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Dave Palumbo is a big proponent of ketogenic dieting and was a top ranking bodybuilder. He was/is also chemically assisted though and that will make losing fat while retaining muscle much easier. |
The diet went from the beginning of May to the beginning of August, which is roughly 3 months. In that time I lost 18 lbs., so that averages out to 6 lbs. per month. Now, if I had actually lost 6 lbs. a month (1.5 lbs/wk) consistently, that would've been a pretty good rate of weight loss. Unfortunately, that is not how it went.
If I remember correctly, I lost about 10 lbs. in the first month, 5 in the second and 3 in the third. In that first month I was working a construction job in the morning and serving at a restaurant at night, which is considerably more physically demanding than an average job and therefore I was burning a massive amount of calories while consuming very low amount of calories throughout the day, creating a caloric deficit that was far too large, resulting in a loss of quite a bit of muscle. In the second month, I cut back on the construction job, but was still working the serving job and sticking to the 2,400-2,800 kcal/day. In the second month, my rate of weight loss was actually pretty good and my third month was even better, as I was no longer working construction and upped my caloric intake.
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I personally lost a considerable amount of muscle. I'm weight about 180 lbs. in this picture. The red shirt was previously quite tight on me and is very loose in this picture. |
You can see that I did made a strong correlation to the amount of calories I was burning in the day and the number of calories I was consuming (caloric deficit); When I was working a lot (burning a lot of calories) I was losing weight far too quickly/losing muscle and when I cut back on the work and upped my caloric intake a bit (reduced the caloric deficit), I was losing weight at a good rate of speed. This is why I think that it is fair to say that I personally made a mistake in the way I carried out the diet and that I believe that it can still have a place in the world of aesthetics/bodybuilding. If I had kept a more appropriate and consistent caloric deficit throughout the 3 month period, I would have still lost fat and retained far more muscle.
I also claimed that I was gaining strength while losing a lot of weight, which is true; I did get stronger than I was when I started the diet. I originally accredited that the to ketogenic diet, thinking that I was able to lose weight and get stronger at the same time because of this diet. In all actuality, the strength gain was due to the fact that I was really just regaining strength that I had before I got injured and I had just started focusing on strength. My body was simply adapting to the new stimulus that I was subjecting it to, while regaining the efficiency of my neuromuscular system. Your body certainly does need carbohydrate to perform optimally in sports/activities that require the anaerobic pathway and you can't do that while running on little more than fat, protein and ketone bodies.
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I'm quite certain that Brandon Lilly (one of my personal favorites) consumes carbs to power his training! |
My final thoughts on the the cyclical ketogenic diet:
- It can be effective for aesthetic/bodybuilding needs
- You can lose fat rapidly on the diet
- It is easy to create a caloric deficit that is far too large, resulting in muscle loss
- It is difficult to get in the required micronutrients for optimal health
- The diet is not ideal for those concerned with athletic performance
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