Why I think eating fewer carbohydrates during the first wave helped me never catch COVID-19.
A THREAD 🧵
The ketogenic diet (keto for short) is a low carb, high fat diet that offers many health benefits.
It involves drastically reducing carbohydrate intake and replacing it with fat. This reduction in carbs puts your body into a metabolic state called ketosis.
When this happens, your body becomes incredibly efficient at burning fat for energy. It also turns fat into ketones in the liver.
Ketone bodies not only work as a fuel substrate but have other physiologically beneficial properties.
I have been eating low-carb for a while now, and have seen these benefits:
- Clearer thinking
- Muscle gain and fat loss
- No sugar cravings
- Ability to fast for long periods of time comfortably
- No dips in energy or mood after meals
- Reduced visceral fat
I also believe it was one major reason I didn't catch C-19 whilst working frontline.
My diabetic parents, who have improved on the keto diet, have also not contracted C-19 so far.
And the emerging science continues to prove my hypothesis.
Infections love blood sugar.
A multicentre retrospective study from China showed that high fasting glucose levels at admission were an independent predictor of increased mortality in patients with COVID-19 who did not have diabetes mellitus.
In other words, if you don’t have diabetes but have an increased blood sugar level, you may still be at greater risk of contracting symptomatic COVID-19.
Interestingly, virus aside, blood glucose taken on the admission of those who suffered heart attacks has also been shown to be an independent predictor of long-term mortality in patients with and without known diabetes.
A fantastically in-depth study using machine learning went through nearly a quarter-million articles on SARS-CoV-2 and repeatedly noted that elevated blood glucose was a key facilitator in the progression of COVID-19.
“elevations of glucose provide ideal conditions for the virus to evade and weaken the first level of the immune defence system in the lungs, gain access to deep alveolar cells, bind to the ACE2 receptor and enter the pulmonary cells,...
...accelerate the replication of the virus within cells increasing cell death and inducing a pulmonary inflammatory response, which overwhelms an already weakened innate immune system to trigger an avalanche of systemic infections, inflammation...
...and cell damage, a cytokine storm and thrombotic events.”
Chronically raised blood sugar levels can be caused by insulin resistance.
Insulin is a hormone that functions to regulate the metabolism of carbohydrates, fats, and proteins by enhancing the absorption of blood glucose from the circulation into fat cells, muscles, + the liver.
However, excess blood sugar levels and increased underlying inflammation over a long enough period of time cause the body to not respond to insulin and/or not produce insulin like it once did.
This is insulin resistance.
Obesity, high blood pressure, low cholesterol levels, nonalcoholic fatty liver, cognitive disorders, polycystic ovarian syndrome, and virtually all other common chronic conditions are now widely accepted to be linked to insulin resistance in some way.
A 2018 study showed that insulin and its downstream signalling through its insulin receptor shape adaptive immune function through modulating T cell metabolism.
In essence, they found that insulin signalling acted as a stimulatory pathway or “boost” on T cells, driving proliferation, cytokine production, and glycolytic and aerobic metabolism, which ultimately result in strengthening the host's defence against infection.
The researchers go on to say that insulin receptors are essentially worn out and/or don't work as well in people with insulin resistance and may be one important reason for immunocompromisation caused by insulin resistance.
Insulin resistance and higher than normal sugar levels impair the immune system via causing:
- Unenergized T cell response
- Sluggish innate immune response
- Cytokine impairment
- Defects in pathogen recognition
- Inhibition of antibodies
Both of my parents have type 2 diabetes. To keep them from getting sick, I learned early on how important it was to control their blood sugar levels. To help them, I advised and encouraged them to start the ketogenic diet. I began eating ketogenically too.
It also increases blood levels of ketone bodies, acetoacetate, and beta-hydroxybutyrate (ßOHB).
Other than being a fuel, ketone bodies have been shown to exert genetic-level changes that reduce oxidative stress and can display immunomodulatory and anti-inflammatory properties.
Before you scroll down any further, if you'd like to know more about keto and other fundamental health changes that may help you stop from getting unwell, then I have written all about it in the book.
There are many proposed ways in which ketone bodies may help reduce the likelihood of infection as well as decrease the resultant inflammatory reaction. These include:
Ketones may act similarly to other biocidal agents that appear to interact with specific parts of the spike protein of some coronaviruses resulting in spike inactivation.
Mitochondria have pores and these are used by some viruses (including the influenza virus) to promote cell death and disrupt the energy-making process. Ketone bodies can help close these pores.
Preserving and improving organ function, tissue resistance and tolerance.
In a study of patients with COVID-19 who were ventilated, results showed a significant difference in survival and need for the intensive care unit by those on the KD compared to those on a standard diet.
While working during the pandemic, I felt a little more confident knowing that my blood sugars were stable and my body was producing healthy amounts of ketones.
I am thankful for not squandering it all by eating junk that was handed out on the wards.
It is comforting to read about new studies that prove what I already thought.
“...ketone bodies profoundly impact human T-cell responses. CD4+ , CD8+ , and regulatory T-cell capacity were markedly enhanced, and T memory cell formation was augmented.”
“Our data suggest a very-low-carbohydrate diet as a clinical tool to improve human T-cell immunity. Rethinking the value of nutrition and dietary interventions in modern medicine is required."
I have started to write a book on cancer. I will tweet sections as I go along. I will also post them on the Generation Grounded articles page as I go along.
What is cancer?
For many, the word “cancer" itself raises stress levels, revealing the whole problem in one.
Cancer is misunderstood, and it is primarily misunderstood because it is feared.
We are correct in calling it a disease, but mistreat the disease.
By writing this, I by no means claim to know the whole of cancer biology, I only write as a matter of urgency, with the knowledge I have, maybe some people can be helped.
I’ve been around cancer, I’ve smelt it in the air, I have seen what it does to the human body, to those with the disease, and those around them. I have studied it, read papers on it, and more importantly, made connections that I am confident that can stand up to a panel of both scientific and logical scrutiny.
Other than that, I have been gifted with openness, and with this openness comes three things,
One, the personal knowledge that even our scientific knowledge of cancer may never be complete.
Two, the understanding that there may be other lesser “conventional” ways of treating diseases.
Three, this is the information that I have been blessed with at this moment in time.
And four, because it just came to me like a winter robin, there will be celebrations acknowledging what is to come.
Whether I am here or not to see this come to mainstream-fruition is another thing.
…
Let’s say I had a machine that could erase your memories, just like the one in Men In Black, the movie, that shiny silver stick, remember? One flash, and you’ll look at me blankly, glazed, like a baby just breastfed.
Let’s say I have a machine like this and could program it, with a flash, to remove everyone in the world’s memory of cancer as even a thing, I’d push that button in a heartbeat. Double time.
If one forgets all the conditioning of that word, then what?
Prompt: imagine you have no human understanding of the word "cancer", how would you draw it? In the style of Henri Rousseau. (Upscaled 4x)
5' adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase is an enzyme that plays a crucial part in cellular energy balance.
Primarily it is thought largely to activate glucose and fatty acid uptake and oxidation when cellular energy is low.
But is has other functions.
The authors of this 2022 paper note, "AMPK is an inositol sensor, whose inactivation by inositol serves as a mechanism to restrict mitochondrial fission."
Some possible benefits include: anti-viral; anti-COVID-19; blood-pressure lowering; improving lung ventilation; maintaining balanced levels of iron; improving taste and smell; neuroprotection; and immunomodulation.
A THREAD 🧵
Progesterone is one of three major sex hormones, the other two being oestrogen and testosterone. Though it is found in both men and women, it is most commonly associated with women for its involvement in the menstrual cycle, pregnancy, and the growth and functioning of embryos.
In men, progesterone influences the production of sperm cells and testosterone biosynthesis. But its physiological influence does not end with fertility-related functions.