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by distantaidenn
1163 days ago
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I can't agree with it being a delusion. Again, my personal experience is just that -- personal. Ketones are associated with fasted states and/or restricted carbohydrates. The average person holds about 400-500g of glucose (1600-2000 calories) in their bodies. Once that is depleted, through fasting or carb restriction, you will switch to ketogenesis to provide fuel. There are numerous studies that show a positive correlation with ketone production and cognitive performance. Few examples:
> https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25404320/
> https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27528626/ If I am doing serious deep work, I can go 8 to 10 or so hours without even thinking about food. However, once I do eat, I'm done with any serious work for a few hours. Keep in mind, I'm operating from a 20 year experience of intermittent fasting (before it was cool). To reiterate, I don't think it's a delusion. We evolved in a feast or famine state. Dense carbohydrate sources and constant satiation were rare when our base metabolic pathways evolved. |
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Do you have a source? Your second link measures cognitive performance in rats, not humans.