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As an N of one, I present my situation:

Since mid-January this year I have been fasting intemittently. I have zero calories before 5PM, and I am usually in bed by 10. I exercise most weeks between 4 and six days, but only two or so are "vigorous" for me. My workouts are mid-day.

When I eat, I eat normally for me, which is lower carb and higher protein, but not (knowingly) keto or anything.

I have lost about 10 pounds.

I just got my blood lab results, and they are the worst numbers I have ever seen. Highest fasting glucose (borderline diabetic, a rise of 14 points or so from memory), highest cholesterol (doc's gonna make me take meds if it doesn't come down).

I've done this before, but wouldn't I would "only" wait until 2, and I got bad (but not this bad) results as well. I decided to try again, making my eating window truly shorter, but alas...

I was devastated by the results. Total bummer.



Curious about your food choices. I've been experimenting with IF. More specifically I'd call it more like timed eating because the bulk of my fasting hours and during sleep. I'm down 20 lbs with solid numbers. As a side note I have some genetic factors as well and trying to counter those.


A lot of lean protein and vegetables; eggs (3 egg-whites + 1 whole egg is a common combination for me), chicken, fish, broccoli, etc. I wasn't trying for low-carb, but low-carb made it easier to stave off cravings. I was paying attention to calories more than anything else.

I do drink, however, straight liquor. Rarely to excess, but also rarely fewer than 2 drinks (almost always 2-3 drinks an evening).


Why not just eat the whole eggs? The fat in the yolks is really good, assuming you're getting pasture-raised eggs.


Same here, 10 kg down very quickly. Now weight is fixed at 80kg no matter what I eat. The only difference is when I eat.


Same, I went from 95kg to 80kg in a few months, then I got stuck at 80kg for a few months on keto. But then all of a sudden I dropped to 72kg in a few weeks (it was such an odd and rapid drop I freaked out and went to the doctors to get checked out)


>Since mid-January this year

That's a sample too short, a lot of that can be the momentum carried over from whatever you have been doing previously. You have to understand that as a carb/sugar eater, you may have effectively destroyed your body to the point when it's much harder for it to digest nutrients from food (e.g. fatty liver). And/or you may have a starting diabetes.

Before jumping into the meds death spiral, check Dr. Berg's videos on YouTube, and I'm sure you'll find a way forward. When your body is broken, nutrition isn't a simple thing, trust me, I know.


Thank you. I'll do it.


Reduce your protein and increase your fat intake. Ideally, 80-90% of your calories should be from fat. Excess protein is converted to glucose.


Will that cause a problem with cholesterol?


"I have zero calories before 5PM"

Did you mean after 5PM?

Other than weight loss, do you feel any differently (body, mind)? I have started IF last fall. Similar diet - low carb, higher protein. I also had considerable weight loss, but no impact on blood quality.


No- before. I eat between 5pm and 10pm. I guess I feel better. With placebo effect and whatnot it’s hard to know. My workouts took a hit initially but eventually got back to their normal intensity.


when was your last test before the one you had?


That's a very reasonable question - for all we know, the numbers might have been even worse!


Indeed- it was about a year prior.


If you are refering to the HbA1c for the characterization of being prediabetic, take into account that it is an estimator that averages over 8-12 weeks.

Don't confuse Keto, etc. as "high protein", its primarily a very low carb diet, "moderate protein" and "high fat". Too much protein also isn't ideal for Type 2 diabetes or the various stages that lead up to it. One thing that surprised me was for example, how Whey protein can also spike up blood sugar (so much for post-workout whey drinks, etc.)

I recommend the books and videos of Dr. Jason Fung on fasting, as I think he makes a compelling case for the layman how fasting varieties can be beneficial. He is a nephrologist, and since kidney issues are common with diabetes patients, he had many diabetes patients in his office and had good succes with them bettering their condition using fasting methods.

Obligatory: I am not a doctor and you should not swap out medical supervision for random internet advice, but Dr. Jason Fung is definitely worth checking out.

Ok, I hope that wasn't too much of unsolicited advice for you. I wish you all the best and hope that you can get on top of things which whatever method works for you.




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