Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Eric Helms on the Ketogenic Diet for Building Muscle
Episode Date: February 13, 2019The ketogenic diet is all the rage right now. According to many, it’s the single best diet for losing fat, staying lean, and improving health and longevity. It’s not, of course, because there’s ...no single diet that’s best for accomplishing all of that in everyone all of the time, but the ketogenic diet can work well as a weight loss diet for some people some of the time. That’s how it has mostly been promoted, as well—as an effective way to lose weight rapidly—but recently, more and more people have been talking about the ketogenic diet’s superiority for building muscle as well. They’re calling this approach “ketogaining” and the story is that it’s a healthier, more effective way to gain muscle and not fat than the traditional high-carb diet popular amongst most bodybuilders and weightlifters. Poke around online and you’ll find some freaky big and lean people promoting ketogaining as well as a few studies that seem to validate their claims, and so understandably, it’s starting to catch on. How legitimate is ketogaining, though? Can you really have great workouts and gain just as much muscle but less fat by eating less than 50 grams of carbs and over 100 grams of fat per day? To help answer these questions, I invited Eric Helms back on the show. In case you’re not familiar with him, Eric’s one of the premier natural bodybuilding coaches in the game and is himself a professional natural bodybuilder and strength athlete, as well as an author and credentialed scientist with several peer-reviewed publications under his belt. In this interview, Eric breaks down the research currently available on ketogaining and explains . . . - The basic theory of ketogaining (why it’s a thing) - What studies have shown and what questions still remain - How the ketogenic diet is likely to impact your training performance - How much fat you can expect to gain following a ketogenic diet vs a high-carb diet - Eric’s personal recommendation for carbohydrate intake for maximizing muscle gain - And more 13:49 - Does the ketogenic diet work for someone who wants to gain muscle and strength? 16:39 Why does the ketogenic diet make you feel satiated? 28:41 - Why do you think that the performance was maintained? 34:57 - Does you body get more efficient with the glycogen it uses once you switch to a high fat, low carb diet? 39:09 - Does upping carbs improve performance? 49:18 - Where can people find you and your work? Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If your goal is to put on muscle mass, you probably want to have some level of carbohydrate
in your diet. It doesn't necessarily need to be a high carbohydrate diet because it's not like
you're running marathons if you're a powerlifter, an Olympic lifter, or a bodybuilder, but you
probably want to be somewhere around at least a gram per pound would be kind of my low-end
recommendation. Hey, this is Mike from Muscle for Life and Legion Athletics.
And as you probably know, I work pretty hard to understand and promote high quality diet,
nutrition, and exercise science.
And that's why I have spent and continue to spend quite a bit of my time researching and
then writing articles, writing books, recording podcasts,
recording videos, and so forth. And that's why I reference quite a bit of scientific literature
in all of my work. Now, something I don't do though, is produce a research review where
individual studies are broken down and analyzed, because one, my plate is already
overflowing with projects as it is. And two, I honestly don't think that I could do it better
than the researchers who are out there creating research reviews and whose work and research
reviews I myself read regularly, like James Krieger, Eric Helms, Greg Knuckles, Mike Zordos,
read regularly, like James Krieger, Eric Helms, Greg Knuckles, Mike Zordos, Alan Aragon, and Brett Contreras. And so I had an idea, why not get those guys to come on my podcast to discuss various
studies that they have analyzed in their reviews and share with us what they've learned and how we
can use these key takeaways, how we can use the information in those studies
to better optimize our diets, exercise routines, supplement regimens, and our overall lifestyle.
Well, I reached out to them and they thought it was a great idea. And so a monthly series was
born. Basically once a month, I'm going to have one of these guys on the show and they're going
to break down a study that they have analyzed in their respective research reviews.
And they're going to explain to us why these studies were conducted, how they were conducted, what the results were, what their interpretations of the results were, and how we can use the information to improve our diets, our training, our supplementation, or in some cases,
just the overall quality of our lives. If I sound a bit funny, it's because I've had a cold for a
few days, but I'm finally better. And I'm here recording this intro. I also had a randomly good
workout this morning. I was expecting it to be pretty shit because I wasn't feeling too good
over the weekend, but I felt strong today. I even went up in reps on a couple exercises,
so I must have needed some rest. Anyway, today's episode is going to be about the ketogenic diet,
which is all the rage right now. According to many people, this is the single best diet for losing fat,
staying lean, and improving every aspect of your health and well-being and longevity.
And the reality is it is not, of course, because there is no single diet that's best for accomplishing
all of that in everyone all the time. But I will throw the ketogenic diet of bone and say that it can work
well as a weight loss diet for some people some of the time and that's mostly how it has been
promoted it's mostly been promoted as an effective way to lose weight rapidly and healthily and sure
it can accomplish that but recently more and more and more people, especially in the
body composition space, have been talking about the ketogenic diet's superiority for building
muscle as well. Now, they're calling this approach keto gaining, and the story is that it is a
healthier, more effective way to gain muscle and not fat than following the
traditional high-carb diet popular amongst most bodybuilders and weightlifters. If you poke around
online, you will find some pretty freaky big and freaky lean people promoting keto gaining,
as well as a few studies that seem to validate their claims. And so understandably,
it is starting to catch on. I am starting to get asked about it more and more frequently.
How legitimate is keto gaining though? Can you really have great workouts and gain just as much
muscle, but less fat by eating less than 50 grams of carbs and over 100 grams of fat per
day? Well, to help answer this question, I invited the one and only Eric Helms back on the show.
And in case you are not familiar with him, Eric is one of the premier natural bodybuilding coaches
in the game and is himself also a professional natural bodybuilder
and strength athlete, as well as an author and credentialed scientist with several peer-reviewed
publications under his belt. He's also a super cool, super down-to-earth guy, so he's always fun
to talk to. And in this interview, Eric breaks down the research currently available on keto gaining and explains the basic theory
behind it. So why is it a thing? What studies have shown and what questions still remain?
How the ketogenic diet is likely to impact your training performance? How much fat you can expect
to gain following a ketogenic diet when you are lean bulking versus a high carb diet. He also shares his personal
recommendation for carbohydrate intake for maximizing muscle gain and more.
This is where I would normally plug a sponsor to pay the bills, but I'm not big on promoting stuff
that I don't personally use and believe in. So instead, I'm just going to quickly tell you about something of mine,
specifically my fitness book for women, Thinner, Leaner, Stronger. Now, this book has sold over
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to listen to Thinner, Leaner, Stronger for free. Alrighty, that is enough shameless plugging for now, at least. Let's get to the show.
Mr. Eric Helms is back. It's been a while. We've done a couple interviews and those have been some
of the most popular actually that I've done in a long time, which is I was looking over those
numbers. That's why I told one of the guys that works for me, I was like, we need to get
the one and only Dr. Helms back on because he's a cool dude and people always like his stuff.
Well, I am. I'm honored to be back on.
And I'm just tickled pink that people like my episodes a lot.
All right. So the topic is going to be keto gaining, which I also thought was a great timely thing to talk about, because if I had no integrity, I would be going keto crazy right
now because it's actually astounding. I mean, I'm looking at it more from on the book side of
things because that's a lot of my life is in the publishing world. And the amount of keto related
books and cookbooks and just diet books and health books that are selling right now is astounding. It's
actually absurd. It reminds me of back when paleo first really took off. It's like at this point,
if you can produce anything halfway decent with keto and you know how to game Amazon's search
algorithm, you're going to make a lot of money. Wow. So, I mean, yeah, it's definitely a pretty
hot topic at the moment. It's definitely buzzing. Keto is one that comes in cycles. You know, like if we all recall back to the 90s when the Atkins diet came out, that was huge. And there were tons of diets, diet books as well, all written about it. So, I think it is intriguing because it's not, I wouldn't describe it as a fad because it's been around for a long time, but it's definitely hot right now. Has it been around in, in, has it been known though,
as the ketogenic diet? Because Atkins diet was a thing in its own right, right? And it was a,
just considered a low carb, a higher fat, but was it associated with ketogenic dieting?
Cause this is the first time, I mean, I've only, you've been around this in the space probably
longer than I have. It's been six years or so for me.
And in that time, I haven't seen people specifically jumping up and down for the ketogenic diet, just some form of low-carb.
Yeah, I mean, I think there's plenty of low-carb diets that have been promoted in the past all the way going back to like Banting.
We're talking like 1900s that did produce a state of
ketosis. I think this is probably the first time that the term itself ketogenic has become as
popular as it has in the just kind of the primary name. I don't see it as much different than the
low-carb craze of the 90s or, you know, restricted carbohydrate diets have been a thing for a long time.
That's for sure.
You said Manting or Banting?
Banting.
Banting.
Well, what is that?
I've never heard of that.
That was a gentleman, I'm not great on my history on this one, who lost a whole lot
of weight using a ketogenic diet.
And I believe his last name was Banting.
That became the term, like doing a Banting diet.
It was pretty old school.
I think, man, that might have been, my history is not great off the top of my head, but the
Banting diet was like, I think one of the very first times that ketogenic diet took
the mainstream.
And I'm sure someone out there who's better with history will be like, no, you got it
all wrong.
But it's definitely probably one of the first times it appeared in the mainstream as an approach that was kind of
counter to the norm for weight loss and combating obesity and for health.
Interesting. Yeah. I wrote a longer form article on the ketogenic diet a couple of years ago. I
never came across that in the research that I did. Where I kind of started was just when it became
something that was used to help people who have epileptic seizures.
Yeah, this was definitely like pre-research.
I think, yeah, it was a gentleman named William Banting and he used to be obese.
I think it was in the 1800s and he limited his intake of carbs primarily and lost a ton of weight.
And then diet was promoted after that because of
his success. It's like pre-science, just intuition. He just had an idea and it worked.
Well, it wasn't pre-science per se in the 1800s, but it was definitely, it wasn't like...
Oh, I mean, I mean the science of ketogenic dieting though. There was no...
Sure.
Right. Or just dieting in general. I'm sure that there wasn't that much known at that time.
Definitely there wasn't PubMed at the time, that's for sure.
I'm sure that there wasn't that much known at that time.
Definitely there wasn't PubMed at the time, that's for sure.
Hey, before we continue, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, and if you want to help me help more people get into the best shape of their lives,
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checking out my VIP one-on-one coaching service. Now, my team and I have helped thousands of people of all ages, circumstances, and needs. So no matter how complicated or maybe even hopeless
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coaching now and schedule your free consultation call. And let's see if our program is a good fit for you. All right. So what we want to
talk about today and the research you're going to be going over is it's a bit more specific part of
the body composition space because most people who find their way, at least in the mainstream,
who find their way to the ketogenic diet are wanting to lose weight, which is another
discussion, but of course it can work fine if it means that you
are in a calorie deficit and you can stick to it and you don't hate your life on it.
But if you are someone who's wanting to gain muscle and strength, is the ketogenic diet
viable? Now, of course you can gain muscle and strength on it, but that's where I'm just going
to kind of pass it over to you because it's anybody out there that poke around on the internet, you'll find there's a debate going on where some people say
it's awful. You're not going to make any gains on a keto diet. Other people on the complete other
end of the spectrum saying it's actually better. Low carb is, and high fat ketogenic dieting is
better than just a balanced higher carbohydrate diet. And then of course you have people in the
middle that say, oh, well it depends. Yeah. Yeah, definitely. There's a lot of, it's a crowded space as far as
opinions. Anytime you see a lot of people discussing something, even pseudoscientifically,
and there seems to be a lot of disagreement, it's typically because there's not a lot of
research on something. And I would say that is the case, although that is changing with
the ketogenic diet in terms of the available evidence. There's not a whole lot on low carb
diets in athletes or resistance trained individuals trying to put on muscle mass.
There's a fair amount in the obesity realm and diabetes management and that type of thing in
health. But yeah, if you were to sit down and try to do a research review of all the studies on, let's say, resistance trained or strength training athletes paired
ketogenic diets to normal diets, you'd have a handful of studies. But on balance, they don't
look too great for at least the goal of putting on muscle mass. There's been a number of ones that
have been published recently. So Vargas et al., 2018, this was a study where they compared two groups, one following a
more quote-unquote traditional diet and the other group following a ketogenic diet with
the goal to put them on a slight surplus, have them weight train and get bigger.
And the ketogenic diet group actually lost body fat and on average lost a non-significant
amount of body weight and had no change in muscle
mass. Now that's interesting because it's not all bad. And this kind of goes hand in hand with some
other research on the ketogenic diet where we've seen that independent of protein intake, although
the protein intake is probably a big part of it as well, people tend to reduce their energy intake
when they start on a ketogenic diet. And this can
last for around a month or so. I think this is part of the reason why you get a lot of anecdotal
reports of success with a ketogenic diet is that it typically, one, you're cutting out one of the
three major macronutrients. So both your fat and protein typically go up. So you're going to see
better muscle retention compared to a poor diet where you're trying to lose weight or you just starve yourself and do a lot of cardio.
So on top of having higher protein and probably greater lean body mass retention compared to what
someone had done in the past, they're also getting a suppression of hunger from that higher protein
intake and just the fact that it's a ketogenic diet. Something about the ketogenic diet initially
does seem to consistently suppress hunger above and beyond just having a higher protein intake.
So it kind of feels like the diet's easier. Do you think that's because in some people,
and you can correct me if I'm wrong here, but this is my understanding that in some people,
fat can be very satiating. Now we know if you mix fat into a mixed meal, it increases satiety,
but just in and of itself, some people just feel fuller
with higher fat foods and just a higher fat intake in general than carb.
You know, the straight up satiety comparisons don't really fare well for fat. So I think like
if you actually look at it on a gram per gram or calorie per calorie basis, more often than not,
carbohydrate actually tends to be a little more satiating or it has more to do with
the volume of the food or the fiber content. Like one of the most satiating foods out there is
potatoes, you know, so yeah, yeah, probably has to do the palatability as well.
Just just to clarify, I mean, that's one thing I write in my books, and I've written about in
articles and talk about all the time that generally speaking, people are going to be
fuller on carbs and fats. But again, I may just be wrong, but I don't remember the exact research off the top of
my head.
There was some evidence that I came across that how I understood is that although in
some people, for some reasons, that's not necessarily the case.
And sure, you're always going to have the random one-offs, but that's a bit more than
just random one-offs.
But again, I could be wrong.
Yeah.
So what I was going to say was that fat is still satiating just because it's not necessarily satiating on a gram per gram or
calorie comparison to fat. It doesn't tell us the whole picture. You know, fat does result in the
release of cholecystokinin. It does provide more mouthfeel and it can result in more satisfaction
after finishing a meal. So it does have an impact on satiety, certainly. It's more just a question
of per calorie because the energy density of fat, is it more satiating and will it result
in ad libitum or free feeding of less or more calories compared to a carbohydrate meal? And
typically carbohydrate wins out. However, I think the reason why, if I had to speculate as why
ketogenic diets provide this initial satiety effect is probably because of some of the changes physiologically as you're kind of retooling the body to focus on fats as a fuel source more.
And this happens, it kind of seems to coincide with the quote unquote diet fatigue people experience that can also last a few weeks and sometimes up to a month, quote, unquote, keto flu. So if I had to guess that those might be part and parcel to one another,
that during that period, satiety is suppressed a bit as things are being switched over, if you will.
It could also be something that is completely non-physiological, just that when you're
initially adopting a ketogenic diet or any new diet, you're trying to figure out what you're
allowed to eat. You're just not as familiar with the food choices. It may be that if you had someone who coached you
up on what foods you can eat and can eat, that you'd have more options. But I think just the
fact that you're cutting out an entire, you know, actually, if you go to the grocery store, like
two-thirds of the grocery store from what you can buy, then you end up eating less just because
you're kind of scratching your head sometimes. So, there's a number of factors that could go into why there's this
lag period initially where people report less hunger or habitually eat less calories.
I mean, it could also be that they're now not able to eat the types of foods that they tend
to overeat. And then instead they have to eat stuff they generally don't eat. And maybe in
some cases don't like all that much, but are willing to do it to get results.
That's actually a really good point.
Some of the most highly palatable foods, the foods that drive additional hunger intake, the foods that you could say make you hungrier are typically combinations of carbohydrate and fat.
They're combinations of sweet and savory.
fat. They're combinations of sweet and savory. So it may not be that ketogenic diets are more satiating. It's that you're removing foods that are more stimulating of hunger. That's a really
good point, actually. Do you know the book Sugar, Salt, Fat, I believe? It's those three. I don't
know. I think it's that order. Michael Moss, investigative. Not familiar with it, but go ahead.
Yeah. Well, I had him on the podcast and it's just a deep dive into the really into into food science and it's not surprising when you think about it but at first it's a bit surprising
to learn just how much time and money and effort the big food companies put into finding these what
they call bliss points the just exact right amount of sugar salt and fat and just the right mouth
feel and the entire they kind of break down the experience of eating their foodstuffs into all their little constituent parts and just
maximizing every little point. So, it makes these foods hyper palatable. It doesn't happen by chance.
It happens by a lot of work. Absolutely. And that's why I think, well, sometimes I think we
in the evidence-based community will attack someone if they talk about, you know, processed versus unprocessed foods.
And I think it's one of those cases where the person might be technically wrong for the reason they're stating, but it's still good advice.
Like even if there's nothing physiologically wrong with eating some processed foods in the context of having a balanced diet, on average, like you said, if you eat a lot of processed foods, your satiety is going to be lower. So, there's definitely
something to focusing on more single ingredient food items just because it makes a diet easier
to follow. You're not eating foods that have been engineered to make you eat as much of them as
possible. You know, no one had one piece of broccoli and went, man, I can never, I can never
just have one broccoli. You know, that's not a thing.
Once you get there, you've transcended.
You are the king of orthorexia if you feel that way about broccoli.
I'll tell you what, that's king or queen, man.
So getting back to what this means in the context of keto gaining is that it makes it
a little harder.
If you're following a diet that suppresses your ability to eat more
and you need to be in a surplus to gain mass effectively, that can get in the way. It also
confounds a lot of studies. Like this study I'm referring to by Vargas et al was only eight weeks.
So if some of these people are experiencing four to five weeks of hunger suppression,
that's really basically looking at maybe a three-week period where they got in a surplus.
So on average, when you look at this study, you look at the numbers and you're like, oh, on average, these guys were actually in a deficit.
Right, because you mentioned, I mean, they lost weight, they lost fat.
You can't do that in a surplus if it's statistically significant, if the amount matters.
Yep.
So there were probably a few people who weren't in a deficit, but the majority were just by the numbers if you look at it.
Out of curiosity, I'm sure you did this.
Did you look at the individual results to find some people who did not lose fat or weight, who gained some?
Yeah.
I mean, it's really nice when studies report all the individual data.
That's not completely common.
And if I recall correctly, I don't think Vargas reported all of the individual data. That's not completely common. And if I recall correctly, I don't think Vargas reported
all of the individual data. I could contact the authors, but you know, ain't nobody got time for
that. Who knows, maybe this can be the next study. You're already conducting a lean bulking study.
This is true. And actually, you know, we did a study, what's called a case series,
which is somewhere between a observational group study and a case study of
one person. It's like a handful of people who you track. So a master's student of mine,
Simon Shatterton led this and did a great job with it. He looked at five strength athletes,
a mixture of Olympic lifters and power lifters following a not quite ketogenic, but definitely
a low carb, high fat diet where they were capped at one gram
per kg of carbohydrates. So for example, a 200 pound male wouldn't be able to go over 90 grams
of carbs. So pretty low. Yeah. I mean, you can get there with just some fruit and vegetables.
Absolutely. That's like, you know, a banana and an apple and then vegetables rest the day and
you're out of carbs. Similar thing happened. There was this initial suppression of, of hunger,
carbs. Similar thing happened. There was this initial suppression of hunger, loss of body fat,
and we had the individual data on this. And it happened in four out of five people,
so about 80% of them. There was one person who didn't reduce their calorie intake and didn't lose much body fat to speak of. So it's certainly not a universal effect, but it does seem to affect
the majority of people. So yeah, that's individual data is really important here because there are definite differences among individuals, which is another reason why
anecdotes are limited in their ability to help you. You can find people ranting and raving about
the ketogenic diet because they might have just, it was really a useful tool for them compared to
what they'd done previously and others that it might not ever fit well. So yeah, that's an
important point. This study by Vargas et al, it doesn't ever fit well. So yeah, that's an important point.
This study by Vargas et al., it doesn't really tell us what we want to know. It tells us that
it's difficult to get into a surplus while following a ketogenic diet, unless it's maybe
more supervised by the researchers or more encouraged. Maybe they could have had a little
more contact with the participants. But it doesn't tell us whether or not an equal surplus of a
ketogenic diet compared to a traditional diet would be as effective.
But it does tell us practical things.
Like if you adopt this and try to do a bulking phase, it might be difficult.
Fortunately, there is other research out there that allows us to make some conclusions about whether or not the ketogenic diet is appropriate for putting on muscle mass.
So there was another study that also came out
last year in 2018 by Kephart and colleagues, and it's called the three-month effects of a
ketogenic diet on body composition, blood parameters, and performance metrics in CrossFit
trainees. And they found that interestingly enough, performance wasn't that negatively affected
by going on a ketogenic diet, but there were decreases in lean mass in certain areas.
And this isn't just no gain.
This is actually a loss of lean mass.
This is also a longer study.
We're looking at three months now.
And, you know, you could look at that and say, oh, that could be an aberrant finding.
But there was also another study that came out just recently.
And I'm assuming you can also dismiss it saying, oh, well, it's lower carbs.
So there's just less, you know, water and glycogen in the muscles that was registering as lean mass.
Yeah. So it all depends on what the method is and whether they account for that. So this was,
I believe they use DEXA in, in Kephart. If I, if I remember correctly, that should,
if you're doing it in the same conditions, it should correct for that. But I can't guarantee
you that the, uh, the practitioners and the participants were on board with doing it at the same time of day and maintaining similar levels of hydration and all that.
So it's possible.
One could try to dismiss all of the data I'm about to bring up as to why it's probably not a good idea and ascribe it just to, like you said, systematic measurement error.
Or just superficial things.
Yeah, absolutely. Some kind of quote-unquote lean mass loss that is not actually muscle mass,
especially when you're seeing performance not necessarily decrease or maintain. But
if your goal is putting on muscle mass, I think you would probably want to be cautious based on
this because there was also a recent study where they looked at powerlifters and Olympic weightlifters,
basically similar to what I did with Simon Chatterton, but with a much bigger cohort
and more investigation. And they found that they lost body mass and they didn't lose performance.
And the author said, hey, this might be a useful way to make weight instead of more harmful like
hardcore dehydration, which I agree with. There was also a loss of lean
mass and around like two kilograms, which is a little like, that's not good. You know, it's good.
It didn't affect their performance, but the fact that we've seen in CrossFit trainees and power
lifters, Olympic weightlifters, loss of lean body mass in the study that I did with Chatterton,
we didn't see any gain in ultrasound muscle thickness over
eight weeks. And these are trained lifters, so you're not expecting huge gains in eight weeks,
but we didn't see any gains. So across the four studies that I've referenced while we've talked,
we've either seen a plateau or no change in muscle mass or a decrease in muscle mass. So I
would say on balance right now, it's not looking too good. If your goal is to put on muscle mass, you probably want to have some level of carbohydrate in your diet. It doesn't necessarily need to be a high carbohydrate diet because it's not like you're running marathons if you're a powerlifter, an Olympic lifter or a bodybuilder. But you probably want to be somewhere around, you know, like at least a gram per pound would be kind of my low-end recommendation. Makes sense. And out of curiosity, why do you think that the performance was maintained?
You know, this is a funny thing. I think in the evidence-based community corner,
we have a lot of people who like to lift weights and like to read PubMed.
We've become very anti-low-carb, and I think we need this to be a little more balanced.
I'm not you. I'm not a scientist, but you know, I've, I've, I'm that guy as well for, for however
much I have my foot in the, in the same pool that you're in. I've been, that's been my position for
some time. I wouldn't say I've been rabidly anti-low carb. I've just said like, why? I mean,
if you, if you really enjoy it, then that's why. But if you don't really enjoy it
and you'd rather just eat a more balanced diet, you're not, you're not losing, you're not missing
out on anything, whether you want to lose fat or gain muscle or just feel good.
Yeah. Then that's my main beef too, is that it's potentially unnecessarily restrictive,
but that said, we still need to do more work into who does it work for? Why does it work for
them? Who sticks with it
long-term? I have a colleague here at AUT who's doing his PhD looking at low-carb diets. One
thing that he's been investigating in one of his studies is how people approach diets. There's
some research on this from a different angle looking at flexible versus non-flexible dietary
restraint, rigid versus flexible restraint.
But he looked at it specifically as people who ascribe the description to themselves of either being moderators or abstainers. So it may be that some people just find it much more natural and easy
to abstain from certain things from a diet. And they really like having specific rules to follow,
like I'm going to follow. Like,
I'm going to eat this list of foods and not this list.
I've come across a number of people over the years of, I mean, I've emailed,
between email and social media, I've interacted. I mean, I don't know, my inbox is 115,000 emails
probably sent and received. So just speaking from that experience, I've definitely come across
people who just seem to do better. This is just weight loss, mostly seem to do better with a more
restrictive approach, mostly because they found that it just was hard for them to control their
intake. If, you know, they couldn't just eat 50 grams of chocolate or something, it needed to be
the chances of that turning into the whole bar were too high. But you see that
in other areas of life too, right? Where you find that some people, they've learned that about
themselves, whether it's TV or video games or porn or whatever potentially, quote unquote,
addictive type things are out there. Some people have found that, I mean, I'd say in the case of
porn, it's better to just abstain. There's nothing good that can come of that, but let's take TV, video games, or, you know, sugar or highly palatable foods and
stuff. Some people have found that they just know themselves well enough where they go, yeah, no,
I just need to not do that at all. At least for a while, I'm going to go down the dwindling spiral
quickly. Yeah. I'm certainly not a psychologist or a neuroscience guy, but I do know that we see rules differently from, oh, I need to be mindful of this.
You know, so I can say objectively that if someone is a moderator and they take an approach and a mindset of moderation to nutrition, that's probably healthier psychologically and physiologically in the long term. But if that simply turns into this cascade of failure and then self-recrimination
and weight gain and then not being able to follow the diet, then that's not the right option.
And I think some people are better suited to being on a more rigid, if you will, or maybe
more rule-based plan, I think is a better way to put it. Like if it fits your macros is simply intimidating to someone who doesn't have the
nutritional literacy and who also happens to kind of have that, that natural predilection towards
liking hard lines in the sand is the way they operate mentally. Now that doesn't mean that
they can't change the rules over time. And I think that's the way I would approach it as a clinician
is, all right, we have this list of foods, we've removed some trigger foods, we've included a lot
of good healthy foods, and you're going to follow these rules. And then as they've gotten used to
that, we can change the rules a little more and make them a little more inclusive, flex them out,
maybe change the time restrictions. So, hey, on weekends, you're allowed to have X, Y, and Z,
and then just see how that goes. But to get back to the main point, it's whether or not a ketogenic diet is effective depends on a lot of things for
someone. And it's not simply, hey, carbs are what fuel exercise. And if you cut out carbs,
everything's going to go to shit. And it's an overly restrictive diet. So it's bad. I think
there are some problems and that's why we've kind of had this lash back
against them in our community. But we also have to recognize that weightlifting, powerlifting,
bodybuilding, they're on the extreme low end of energy expenditure for sports. And if I had to
guess out of team sports or endurance sports or power and strength sports, who would be the most
negatively affected by a low carb diet?
It would not be strength athletes. They're probably the least likely to be negatively affected because there's so little energy expenditure. You have to do a pretty high
volume program before you're actually negatively affected by a low carb intake.
And that's why you see so many strength athletes and bodybuilders who do fine on relatively low
carbohydrate diets. I will say that you're going to find very few bodybuilders who do ketogenic diets.
That's kind of the rare exception.
But you'll run into a lot of high-level bodybuilders who do moderate carb diets even in the off-season.
And we've got data to back that.
You know, people are going, but hold on.
You know, bodybuilding relies on glycogen.
It's primarily anaerobic.
I don't get it.
But it's interesting.
When you switch to a higher fat, lower carb diet, it doesn't deplete glycogen as much as you think.
Glycogen is preserved to some degree.
And also your training doesn't deplete glycogen as much as you might think.
If you do like a really high volume body part specific, like 20 sets for an individual body part, it might only deplete glycogen about 40%.
And even on a moderate carbohydrate diet within 24 hours, that'll come back.
And so unless you're doing high volume, same muscle group every day, which is just a bad way to train, it probably wouldn't run into any issue.
And doesn't your body get more efficient in the glycogen that it does use if it if there's less available. Yeah, absolutely. I mean, you are physiologically limited to how much
you can pull in other substrates to do heavy high anaerobic threshold work. When you're weight
training, you are going to be burning some fat like there we have studies showing a reduction in
intramuscular triglyceride stores after a heavyweight training session.
But that's probably being burned between sets to help you resynthesize ATP.
But if you get really good at that, that means that you don't have to rely on other fuel sources.
So, yeah, you get more and more efficient with how much glycogen you're using.
But just to give kind of a real practical example, there was a study, I believe, in the late 90s by Mitchell, where they had folks do five sets of 15 RMs to failure on squat, leg press, and leg extension.
So think about how crazy that workout is.
Five sets to failure in high reps for squats, then leg press, then leg extension.
That sounds awesome.
At 15 reps, too, that's terrible.
Yeah, yeah.
So that's 75 reps of squats, leg press, and leg extension. That sounds at 15 reps too. That's terrible. Yeah. Yeah. So that's 75 reps of squats,
like press and leg extension. Um, so your, your quads, that's a workout you, you don't ever want
to come back to. No. Yeah. Yeah. That's, that's, I've never, it's like when you're first time
doing the 10, 10 by 10, we were like, that was the worst thing I've ever done. Absolutely.
Absolutely. And if you think about it, that's only 100 reps. This is, I think, 225 reps in total. So it's wacky, right? So the people who did this, there was two groups.
One consumed either a 65% carbohydrate diet, or the other one consumed a 40% carbohydrate diet
for the two days prior. And I think the authors hypothesized that the lower carbohydrate group
would have poorer performance, but they didn't. So it just goes to show you that you just can't compare resistance training to the kind of
energy expenditure that you see in someone like a marathon runner. Yeah. Even the most crazy
bodybuilding being filmed that I need to go all out and puke three times kind of workouts
pale in comparison to what happens if you do soccer practice or if you go run a few miles,
not a few miles, obviously a lot of miles, but real athletes.
Anybody that has done stuff like that knows. I played a lot of ice hockey when I was growing up
and I remember even when I was an invincible teenager, how tired I would be after a hockey game that there's no
comparison between that and how I'll feel even after a quote unquote, hard weightlifting workout,
like a hard weightlifting workout. I'll feel good. I'll feel energized. I'm ready to go for the day.
I mean, after a hard hockey game at 16 years old, I was like ready to go to sleep.
Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. So, I mean, you can definitely make a hard leg day feel hard, but it's not, that doesn't necessarily correlate to how much energy you're expending. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. So, I mean, you can definitely make a hard leg day feel hard,
but it's not, that doesn't necessarily correlate to how much energy you're expending. So the point
is, is that you can certainly get away with moderate and moderately low carbohydrate intakes
in the off season, probably be fine to feel your training. And so long as you can get in a surplus,
I see no reason why that would get in the way, but there might be something about being so low in carbohydrate that you're ketogenic that actually interferes with the muscle building
process. And it might be just insulin levels are too chronically low. It could interfere with some
things on a cellular level that I can't speak to confidently, but it would be interesting to see
more research in this area because we've now seen consistently three studies in 2018 that I'm aware
of. We've seen either a decrement or no gain in muscle mass when there was an intended surplus.
So that's a good, simple, practical takeaway question for you. So if you have somebody,
let's say there's eating a moderately carb diet, somewhere around a gram per pound per day,
and they need to, and their protein's around the same and the remaining calories from fat,
and they need to increase their calories. Or let's say it's somebody who, and I come across guys here and
there who genuinely just need to eat a shitload of food to gain weight consistently, whether it's
because they're active outside of the gym or that's just the way it is. I mean, seeing 160
pound guys need to eat upward uh, upward of 4,000
calories a day to, to consistently gain. In fact, one of, one of them works with me. So I see him
every day. So let's say to a, to a person like that, now they have an option. Let's say they
need to get another 500 calories a day or whatever it is. What are your thoughts on how they do that?
The reason why I ask is my standard recommendation to people like that is work your carbs up to a point where, I mean, you don't have to go absurd. And there is a point
where it's just not even practical to eat more carbs and it makes more sense maybe to eat more
protein. I'm just curious as to your thought, like, is, do you think there's really a big
benefit performance wise or muscle building wise from going, let's say from one gram per pound per
day to one and a half or maybe even two,
as opposed to using those calories, otherwise more fat, more protein?
I think there can be, but on average, there probably won't be. So if I was to make a
statement based on the research, I would say it probably doesn't matter. I would just say
calories and protein and up calories. When I'm in a coaching position, it's definitely worth trying upping carbs first to see if that does improve performance because
upping fat probably won't. It can have some peripheral effects where it might result in
a slightly more beneficial hormonal environment if you're on a pretty low fat diet.
Which you probably wouldn't be, right? I mean, if you're lean bulking, you're probably getting
plenty of fat. Yeah, probably not. You you have to be doing that intentionally and i only
bring that up because i know it's been popular in some circles to do like low fat high carb bulking
as a way to try to minimize fat gain and i think that can have some negative side effects there's
some some research showing that like if your fat's down around 15% of calories, that can
result in a lower testosterone level.
Whether or not that would actually translate to better muscle mass gains, these are pretty
modest differences in the research and how much that affects testosterone.
So probably not much.
Yeah.
So in a realistic scenario, fat won't be that low, like you said.
I would probably first try to add in some more carbohydrate and see if that had a
beneficial effect on an individual basis. There's a good chance it wouldn't, but it might. And I've
definitely been in a situation as a coach where I have seen that. And you get to find something
out about that person. Like, oh, they do really well on a higher carb diet. They respond well to
it. An example would be my colleague, Alberto Nunez. He notices a very distinct difference
when he goes moderate carb even
versus high carb. And then low carb is really no go for him. And you can see the effects in
his training and his physique very quickly. I'm one of those people too. I don't know if
it has anything to do with that. I remember I took a DNA fit test a while ago. And
just one of the little takeaways or whatever is that my body deals with carbohydrate very well,
very high on the carbohydrate sensitivity
spectrum. So it might have something to do with that, might not. I didn't put too much stock in
that anyway. Sure. Yeah, yeah. And the evidence for this has been weakened with some of the most
recent studies. But on balance, I would say that overall, there is data to suggest that different
people handle carbohydrates differently. And maybe based on
predicted by your lipid profile and maybe predicted by your quote unquote insulin sensitivity or some
combination that thereof, we're still kind of investigating that. But there are individual
differences. I think there's no question to that. It's just a question of how do we gain the
sensitivity of analysis to be able to predict that. We don't have it yet, but the
practical take home for coaches and for individuals, you know, working with their own nutrition
is to, I would say, give a month or so on a, say, 40% fat diet with similar calories and similar
protein, similar training, just to kind of keep it like a nice observational scientific
investigation of yourself and then flip it around and go to like 20% fat, kind of the low
end and see with obviously higher carbohydrate to keep calories the same and see if you notice
differences in performance, see if you notice differences in just how you feel energy levels,
and then do it one more time each. And if you consistently noticed that both times you did
better on either the 40% fat or 20% fat diet, then that's something you've learned about
yourself that you might do better on either a moderate or a higher carbohydrate intake.
That's great. It makes me think of another guy who works with me. I believe the diet part of
it was from your colleague, Greg Knuckles. I know the training was. It was insane. It was a two-a-day
program. I think he did it for close to two months, maybe about six weeks. Insane volume. And the diet was 1,000 grams of carbs a day. And he did, you know, just a lot of oatmeal, a lot of bread,
a lot of pasta with low fat pasta sauce. And I believe the protein intake was fairly high as well.
I know the training side came from Greg, the diet. Does that sound familiar to you? Or
is that something he just came up with? The guy working with me, I believe though the diet,
I think that was like part of it. It was like Greg, this is his all in most ridiculous bulk you can do basically.
It's possible.
I will say that all of my partnerships with Greg are more around just mass and sharing
information and thinking and having him be smarter than me rather than the actual coaching
side of it.
So I can't speak to that.
I don't know.
Okay.
I want to check it out.
You might find it interesting.
And if I remember, the logic was, at least on the diet, was just to keep fat low-ish to minimize
fat gain over the period and get a ton of calories. I actually don't remember exactly. Again,
I wasn't the one doing it. I was just laughing at watching him eat a loaf of bread every day.
There was some reasoning behind the absurd amount of carbs and the also relatively high
amount of protein.
I don't remember exactly, but it might've been around one and a half grams, like a bit
higher than what you'd normally think is necessary.
And, you know, it makes sense from a, not necessarily the extreme amount, but it does
make sense for some physiological reasons why you might want to have a very high carb
diet or a carb dominant diet, I should say, when trying to
put on muscle mass. And consider the training was crazy. Like you should, the training definitely,
you will cringe when they were, again, two days, my buddy was in the gym three hours a day,
just hard, hard training. Sounds fun. Do it, do it, do it. I'm a masochist. I'm a masochist. So
I have to hold myself back to make progress, not push myself harder. So if there is a potential rate limiting effect from being too low in
carbohydrates and there's a potential benefit from having like as high glycogen levels as possible,
then why not? Right. Especially if things are not working out the way you'd wanted
on a moderate or lower carb diet. Like in the scenario you gave me, someone's not progressing.
They're currently on like a gram per pound. What would you do? Yeah, I think probably one of the
first things you should do is try a higher carbohydrate approach. And if it doesn't net
you any benefits and you just start to gain body fat quicker, then you learn something. And the
approach should then be something else, looking at sleep or recovery or the training program or
something of that nature.
Makes sense. And just as a little epilogue to the insane bulk, so he's a solid in six weeks,
no drugs. He's a solid, probably five pounds heavier now. He gained a bit of body fat and
then he cut back down to the same waist and caliper measurements as where he started.
And he's just five to six pounds heavier now and
gain a significant amount of strength as well. So the results were there. It worked. There's no
question. He's also 23 or 24. So he's invincible. I was, I was encouraging when he was asking me,
he's like, do you think, I mean, he's a smart dude and he knows probably a bit more about
training program than even I know, but he was like, what are you? I was like, yeah,
you're invincible dude. Now, now's the time do it. Yes. I literally could not do some of the things I did when I was in that same age now.
So more power to you people in your twenties. Yep. Yep. All right. Well, um, is that, I think
that's about everything for the keto gaining at least for now, right? Yeah. I think, you know,
the take home is that we probably shouldn't be so blindly against ketogenic diets.
Some people's mentality they can work for more so if you struggle with things like tracking
and moderation is hard for you and you want to follow a high protein, low fat diet that
primarily consists of protein, fats, a little bit of fruit and some vegetables.
There's nothing wrong with that if you're following a moderate or low volume strength training program. However, if your goal
is to put on muscle mass, you probably want to be getting at least a moderate carbohydrate diet,
and, or it's going to be making it harder on yourself. Awesome. So let's wrap up with, um,
I just want to, I just want to tell everybody about mass first, which is an acronym for monthly applications in strength sport.
And I'll say that I have a pretty autistic schedule that I follow in general.
I have all my time time blocked out.
And so I spend time reading, studying things every day.
And I have a rotation.
And for my health and fitness, MAS is always at the top.
and fitness mass is always at the top. So if there's a new issue that I haven't gone through,
that's what I put my health and fitness research slash reading time into before anything else, because what you guys are doing is awesome. It's my favorite source of evidence-based
health and fitness knowledge out there. And that's really why I like to have you on to go
over research in it. For everybody
listening, we don't have any under the table deal. I'm not getting paid for this. I just genuinely
really like what you guys are doing. So I just want to say that and tell everybody that if you
like this type of discussion, if you like what Eric's talking about, and you like getting into
a bit of the science, but what I like is you guys do a great job sharing the technical information
without making it so obscure that only another scientist would be able to really understand what you're saying, which is helpful even for me because my scientific literacy is okay.
But, you know, I'm not, I'm not you.
I don't even need to start.
We'll start with just jargon.
Like, you know, I'm still in the dictionary frequently as I'm going through even your reviews of studies
because sometimes there are new terms I haven't heard and sometimes they just don't stick.
So what I like though is it's very practical.
It's very easy to understand.
And so that's my personal endorsement of it.
And if there's anything you want to add to that, please do.
And then just let people know where they can go to check it out.
Well, first, I just want to say thank you. It's really encouraging to hear that what we're
intending to do is actually coming across. And that is to, you know, put out relevant research
to people that are interested in body composition change, strength performance, and to make it
accessible, and also to hopefully improve our readership scientific literacy. That's why we
don't just just give a bullet point list of what happened in the study. We also want people to
understand some of the nuance without making it too dense. So it sounds like we're doing a decent
job at that. We'll keep trying to get better. And the other thing I'd add is we have audio
roundtables for each written article. So if you prefer to listen while you drive, or if listening
is easier than reading, and we also have two videos each month if you prefer to listen while you drive or if, you know, listening is easier than reading.
And we also have two videos each month if you prefer video content.
So we've got something for everybody.
And yeah, just Mike, thanks for having me on.
And thanks so much for the personal endorsement.
It lets us know we're doing it right.
And if you want to check us out at strongerbyscience.com slash mass, that's where you can get a subscription.
Great.
And you guys, are you still offering an issue for free so people can just get it, get an idea before they sign up? Yeah,
we've actually got our like best of 2018 issue that you can get if you go to that website and
you can enter your name for more information and we'll email you that so you can feel us out and
see if it's your your bag or not. That sounds naughty. All right. Great, man. Thanks again.
Thanks as always. Great discussion. I look forward to the next one. My pleasure, man.
Thanks for having me. Hey there, it is Mike again. I hope you enjoyed this episode and found it
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