Ketone Levels
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There are three important Ketones involved in Ketogenic Diets, Acetoacetic acid (AcAc), Acetone, and Beta-hydroxybutyrate (BOHB).
Contents
1 Levels
- Some evidence from treating childhood epilepsy suggests that when blood ketones are over 2 mmol, urine ketones rise to 4+[1].
- Urine ketone levels vary with the time of day, often being lower in the morning[2]
- The ratio between AcAc and Acetone appears reasonably constant, and is based on the spontaneous, one way decomposition of AcAc into Acetone.
- The ratio of AcAc to BOHB is rather more varied and may change with Ketoadaptation.
2 Example levels
From "Physiological roles of ketone bodies as substrates and signals in mammalian tissues"[3]:
Situation | Ketone Levels (Blood levels of AcAc + BOHB) |
---|---|
Fed | ~0.1 |
Fasted 12-24 Hours | Up to 0.3 |
Fasted 48-72 Hours | 2-3 |
Fasted 5-6 weeks (plateau) | ~8 |
Post exercise | Up to 2 |
Late Pregnancy | Up to 1 |
Late Pregnancy, fasted 48 hours | 4-6 |
Neonatal | 0.5-1.0 |
Hypoglycemia | 1-5 |
Controlled diabetes | Up to 25 |
3 See Also
- The classifications and types of Low Carbohydrate Diet.
- An introduction to the Ketogenic Diet.
- My experiences with ultrarunning on the Ketogenic Diet
- How the Ketogenic Diet can be used for the treatment and management of disease.
- Health Risks of the Ketogenic Diet
- The time frame and changes that occur with Ketoadaptation
- What are Ketones
- How to measure Ketones
- What ketone levels to aim for
- The pros and cons of the Ketogenic Diet for athletes
- The Types of Ketogenic Diet
- My Ketogenic Recipes
- Non-Ketogenic Low Carbohydrate Diets
4 References
- ↑ Eric. Kossoff, Ketogenic diets : treatments for epilepsy and other disorders, date 2011, publisher Demos Health, location New York, isbn 1-936303-10-8, Kindle Offset 2037
- ↑ Eric. Kossoff, Ketogenic diets : treatments for epilepsy and other disorders, date 2011, publisher Demos Health, location New York, isbn 1-936303-10-8, Kindle Offset 2274
- ↑ AM. Robinson, DH. Williamson, Physiological roles of ketone bodies as substrates and signals in mammalian tissues., Physiol Rev, volume 60, issue 1, pages 143-87, Jan 1980, PMID 6986618