Log in

goodpods headphones icon

To access all our features

Open the Goodpods app
Close icon
Mastering Blood Sugar - Why Would You Want To Be In Ketosis with Dr. Ethan Weiss

Why Would You Want To Be In Ketosis with Dr. Ethan Weiss

07/22/20 • 49 min

Mastering Blood Sugar

Dr. Ethan J. Weiss has been passionate about health since a young child, growing up around a cardiologist father. He eventually went on to attend Vassar College before moving on to medical school and residency at John Hopkins. He came to UCSF in 1998 to complete his clinical and research fellowships in cardiology and has remained on the faculty since then. Dr. Weiss has maintained an active clinical practice with expertise in the emerging intersection between endocrine and metabolic disease and cardiovascular diseases. He is a leading authority on novel tools to predict and prevent cardiovascular disease and has special interest in using technology as a tool to enable lifestyle changes.

When you look at the role of nutrition in cardiovascular health, you’ll find that there is imperfect information. So, we need to review the information that we have and take the best approach going forward. Dr. Ethan believes that cholesterol is causative in cardiovascular disease. In the past ten years, there has been an abundant amount of information that LDL is a massive risk factor.

Dr. Ethan explains the effects of cholesterol. If you look at plaque in human arteries, there is definitely LDL cholesterol. How LDL contributes to the growth of plaque is still something we are learning about. We are hindered in this field because it is difficult to get ahold of the tissue. We don’t have the best or most refined understanding of how this happens. However, the latest theory is that cholesterol will cause problems by inducing an inflammatory response.

Diet relates closely to lipid health. In the seventies, we told people to eat low fat; therefore, people started eating high carbs. However, Dr. Ethan doesn’t want to say that he has the answers prematurely. No one has the answers; there is still a lot to learn about nutrition. If you take a low carb and high-fat diet, the impact is an increase in LDL cholesterol. After digging deeper, Dr. Ethan felt more comfortable with the rise in LDL because it didn’t increase the risk of cardiovascular disease. Some individuals will have a much more significant change to their LDL when they start eating low carb. Dr. Ethan says people have five choices:

Ignore it.

Keep an eye on things by measuring calcium.

Try a different diet by adding more carbs.

Start taking a statin.

Replace saturated fats with plant-based fats.

Dr. Ethan is most excited about the last choice, replacing saturated fats with plant-based fats. When people have heart attacks, it’s important to treat things differently. So, Dr. Ethan does not recommend using diet to treat heart attacks alone. However, food should be part of the recovery.

Then, Dr. Ethan explains the relationship between keto and diabetes. You don’t often see people coming into the doctor’s office with fewer and fewer drugs. However, people with diabetes are coming off of their diabetes medications and blood pressure medications once trying the ketogenic diet. Dr. Ethan has found publications on low carb diets and diabetes in 1795. So, the relationship between keto and diabetes is not a new phenomenon.

Support the show

plus icon
bookmark

Dr. Ethan J. Weiss has been passionate about health since a young child, growing up around a cardiologist father. He eventually went on to attend Vassar College before moving on to medical school and residency at John Hopkins. He came to UCSF in 1998 to complete his clinical and research fellowships in cardiology and has remained on the faculty since then. Dr. Weiss has maintained an active clinical practice with expertise in the emerging intersection between endocrine and metabolic disease and cardiovascular diseases. He is a leading authority on novel tools to predict and prevent cardiovascular disease and has special interest in using technology as a tool to enable lifestyle changes.

When you look at the role of nutrition in cardiovascular health, you’ll find that there is imperfect information. So, we need to review the information that we have and take the best approach going forward. Dr. Ethan believes that cholesterol is causative in cardiovascular disease. In the past ten years, there has been an abundant amount of information that LDL is a massive risk factor.

Dr. Ethan explains the effects of cholesterol. If you look at plaque in human arteries, there is definitely LDL cholesterol. How LDL contributes to the growth of plaque is still something we are learning about. We are hindered in this field because it is difficult to get ahold of the tissue. We don’t have the best or most refined understanding of how this happens. However, the latest theory is that cholesterol will cause problems by inducing an inflammatory response.

Diet relates closely to lipid health. In the seventies, we told people to eat low fat; therefore, people started eating high carbs. However, Dr. Ethan doesn’t want to say that he has the answers prematurely. No one has the answers; there is still a lot to learn about nutrition. If you take a low carb and high-fat diet, the impact is an increase in LDL cholesterol. After digging deeper, Dr. Ethan felt more comfortable with the rise in LDL because it didn’t increase the risk of cardiovascular disease. Some individuals will have a much more significant change to their LDL when they start eating low carb. Dr. Ethan says people have five choices:

Ignore it.

Keep an eye on things by measuring calcium.

Try a different diet by adding more carbs.

Start taking a statin.

Replace saturated fats with plant-based fats.

Dr. Ethan is most excited about the last choice, replacing saturated fats with plant-based fats. When people have heart attacks, it’s important to treat things differently. So, Dr. Ethan does not recommend using diet to treat heart attacks alone. However, food should be part of the recovery.

Then, Dr. Ethan explains the relationship between keto and diabetes. You don’t often see people coming into the doctor’s office with fewer and fewer drugs. However, people with diabetes are coming off of their diabetes medications and blood pressure medications once trying the ketogenic diet. Dr. Ethan has found publications on low carb diets and diabetes in 1795. So, the relationship between keto and diabetes is not a new phenomenon.

Support the show

Previous Episode

undefined - E21: The Problem With Snacking, with Dr. Brian Mowll

E21: The Problem With Snacking, with Dr. Brian Mowll

In this episode of The Coach’s Corner with the Diabetes Coach, Dr. Brian Mowll talks all about snacking and why it’s one of the worst habits for people with insulin resistance, overweight, and type 2 diabetes or blood sugar problems. Conventional doctors and dietitians often recommend eating 5-6 meals per day, or 3 meals with small snacks in between to stabilize blood sugar. This advice almost always makes the problem worse and leads to chronically high insulin levels. Learn to break the snacking habit now and improve your metabolic health.

The Coach’s Corner is a solo format podcast with Dr. Brian Mowll sharing insider tips and information about how to address high blood sugar and prevent or reverse pre-diabetes and type 2 diabetes using a personalized, natural diet and lifestyle approach.

In these revealing and impactful episodes, Dr. Mowll answers listeners questions and tackles common problems related to diabetes and blood sugar managment. Subscribe to the Mastering Blood Sugar podcast to get updates when new episodes are released.

Support the show

Next Episode

undefined - E23: How Much Protein Is Ideal For Diabetes? with Dr. Brian Mowll

E23: How Much Protein Is Ideal For Diabetes? with Dr. Brian Mowll

In this episode of Diabetes Insights with Dr. Brian Mowll, we discuss a 2011 paper from Dr. Osama Hamdy of Harvard University Endocrinology department and the Joslin Clinic evaluating the optimal protein content for the diabetic diet. Dr. Mowll explains the main findings of this study including a detailed description of Dr. Hamdy’s recommendations and justification. He also gives his commentary about the most useful clinical insights from the research report.

Diabetes Insights is a solo format podcast with Dr. Brian Mowll exploring the latest and most interesting research in the field of diabetes, blood sugar, and metabolic health, and distilling the most relevant data for clinical use.

This special podcast episode is geared toward healthcare professionals and those with an interest in learning more about diabetes and the latest advancements in understanding and treatment. Subscribe to the Mastering Blood Sugar podcast to get updates when new episodes are released.

Hamdy, Osama, and Edward S Horton. “Protein content in diabetes nutrition plan.” Current diabetes reports vol. 11,2 (2011): 111-9. doi:10.1007/s11892-010-0171-x

Enjoyed the Podcast?

Subscribe on iTunes and leave a review!

For more Dr. Mowll, check out his website drmowll.com

For more information on this week’s episode, visit:

Mastering Blood Sugar Podcast

Support the show

Episode Comments

Generate a badge

Get a badge for your website that links back to this episode

Select type & size
Open dropdown icon
share badge image

<a href="https://goodpods.com/podcasts/mastering-blood-sugar-173911/why-would-you-want-to-be-in-ketosis-with-dr-ethan-weiss-11918046"> <img src="https://storage.googleapis.com/goodpods-images-bucket/badges/generic-badge-1.svg" alt="listen to why would you want to be in ketosis with dr. ethan weiss on goodpods" style="width: 225px" /> </a>

Copy