Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Jan's avatar

A terrific piece, Dr. Muir. We'll put this on our web site as a less biased and clearer-eyed view than the one that reigns in our parts. Thanks for the nice shout-out at the end. Matt remains in full remission, no episodes, no symptoms, tapered off lithium a year ago, continuing the taper for the other meds. Questions: What would it take for an unconventional psychiatrist like yourself to make patients aware of this intervention? Given it is well established for weight loss and treatment and prevention of diabetes, should psychiatrists make their patients aware even if the evidence in psychiatry is still emerging? Should psychiatrists be responsible for treating the metabolic syndrome the meds they prescribe induce? I am not convinced that a blinded trial is ethical. If you put a member of this vulnerable population through the trouble of going on a ketogenic diet for three of four months, it feels nasty to undo their progress with a glucose shake every day. And then you would have to blind them to their ketone levels, which could be quite tricky. It may be more important to map metabolic and psychiatric effects to ketone levels. We are trying to make sure our studies use ecological momentary assessments, especially for bipolar, to catch daily mood shifts. I'll pose to our network if there have been blinded keto trials in epilepsy. Anyway, excellent piece. Bravo.

Expand full comment
Michael Sikorav MD's avatar

Is the brain energy book worth reading as a MD or its for too broad an audience?

Expand full comment
7 more comments...

No posts