Subject: | |
From: | |
Reply To: | |
Date: | Wed, 12 Jul 2000 07:14:34 -0400 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
Parts/Attachments: |
|
|
On Tue, 11 Jul 2000 13:31:53 CDT, Justin Hasselman
<[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Well,
>right now I'm eating only lean meats with just a few vegies. My fat intake
>is virtually non existant ...
>After using a ketosix strip, I found that I'm pretty deep into ketosis. At
>first that seemed odd b/c I'm not eating much fat, but now I wonder if the
>ketone bodies being produced are from *bodyfat* being burned for fuel
>instead of ingested fat (someone one who knows more about ketosis can jump
>in here and explain why this is!)??
>
Ketone bodies are produced as soon as any fat (body fat or eaten fat)
is beeing used (burnt) at a high rate, with simultaneuous
gluconeogenesis (by lack of carbohydrate in the food or by fasting).
Ketones are a normal sign of starvation, and occurs even in Orang Utans
in times if food shortage. Urang Utans are fruit eaters with ingest
*very* few fat. But in shortage times, fat is used and therefore ketone
bodies produced.
Ketone bodies are also produced in times of carbohydrate starvation -
like some on the list use to aspire.
By supplying fat and forcing the body into gluconeugenesis by cutting out
carbs. But that is quite a different thing.
The ketone smell (of aceton, a ketone body) is often associated with poverty
- because it's a sign of starvation. Similarly cancer stations in hospitals
are said to smell like aceton (because it's a illness sign in this case).
If you don't *eat* fat, the ketones can tell you for shure, that body
fat is used up.
fine :-)
Amadeus
|
|
|