My granddaughter is headed off to medical school after having just graduated from BYU. I’m so happy that Dr. Bikman was her endocrinology professor. She’ll be a better doctor for having had his instruction.
@proudtobeweird6 ай бұрын
😯 She is a lucky lady … learnt from the best 😊
@jobrown81466 ай бұрын
Wow, that's really good to hear.
@vonticehembree60836 ай бұрын
Lucky little lady !!! I wish I could sit all day in his classroom
@Petunia-fl9lu6 ай бұрын
how wonderful!!!! you must be so proud!
@albertdowrn5 ай бұрын
I was just thinking after listening to another podcast when he explained he was teaching pathophysiology how I would of learned so much more.
@salobrena64426 ай бұрын
I feel like a superstar now.. vldl is 14, ldl is 191, hdl 102.3 and my triglycerides are 71.. this was after 1 year on carnivore. This diet works and improves nearly every single thing. Even my car is running better.
@Primetime_dads5 ай бұрын
How much saturated fat a day do you eat, I just did my macros and im at 100g a day. Im sure this is probably to much
@salobrena64425 ай бұрын
@@Primetime_dads I don't count anything..I just eat.. I eat a good amount of fat.. today I am having pork belly, butter, eggs, and sausage.. tomorrow it's steak and beef fat trimmings and eggs.. I eat a lot of beef fat trimmings..
@qartstudio93264 ай бұрын
@@salobrena6442pls update to us 6 months later
@akhusal6 ай бұрын
Dr David Unwin gave the advice to his patients to eat plenty of saturated fat, meat, eggs and salt but avoid carbohydrates (bread, rice pasta, bananas, apple etc). Hundred patients lost weight, improved liver and kidney function, came off diabetes medications saving £70,000 in medicine costs for ten years. He recorded all stats over several years and published them in journals. If only every Doctor would do their job and above all first do no harm (conventional practice results in amputations, heart/kidney failure etc).
@jobrown81466 ай бұрын
Thankfully Dr Unwin was one of the first videos I found after learning that I had diabetes and found out about the low carb lifestyle.
@jeffj3186 ай бұрын
@@jobrown8146Keep it up. Congratulations! 🎉
@jax93496 ай бұрын
I love Dr David Unwin, his journey is so inspiring.
@jobrown81466 ай бұрын
@@jax9349 Yes, and I love the fact that he has documented the progress of his patients.
@Sec_coach2 ай бұрын
These doctors are persecuted by pharmaceutical industry
@wade-buehler6 ай бұрын
And speaking of Calgary... Hi from Calgary! Now, can you give my doctor a call? He's in a PANIC because my LDL is through the roof since I went all Keto last August. In my lifetime, I've lost more than 300 pounds. After being treated for t-2 diabetes for 30 years, I almost lost my foot in Nov 2022. The following August, I came across Dr. Pradip Jamnadas, who eloquently explained it. I did everything he and so many others have said, I cut out high carbs, processed food, and seed oil, lost 70 pounds, triglycerides way down, HDL up and LDL really up a complete reversal of t2 diabetes A1C of 5.7... after all of that. He wants me on a staten and to stop consuming saturated fat. Hello, news desk, I think I found the problem.
@nevillegoddard49666 ай бұрын
@@jigglesandwich You need to either educate your doctor or FIRE him!
@wade-buehler6 ай бұрын
@@nevillegoddard4966 I know, right. Unfortunately, it's not just my doctor. Sadly, I think it's the majority of them, especially in Canada. I spent more than two hours explaining the relationship between triglycerides, HDL, LDL and VLDL and how they relate, especially with a low-carb diet. I gave him a couple of links. I think he's gonna be alright, but it took 40 years of sales and marketing experience to bring him around. The sentence that hit him the hardest was "You treated me for diabetes for more than 30. years and I almost lost my foot. Three weeks on a low-carb high-fibre, moderate protein diet and I was off all diabetic drugs in two weeks and a perfect A1c 6 months later." Now that's medicine.
@aleksandrazimpel80976 ай бұрын
You don’t need doctors in your life. Take responsibility for your health fully. Don’t let them gaslight you. 2 of my brothers had heart attacks and have stents and claim it’s theirs genetics lol. Ones wife is medical doctor specializing in treatment of diabetes and his daughter is big harma rep. Younger brother’s is medical doctor and his wife worked for big harma now retired in the early 70’s. Statins since at least 20 years and other meds. Now fully injected with the newer marvels of pharmaceutical technology of nano lipids and synthetic modified RNA. They have other problems to. And they blame their genes because doctors determined they must have bad genetics. That twisted lol
@chewiewins6 ай бұрын
Well done on reversing HbA1C! I did same with whole food, plant based. HbA1C normal, BP 110/70 and LDL normal.
@hp-cs7mx6 ай бұрын
Let your your doctor panic all he likes! Not your job to worry about that. You have done so well, get a supportive doc for where you are now. Good luck from Australia !
@allfunnydogsstories21296 ай бұрын
I watched this three times in a row to understand everything you were saying and the third time I started crying because our human body is so unbelievably beautiful. I understand now what’s happening, and the complexity of it is so mind-boggling. At the end we are simply left with only one thing to do, and that’s to treat our body with the respect it deserves ❤
@eddkennedy64586 ай бұрын
Yeah and refuse the clot shots
@shinola2284 ай бұрын
Yeah I believe in evolution of course but sometimes the complexities of biology makes me wonder if there were other forces at work.
@Raindog19632 ай бұрын
A crucial act of practical self love.
@stevemarchant36702 ай бұрын
@@shinola228 For all of this to evolve this way suggests that there is an intelligence behind Creation - evolution is likely an expression of that Creative Intelligence.
@saeedshirvani80526 ай бұрын
Dear Dr Bikman Thank you for clearing up all the falsehoods and proving that millions of people have suffered for decades due to the greed of big pharma
@mikehill16133 ай бұрын
I’m my 69 years on planet earth, I’ve never enjoyed learning so much. I’m very very grateful for having discovered you Dr Bikman. Thank you so much.
@johnwoodard87176 ай бұрын
About 2 1/2 years ago when i was diagnosed with T2 Diabetes my A1C was 10.4. I went on the lowest dose of metformin possible and went on a low carb high fat diet. 3 months later my A1C was 5.4. The only time it went up was when I was eating Mission Low Carb Tortillas regularly (they're a lie; a glucose test showed my blood glucose spiked to 154 just from eating one). My A1C went to 5.7, but more relevant to this conversation is that my Triglycerides spiked to 320. Cutting those out, 3 months later my A1C was 5.4 again and my Triglycerides were 128. 3 months after that they were 99. I didn't change anything else about my diet. Today I'm at 5.4-5.5 with no medication at all, and I'm not super-militant about my diet but I do avoid GPS (Grains, Potatoes, and Sugars) pretty heavily.
@NinoNlkkl6 ай бұрын
Next time you eat any kind of tortilla brand, keep some in your pantry and see how long it will last. It will stay fresh for months, meaning super high amounts of preservatives, let alone, bunch of unnecessary ingredients. It's just BS. Any type of bread you buy at your local grocery store are just all BS.
@JohnSmith-zs1bf6 ай бұрын
So strange I'm fairly lean (like 14 to 16% bf) and even on keto for 6 months my a1c only drops to 5.6 at best
@johnwoodard87176 ай бұрын
@@JohnSmith-zs1bf I also do a lot of Zone 2 exercise to improve MItochondrial function, which has been tied to any number of metabolic diseases, including T2D. When I stopped that because I was walking every day my A1C went up a tenth.
@JohnSmith-zs1bf6 ай бұрын
@@johnwoodard8717 cool. what do you do for zone 2? jogging?
@johnwoodard87176 ай бұрын
@@JohnSmith-zs1bf Biking. I can't get out of one 1 walking, and I can't not be in zone 3 or 4 jogging as I'm a terrible runner. Biking for me is the easiest activity to control my zones. Even with hills so long as I leave my ego at home I have enough gearing to not leak out of zone 2 more than a minute or so.
@albertdowrn5 ай бұрын
What upsets me the most is people who should be curious about this kind of information don't care one bit. I just shared this on my Facebook page. I'm an RN many of my Facebook friends are in the healthcare field. I won't get one comment, but if I post a picture of my cats. Katy bar the door!
@SiriusStarGazer4 ай бұрын
This has been my exact thought! When I see the amount of views , I wonder where the other 5.9 billion people doing. LOLZ. If people were aware of the damage being done to their bodies, they would make better choices and (there would be no poverty in the world also, ny eating less and healthier too), but that is in a world of utopia, not reality. People will always feel they either too young to get sick, nothing will happen to them, they have good genes ( I once had a friend who was obese , diabetic, thyroid etc, all this in her 30s, and she used to say her family doesn't have cancer so she wouldn't get that, but many of her relatives died young due to diabetes. What a sad health world we live in.
@habibbabar25083 ай бұрын
Hahaa....same experience is here..i think ignorance is blessing in this world for most of the people
@19jacobob932 ай бұрын
Yep! I helped one of my clients completely reverse his T2 diabetes by going keto, mostly carnivore. His sister is studying her RNs and is constantly telling him he's going to have a heart attack etc. He's back on carbs again now, and his brain fog and depression are back and his motivation has dropped back to zero. He's showing all the signs that his insulin resistance has returned...
@albertdowrn2 ай бұрын
@19jacobob93 maybe your client will come back to it. Just be ready if they do. As for the sister, point her in the direction of the trials that have been done and hidden until recently. She also should know what they teach in school is heavily biased towards pharmaceutical interventions.
@Pre6132 ай бұрын
You got that right. Sugar addicts just don’t want to know.
@idoiam.23515 ай бұрын
I study nutrition, but you and Dr Lustig are my real professors. Thank you ❤
@meatdog6 ай бұрын
Thanks a million times over. I am down this rabbit hole and cannot get enough of this education you are providing. I wish I could turn back my clock and pursue this research as my lifes work, also. Your contribution is priceless and I hope you are able to continue for a very long time. I read your book from cover to cover on Saturday and just could not put it down. I will be studying and subsuming it until the pages wear out. Sincerely.
@donaldmcpherson32266 ай бұрын
What wonderful comment.
@jamescalifornia29646 ай бұрын
It's interesting how we become scientists while learning about our physiology 😉👌
@kriscook24496 ай бұрын
Thanks, Professor Bikman. You have expertly conveyed your message with your careful choice of words. You ROCK!
6 ай бұрын
it is a Privilege to listen to Mr. Bikman 🍀👍
@iyadkhourdok43166 ай бұрын
In an amazing way, you break down all that science and make it clear to everyone. I love your podcasts. keep going, Dr. All respect 🙏
@DLynne2222 ай бұрын
I remember those days in the 70s when professionals were quoted in women's magazines calling Dr. Atkins a "quack." And the years of not eating eggs, especially the yolks, eating oat bran muffins and taking Niacin, trying to lower cholesterol (not that mine was high, but because I didn't want it to get high). I remember, in the 1990s, when they were pushing near zero fat consumption, reading in an article in a women's magazine that we could eat as many as 3000 calories per day and not gain weight as long as there was zero fat. We always ate meat at dinner, so I struggled trying to get extremely lean meats. I remember boiling and rinsing meats, even hamburger, and trying to rinse off as much fat as possible. To this day I cannot tolerate skinless boneless chicken breast. If only I could have back those moments and the dollars and my health spent, or lost, while trying to follow bad health information.
@smthB46 ай бұрын
What an irony! Saturated fats are to blame after all, but not dietary saturated fat, rather saturated fat made from excess carbohydrates as a result of dietary guidelines! My ‘model’ of insulin resistance has just taken a couple of steps forward thanks to learning this 😊
@paulhailey25376 ай бұрын
Eating a Tasty Ribeye at this very moment with a couple Eggs too
@jeffj3186 ай бұрын
That's the way to do it from a former plant based eater and now carnivore.
@MyKeiKat6 ай бұрын
❤
@danielcohen246 ай бұрын
Indeed! Carnivore is the PHD
@paulhailey25376 ай бұрын
There's No Carb or Sugar that Tastes as Awesome as I Feel and just keeps getting Better every Day 💪
@Neihlos6 ай бұрын
What a fantastic way to start a Tuesday.
@johnmadany98296 ай бұрын
For me it's a fantastic way to start a Thursday😊
@pinanay6 ай бұрын
As a cell biology major in college and a med school dropout, I have thoroughly enjoyed this lecture. Thank you, Dr. Bikman. I have subscribed to your channel.
@notsatch6 ай бұрын
My scrambled eggs and sausage, fried in ghee, tastes even better than usual this morning!
@MrTrda6 ай бұрын
😋
@jobrown81466 ай бұрын
I had bacon and onion fried in butter and then scrambled the eggs into the pan with them for dinner last night. Very yummy and satisfying.
@ronaldlenz57456 ай бұрын
I'll be breaking my overnight fast with bacon and eggs at about 11 a.m. I've already had a brisk 4 mile hilly walk, viewed this graduate level lecture, and planned dinner, a 8 oz beef steak and steamed broccoli. LG!
@CarnivoreScott6 ай бұрын
Fat Tuesday is the BEST day of the week!! Thank you Dr. Bikman. Oh and the glasses ROCK! I'd like to say you DASH'd my hopes, but in truth you have once again reinforced the idea of how a proper human diet includes saturated fats. Well done, and THANK you for providing links to the quoted studies.
@sheemadhumala3387Ай бұрын
For everyone reading this, finding the banned book called the hidden herbs by anette ray should be your top priority
@intentionally-blankАй бұрын
Give it a rest spammer.
@lycanlucian132527 күн бұрын
You again?
@MrBilartur5 ай бұрын
I’m following you from 2021, and my health improved dramatically since then, thank you so much. You’re my best messiah !! Greetings from France 🇫🇷
@davidcorbit39316 ай бұрын
Dr... I absolutely love the way you dig in and truly teach, you are a refreshing breath of medicine . Thank you.
@stanfordlawgrad72026 ай бұрын
Excellent explanation. Dr. Bikman sets the example of properly done science, and simple, easily understood concepts for the lay person.
@Steve-is4zh6 ай бұрын
In summary, combining high carb high saturated fat is dangerous; high saturated dietary fat on very low carb diet (e.g. Eskimos) provides zero insulin resistance worries.
@JMK-vo8pv6 ай бұрын
Two years ago I consulted a "preventive" cardiologist for my diabetes and known coronary artery disease. He just about threw me out his office when I told him I was considering a "ketogenic" diet. Then he went on to say I needed to be on a "plant based" diet, preferably the "Mediterrranean" diet, and that I needed to immediately embark on regular injections of PCSK9 inhibitors. Unfortunately, I believe that my experience is NOT rare. Thank goodness we have great scientists like Dr. Ben Bikman to set the record straight and help us progess toward better metabolic health!
@leticianedilskyj70606 ай бұрын
It sounds like my same cardio. Does the last name starts with K?
@meatdog6 ай бұрын
I was more fortunate than you. I had a heart attack during my stress test at age 46. My cardiologist was doing thr test. When itcsll settled out he told me to immediately stop being a vegan because it caused my heart issue. That was in 1998! He was way ahead of his time and I am eternally grateful. Now as a carnivore, at age 73 I'm super healthy with no heart problems and perfect blood pressure, blood sugar, weight and no joint pain. They are few and far between.
@brachiosaurus65416 ай бұрын
That's the same advice a woman who suffered a heart attack was given to. Now she's gorging on bread, croissants, jam and coffee loaded with sugar every morning. She is high every day from so many carbs and confident in her doctor's advice. A friend of her already passed away and was eating an extremely hypocaloric diet based on carbohydrates and veggies. She had more wrinkles than a raisin.
@marshcreek43555 ай бұрын
@@meatdog Wait. You had a heart attack 25 years ago which meant you actually had cardiovascular disease. You subsequently got off your disastrous vegan diet and went keto. Got it - makes sense. However, are you saying your keto diet stopped the progression of your CVD or the gold standard scenario, reversed it? The one instance where I've heard even keto and carnivore based physicians and influencers consistently agree is that if you've had an event is if not a statin you at least need to be on a baby aspirin even if you're keto. The CVD is still there?
@Margaret24946 ай бұрын
Thank you for explaining this in a way that I can actually understand! You are truly a skilled professor and researcher, and your videos are a joy to watch.
@PatriciaStewart-u9z6 ай бұрын
Dr Bikman - Thank you, so much, for all the research you do, and the care you take to keep me informed of the truth of the matter! If I had to figure this out myself, I’d be lost. I appreciate you!
@RobertaRavasio-ru4dd6 ай бұрын
Dr.Bickman, I'm not a MD but your Speeches are so easy to understand!! My son is about tof fnish to study medicine ad University, in Italy, and I can't talk with him about ketogenic diet, saturated fat...I think that many of the things you explain n your videos are not yet aknowledged by general pratictioners and/oe ininternationalguide lines... Thank you so much!!!
@alexanderu42086 ай бұрын
Eating fish and butter while watching this episode..
@TagiukGold6 ай бұрын
Scandalous.😅
@websterdoris30146 ай бұрын
Eggs and bacon 🎉
@davidnannalockwood31336 ай бұрын
Fatty beef patty with salt and extra tallow for me.
@bhmcl41316 ай бұрын
Whatever you do don’t batter it!
@CeliaSpain1306 ай бұрын
👏👏👏👏👏
@carlor.s.47425 ай бұрын
Once more a metabolic lecture which is so well organized & conceptually progressive that following along & learning is a joy. Well done!!
@willemvanriet71606 ай бұрын
On a keto diet I eat huge amounts of saturated fat through bacon, red meat, eggs etc. and my triglycerides are ROCK bottom at 43 and HDL is a VERY healthy 84 and my waste circumference is 34. Take that food industry that's forever trying to hook me on carbs!
@Primetime_dads5 ай бұрын
How many grams a day? I just started this diet and im at 100g a day, 200g total fat Are yall sure this isn’t to much saturated fat 100g
@Cya-bebetter6 ай бұрын
I love nerding out with your videos; they inspire me to continue my weight loss, health journey in the most educated way. I feel 20 yrs younger with this lifestyle change. Thank you for providing us with the science. ❤
@dorisvoo97436 ай бұрын
Someone need to inform Ms Charmaine Dominguez about these studies. She's a plant based dietition been all over youtube making shorts telling ppl that sat fat causes IR. When I asked her to explain the mechanism she said she will once I join her free training programme. Unless she knows something Dr Bikman doesn't which I highly doubt.....
@nealbrown29786 ай бұрын
Thank you, Dr. Bickman . I always look forward to watching.
@joannsmith96 ай бұрын
Thank you for taking the time to help all of us who aren’t doctors understand and therefore benefit from factual information.
@tonysangster73836 ай бұрын
Thank you for such a well presented talk, the bravery to critique your own work and explain its misinterpretation by others. As a T1D I now better understand why, if my bsl happens to be higher than ideal, that avoiding intake of both carbs and saturated fat is best avoided, until blood glucose levels return to my normal range say, 70 to 120 mmg/dl (or 3.8 to 6.7 mmol/l. The wisdom of doing so for carbs is self-evident bot was not so much for saturated fat as perversely a highish blood glucose level sometimes makes me feel hungry. I also have found out that really those with T2D or T1D are likely to become insulin resistant to some degree- - in T1D because combating blood glucose rise with peripheral insulin administration cannot match the input and intricacy of insulin infused into the portal vein as a meal is arriving from eating, higher doses are needed. At 57 years on insulin; since age 13, and 5 years on a ketogenic diet with insulin injections (scar tissue making insulin absorption too unreliable for insulin pump infusions of insulin) consistent HBA1cs of 5.2% have made life so much better. I wish that diabetes education about low and very low carb diets included the caution about not eating carbs and saturated fats when blood glucose levels are elevated.
@nancyarchibald90956 ай бұрын
Great subject 👌 Dr . I'm on my ketogenic way of eating (once again.) This time around is significantly different because I need to make this my lifestyle. **I am adding more fat this time. I'm adding more marbled red meat, also, extra butter to my meals to achieve longer lasting saity. I'm rarely hungry and losing about 2 lbs per week. Im 68yrs old and pretty much sedentary because of agressive, widespread osteoarthritis. I really enjoy your podcasts and shares. 🎉
@78cheerio6 ай бұрын
I LOL when you said miserable diet. You NEVER complain, judge harshly, or made jokes. You are so very straight up. I was so surprised when you used the word miserable that it got me. Not to encourage you too much but that little Segway from your usual personality was great. Excellent work. This is an important topic and you are the first I’ve seen tackle this saturated fat in so much detail. I watch because I have stubborn high trigs. They do go down on low carb but I worry about the fat. My gene report from FYF by Dr. Rhonda Patrick says I might have trouble metabolizing saturated fat. I’m supposed to increase monounsaturated fat. I think better outcomes like Bp,sleep, trigs might be more important.
@TatianaG-c4g6 ай бұрын
Thank you, Dr. Bickman, for clear and understandable way of explaining complex issues!
@3buzzy6 ай бұрын
This is great!!! Thank you for you work and sharing this information. You are helping the world be healthier and better informed!
@petrapiciacchia24566 ай бұрын
1988 was a great year, not only did Calgary, AB host the Winter Olympics I was giving birth to my first child during the event in Fort Mc Murray, AB. Great memories and as well , great video.
@quisge6 ай бұрын
Your comments about high-carb-high-fat diets being terrible reminds me of mechanisms in the Randle Cycle. I'd love to see an episode dedicated to that topic and its relationship to insulin resistance, assuming the Randle Cycle is indeed a valid mechanism in the cells. I'm still trying to wrap my head around how it works and whether its even valid.
@Thundercloud19696 ай бұрын
Dr. Bikman, I say it again, you are my hero ! Your info makes my work so much better, keep it comming!
@brianlebreton701127 күн бұрын
Great video! Thank you for demystifying the subject
@warrenbach6 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation. Thanks for sharing your helpful information.
@PL.Borneo6 ай бұрын
The last study where saturated fat is combined with hypercaloric high carb diet brings to mind the Randle cycle where there’s a danger in combining fat and sugars together.
@jeffreyharrison40454 ай бұрын
Absolutely amazing episode. Your science and teachings helps me to navigate through the realm where much conflicting information is disseminated. Thank you!
@DynoDeso6 ай бұрын
Insulin Resistance is a protection mechanism of the cell against glucose. All by the beautiful mechanisms of the Randle Cycle
@doughughes2572 ай бұрын
Thank you! This video brought together everything I’ve learned in the last year about diet and cellular metabolism.
@ajadkins15556 ай бұрын
Thank you for all you do! ❤
@TheIgnacio7772 ай бұрын
Fantastic!! I wish you were able to debate those that miss speak on this subject
@amazingmikemed6 ай бұрын
Ben there is a study that compared DASH to low carb in Type 2 diabetics. Low carb reduced blood pressure twice as much as DASH. If you put DASH into the search on Dr Berry's channel he talks about it. The study not that old.
@tessyb31202 ай бұрын
Thank you dr Bikman from Ireland. I'm doing keto not for weightloss, always been active with running and exercise, but for general health, joint pain, menopause symptoms and 3 weeks in feeling much better with less pain and headaches and leaner. Had to pare back running as struggled with energy but looking into z2 training to build it up again as I get more used to the fat/protein. Started keto when researching interventions for my adult daughter who has asd/adhd, unfortunately she has had enough of trying diets over the years gluten free dairy free GAPS(version of keto) as her mental health makes her very food insecure. I was looking into exogenous ketones for her while she eats a standard healthish diet, to use to bypass the glucose system but after listening to how carbs and fats together are not a good idea I'm back to square one with that. Going to watch your video on the randke system again. Also looking into supplementing bhb. I'll continue with keto myself, struggled a bit with the meat part and getting the calories in as a nearly lifelong vegetarian at age 55, but getting there and using dairy to bulk my diet if i cant stomach as much meat. Thanks so much for such well researched and well presented information dr Bikman, I really enjoy your videos🙌
@rfolea23 ай бұрын
Outstanding Fats 101 lecture. A must view for everyone!
@2009raindropАй бұрын
So great to get these nuances explained - thank you - will be seeking out your books. It's almost like that WITHOUT the nuances, everyone can sometimes be right
@sophie46362 ай бұрын
Absolutely fantastic lectire, thank you so much Dr Ben.😊
@Mark4Jesus6 ай бұрын
Hi Dr. Ben. In the study you mentioned where sat fat in blood caused IR, what was the composition? Was it myristic? palmitic? stearic? lauric? capric? caprylic? caproic? All of the above? I couldn't find the study. Thanks!!!
@meatdog6 ай бұрын
I'm exteemely curious about ceremides. Are the ceremides advertised in skin lotion dangerous as they are absorbed through the skin??? And do they contribute to insulin resistance. And are they molecularly the same as blood ceremides? I have lots of questions about this process.
@russellrobins5320Ай бұрын
Professor Bikman, please answer this question for me. What amount of insulin is produced within the body when on a carnivore diet? How much insulin is stored for use at whatever time went on the carnivore diet? Dr. Robert Lustig alluded in one of his lectures for the levels podcast that the body simply stores up All sorts of insulin when on a carnivore diet and when you eat carbs, the body digest and stores those carbs as fat with massive amounts of stored insulin. That did not make sense to me with what I have learned about carnivore and insulin production. Thank you for the informative lecture series, they are wonderful.
@bobsundquist20396 ай бұрын
Once again another excellent talk. Could you please comment on saturated fat and Apo B. The big argument now with saturated fat is it causes an increase in Apo B.
@chewiewins6 ай бұрын
And what about saturated fats effect on flora which also affects insulin resistance? And Insulin resistance multifactorial? Ultraprocessed foods with refined carbs big factor in my view
@nevillegoddard49666 ай бұрын
Excellent video Prof. Bickman! Thank you!
@alanrcrews6 ай бұрын
What is the required role for insulin resistance and how & when is that a benefit?
@OldCatsLady3 ай бұрын
This is really great thank you so much Professor Bikman. I'm trying to bring my cholesterol down. I don't have matabolic disease. I was confused about sat fat and ins resistance. Very grateful 🙏
@jeniedwards59996 ай бұрын
Loved your book, love this info you share freely. Thanks so much, you've changed the way my family of 8 eats!
@gailm.81906 ай бұрын
I’m curious about your thoughts on total parenteral nutrition (TPN) feeding as when in the hospital and u r unable to eat by mouth. These bags have approx 15%amino acid, 65% carb, and 30% fat along with vitamins, electrolytes, etc. and are delivered via a port…so, very much like your direct infusion of saturated fat studies. I think they induce insulin resistance in the patient. My BIL, who is also a T2D is on this regimen and 1 hour after the end of a TPN cycle they check his glucose. It is always high, and if over 150, they give insulin. And the cycle repeats. Thoughts? It seems like the formula should be adapted for a T2D, perhaps. Nevermind the woefully low amino acid concentration and SAD levels of carbs for a sedentary hospital patient. Thank you, this was a really insightful and clarifying discussion.
@TheDirthound2 ай бұрын
So why does the AHA recommend limiting or avoiding saturated fats then?
@pigeonhawk483223 күн бұрын
Their big fat ego won't allow them to admit they are wrong. And they are still going by Ancel Keys outdated and poorly conducted research
@Innately_heal6 күн бұрын
Because Big Pharma basically are the Mafia of the health systems. Sick people are repeat customers for medication. Big Pharma has a hold over Dietician, nutrition and educational bodies, to get them to manipulate what civilians are told to make temhem stay unwell. Fortunately many like Prof Bikman and bringing truth to the forefront. I suggest if you have heart issues, follow cardiologist Dr Philip Ovadia. He is helping heal his heart patients by getting them on high fat, low carb diets. He has an amazing book, "Stay off my operating table", its a very easy read for the every day person 😊
@Snowsea-gs4wu6 ай бұрын
Thank you Dr Bikman!
@debbiesue42876 ай бұрын
Thank you❤ so much for all your hard work and wisdom ! Greatly appreciated!!
@OemarMalawat-mu4sc6 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for educating...... greetings from Indonesia
@OldCatsLadyАй бұрын
Thank you. Brilliant lesson.
@victorialove16286 ай бұрын
Could you comment on your thoughts about the Randal Cycle.
@ewamichaowska59275 күн бұрын
I love you lectures!!! Best from Poland 🤩
@chiararegolini6 ай бұрын
Amazing explanation !!! Thank you very much! I love your work and how you explain all the mechanism! Thank you for all you do!
@annebaugh28356 ай бұрын
I ate keto for quite a long time. I frustratingly never met my weight loss goals. In fact never lost much weight at all. I am now insulin resistant to the point of T2D. I recently have been trying to figure out if my homozygous APOA2 and MTHFR genetic defects could have been undermining my efforts. I don’t understand the mechanism that would change the body’s ability to deal with sat fat. Any insights?
@aristidesaint-jean2322Ай бұрын
Are you really doing a keto diet? Please follow dr berg, Dr ekberg, Dr fung for more info. All the best!
@annebaugh283524 күн бұрын
@@aristidesaint-jean2322 thank you! Yes, I have followed all those folks and more for… a decade (? Not sure how long, but a long time). But it’s only been recently that I learned about the APOA2, which supposedly can contribute to weight gain if you eat more than 20 mg Sat Fat/day. Of course on keto I was freely eating satfat. Not sure if that’s what has tripped me up but my weight is quite resistant and I’m scared to cut calories too low for fear of permanently screwing up my metabolism.
@amallie65416 ай бұрын
Would you please address the causality of xanthelasma on a low carb or carnivore diet? Especially when eating large amounts of eggs? Thank you!
@jobrown81466 ай бұрын
How long have you been eating this way?
@amallie65416 ай бұрын
@@jobrown8146 About 2 years. I noticed some xanthomas on the tops of my hand and on my elbow. I reduced my egg intake, thinking it was the amount of saturated fat causing it. It took about a year for the xanthomas to reverse, but then a few new ones appeared near my eyes. I also added some carbs back into my diet. Not much info available online, besides "familial hypercholesterolemia", which I don't have. My current strategy is to lower my LDL, which skyrocketed eating low-carb/near-carnivore. I do have higher HDL and low triglycerides, like a "hyper-responder".
@amallie65416 ай бұрын
@@jobrown8146 After eating low-carb/near-carnivore for around 2 years, I noticed some xanthomas on the top of my hand and on my elbow. I reduced the number of eggs I was eating and added some carbs back into my diet. The xanthomas reversed after about 1 year. However, a few new ones appeared near my eye. One reversed, but the others are still there, as of yet. I wish I knew the causality, so I could address this problem!
@elizabethheyenga9277Ай бұрын
I didn't eat enough salt for years and had health issues. Increasing sodium changed my life - I had to do sole for a while to really get where I needed.
@websterdoris30146 ай бұрын
Thank you Dr Bikman ♥️💙♥️
@richardnorris79484 ай бұрын
At around minute 14 he’s talking about the saturated fat diet experiment where the plasma levels of saturated fat didn’t go up, even though the people were eating more much more. However, he mentioned it was a ketogenic diet and DoctorEran Elianiv,MD an Israeli micro biome researcher stated that they found that the worst diet was saturated fat combined with refine carbohydrates. Now most people don’t eat a ketogenic diet, so I didn’t hear Ben state that the experiment was also done with increasing saturated fats with people eating the standard American diet, which contains a lot of refined carbs. that may make All the difference.
@melissawitherspoon90946 ай бұрын
Thank you, Dr. Bikman❤
@mariocovino82506 ай бұрын
Thankyou. Just so important to get this information from an authoritative source. 👍🏻
@marymetzler27053 ай бұрын
Great information. Where is the reference for the paper that he mentions at 17:44? It looks like it's not in the show notes, maybe because it was so new when he made the video?
@sharieddinger97156 ай бұрын
Wow - this is great information explained very well. Thank you ☺️
@johnny78086 ай бұрын
I hope he does one on how sat fat eating people are heterogeneous, there are different types. In the low carb community for instance there's plenty of people that have issues with 80g of sfa but do fine on 30g, and others who can't get enough. Our ability to digest sat fat easily seems to vary from person to person even among the fit, I would like Ben to tell us why
@nelsontang10556 ай бұрын
thanks Dr. Bikman, great video, this is very informative, excellent info.
@WowzaGuy2 ай бұрын
I believe all this. But what explains the high correlation between red meat intake and CVD?
@hmlxur546 ай бұрын
I learn so much with each presentation, thank you for clearing any doubt on saturated fat in reference to serum fat.
@KristaFerret6 ай бұрын
Thank you for the great lecture and all you do!
@ninogogoladze69746 ай бұрын
Thank you for another fantastic video, Dr. Bikman
@ellyhardwick8629Ай бұрын
Hi Prof Bikman. Re: your last point (hypercaloric diets), have you considered the role of MASLD, which will be almost always present in this population? In such cases, the liver is overdressed and has too much other higher priority task load, than processing fat properly?
@joeguammusic6 ай бұрын
Does anyone have the citing for the “low VLDL high LDL lowers risk for heart attack” paper that he references around 18:00?
@dharmaturtle2 ай бұрын
I looked for it as well - couldn't find it.
@janeknight35976 ай бұрын
Finally. I am T2 my blood sugar rises after cheese binges. Now I have a clue why. It probably links back to Prof Taylor’s work in the UK. So glad you are looking at this.
@frodehokholt39446 ай бұрын
In an earlier video, you told us that saturated fat boosts glucagon production and that glucagon production inhibits insulin production. From that I concluded that eating saturated fat alone would strongly reduce the bodys insulin level and thereby letting the body rest from the insulin burden and start healing the insulin resistance. I have a severe type 2 diabetes and I am about to put this to the test. I have fasted for over a week and have regained my blood sugar control. But any intake of either carbs or protein will make my blood sugar go through the roof again, it did so the lat time I tried this. The only thing I can eat is lard. I will for a while eat only lard "soup" with a little heavy cream to make it more palatable. After a while, I will try reintroducing protein slowly. Do you see any faults in my logic?
@davefit-areyousaturated98306 ай бұрын
Lard can be as much as 30% polyunsaturated fat. Don’t know the answer but something to consider. If you want saturated fat, beef Tallow and or butter would be a better choices.
@jobrown81466 ай бұрын
Lard in from pork fat. Tallow is from beef.
@peterholt48066 ай бұрын
@@davefit-areyousaturated9830 Lard is predominantly Monounsaturated fat (as in Olive Oil) Generally, 45% MUFA, 40% SatFat, and 15% PUFA although it does fluctuate. When you cook with Lard there are few unstable double bonds to break and form more dangerous compounds. (Certainly fewer than cooking in seed oil) And is technically delicious.
@frodehokholt39446 ай бұрын
@@davefit-areyousaturated9830 unfortunatly I cannot get enough tallow, the price is way too high in Norway. I will try butter, I am a bit sceptic about the carbs and protein, but the levels are low enough to try.
@frodehokholt39446 ай бұрын
I am happy to report that butter seems to work well. Last night I went for a short but very hard walk in a long steep hill, so my legs really felt the burn for about 15 minutes. Before bed I ate all the butter my body felt like having. I went to bed with a glucose level of 158 and woke up with 99🤩 I know from experience that the exercise alone could not make such a massive difference.
@AmberPhlameDeB6 ай бұрын
What about the effect of genes on this, like FTO, FABP2, PPM1K, ACE, polymorphism?
@joshtoten6 ай бұрын
Just finished my eating window with some delicious andouille sausage while watching this. :) Keep doing what you do, Doc!
@jimjackofall15106 ай бұрын
Wonderful talk. Thank you so very much
@sarahg10776 ай бұрын
What kind of fat is human body fat? Like, what never made sense to me is that people would say not to eat saturated fat… but what if human body fat is saturated fat??? I have done water fasts between 3-17 days long. On a most recent 7 day water fast, I had my blood drawn on day 5 and of course, my cholesterol and triglycerides were elevated. Now just looking at that bloodwork would appear that I am not healthy (according to mainstream doctors, like mine.) But once I began eating my usual low carb diet, my numbers went back to normal. Just wondering if the elevated because I was literally only consuming body fat (saturated fat???). The body is fascinating!
@reinabriganti91424 ай бұрын
Have you seen or considered the studies showing C15 fatty acid deficiency as the cause of insulin resistance?