because prevention is better than cure.

because prevention is better than cure.

Mini Cart 0

Your cart is empty.

Mini Cart 0

Your cart is empty.

Our brains have a dual fuel mechanism. The brains of large-brained animals like us can run on either glucose or ketones, derived from fat. If given the choice they prefer ketones. The rise in popularity in high fat ketogenic diets is partly to do with the ability of ketones to nourish and improve brain function when things go wrong, as well as weight loss benefits and the potential to reverse diabetes.

Epilepsy, for example, has been successfully treated in both children and adults with a high-fat ketogenic diet since the 1920’s often halving the frequency of fits. A recent study on people with Parkinson’s found that those placed on a high-fat diet had 41 per cent reduction in shaking, compared to 11 percent on a low-fat diet. There’s also a potential benefit in chronic fatigue syndrome.

The reason these high-fat keto diets work is that if a cell’s sugar metabolism is all messed up, a consequence of insulin resistance promoted by a high-sugar diet, then the cell struggles to get enough energy and you feel mentally and physically tired. But if, like a hybrid car, you can switch to a different fuel, ketones, then the cell comes back to life. This is especially true in struggling brain cells. When you fast, and switch to burning your body fat, the brain derives two-thirds of its energy from ketones.

Ketones are made from medium-chain triglycerides, known as MCTs. The rise in sales of MCT oil, which can be derived from palm or coconut oil. Also gaining in popularity are ketone salts and pure synthetic ketones, although these are yet to clear EU Novel Foods so are not yet available in Europe.

Fats are chains of carbon molecules and MCTs contain C6, C8, C10 and C12 oil. Of these C8 oil (called tricaprylin or caprylic acid triglyceride) makes ketones fastest. While coconut oil is 60 percent MCTs only 12 percent of MCTs is C8. That means that only 7 percent of coconut oil is C8.

The growth in bullet-proof coffee, adding a blob of coconut oil to your morning brew, is one way to up ketone levels but it’s much less effective than adding pure C8 oil. Patrick Holford’s Hybrid Latté – a coffee with carb-free almond milk, almond butter, C8 oil, cacao and cinnamon, is a step up. While coffee gives you energy like a bank loan gives you wealth it does speed up conversion to running on ketones.

Case studies with coconut oil have shown short-term beneficial effects in people with Alzheimer’s, with improved mental clarity. Two breakthrough studies in Canada, by Dr Melanie Fortier and Professor Stephen Cunnane from Sherbrooke University in Canada have established that C8 oil can be extremely helpful as an energy source for those with cognitive decline. Cunnane is an expert on fatty acid metabolism in the brain who has held the ‘Canada Research Chair on Dietary Fatty Acids and Cognitive Function during Ageing’.

Are there any downsides? A few people report abdominal or stomach discomfort. This can be minimized by building up slowly – starting with a teaspoon, then a dessert spoon, then a tablespoon, then two, then three tablespoons taken at different times of day, with food or in drinks or neat.

If glucose is petrol ketones are electricity. If your brain needs a service, switching from running on carbs to running on ketones by eating a low-carb, high-fat diet for a week, may be a good idea. It takes only 12 hours to start to run out of glucose fuel and start switching to ketones. Also good is an 18-hour carb fast – eg dinner at 6pm, lunch at 1pm. My brain stays sharp and I don’t feel hungry.

Want to know more about ketones and your brain? Then make sure you join us for our webinar: KETONES – A Key Brain Fuel During Ageing’ With Professor Stephen Cunnane

Find out more about the Ketones Webinar HERE >>>

References

  1.  M. Nei et al., Seizure. 2014;23(6):439-42.
  2.  M. Phillips et al., Movement Disorders 2018; 33(8):1306-1314 
  3.  Craig C. Med Hypotheses. 2015;85(5):690-3
  4.  C. Vandenberghe et al., Current Developments in Nutrition 2017; 1(4):e000257
  5.  Vanderberghe et al., Can J Physiol Pharmacol. 2017 Apr;95(4):455-458.