present in sufficient quantities to fuel the body’s energy needs. Under these circumstances, the body will — in part — look to its fat stores for energy, metabolizing fatty acids to ketones, which can be directly used for energy.

    Obesity 2018: Flipping the metabolic switch: understanding and applying the health benefits of fasting[review article; ungraded]

  23. The weaknesses in the intermittent fasting literature are:

    • Study designs and populations are markedly different from one another, making systematic reviews and meta-analyses difficult to perform.
    • Fasting protocols often do not correspond to commonly practiced methods of intermittent fasting.
    • Studies are often small and of short duration.
    • Dropout rates are high.
    • Some studies provide food, while others offer only dietary counseling and rely on self-reported food intake at just a few time points.
    • Methods of body composition assessment often differ.
    • Protein intakes may be inadequate.

  24. Methane has a shorter lifespan in the atmosphere compared to carbon dioxide; but, on the other hand, methane traps more radiation from the sun, which can contribute to rising temperatures. So, like many issues, this one is complicated.

  25. Significance 2011: Deming, data and observational studies: A process out of control and needing fixing [overview article; ungraded]

  26. For a more detailed look at the low-quality research that exists, read Guide to red meat: is it healthy?

  27. It has been known for decades that when insulin levels are very low (as they typically are on a low-carb diet), the kidneys will reabsorb less sodium and excrete more into the urine.

    American Journal of Physiology. Renal Physiology 2007: Insulin’s impact on renal sodium transport and blood pressure in health, obesity, and diabetes [overview article]

    Diabetalogia 1981: The effect of insulin on renal sodium metabolism [overview article]

  28. In this section, we focus mainly on randomized controlled trial data and meta-analyses/systematic reviews of such RCTs. Read A comprehensive guide to salt for a more in-depth exploration of the topic and a look at the observational data.

  29. Although the original paper found a mild benefit of salt restriction in certain subgroups, the authors published a correction to their paper with an updated statistical analysis that they believe more accurately reflects the conclusions that can be drawn from the available evidence. Their corrected analysis shows no benefit of salt restriction on mortality in normotensive or hypertensive people.

  30. However, with the exception of one study in 169 hypertensive individuals, the studies were fairly small (between 6 and 40 participants), lasted only one to six weeks, and provided no data on clinical outcomes such as heart attacks and strokes. Therefore, this review does not address long-term effects of sodium restriction on arterial health.

  31. Albumin is a protein normally present in blood, and its appearance in urine indicates that the kidneys aren’t functioning the way they should be.

  32. There was no statistically significant difference in all-cause mortality or cardiovascular mortality. The authors concluded, however, that there was “weak evidence” for improved cardiovascular mortality. The relative risk of CV mortality with salt restriction was 0.67, but the confidence interval was wide and crossed 1.0 (0.45-1.01), making this statistically insignificant. Therefore, the more accurate conclusion is that the data did not show a significant difference in cardiovascular mortality.

  33. Even though this was an analysis of multiple trials, they were very small trials and included a total of only 254 individuals.