Very-low-calorie diets (VLCDs) are used to treat obesity, often in a non-clinical setting, and the typical formulation of a minimum of 50 g carbohydrates daily can induce a mild dietary ketosis. This clinically benign state is sometimes confused with the non-metabolically adapted state of ketoacidosis, and this misunderstanding may lead to the rejection of VLCDs as a suitable obesity treatment. This paper summarises and discusses the difference between physiological ketosis and pathological ketoacidosis, the benefits of ketosis-inducing weight-loss regimen such as VLCDs and why ketoacidosis should never be the diagnosis in a non-type 1 diabetic on a carbohydrate-restricted diet.
Paper https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-3010.2011.01916.x
Full Paper on scihub
It has come to my attention that some well meaning people are still confusing ketoacidosis and ketosis.
Ketoacidosis IS NOT KETOSIS! They are very different things. One is part of the standard fat mobilization metabolism and the other is a run-away syndrome experienced by some Type 1 Diabetics without insulin to regulate ketone production and in a state of hyperglycemia.
https://www.dietdoctor.com/low-carb/skeptical-doctors#ketosis
Most doctors, and T1Ds, are only informed about ketoacidosis - because its an acute condition that must be treated immediately. In fact this is probably the only time a doctor will hear about “keto” in their entire medical training. It’s easy to see why people easily confuse the two states, but they are different and should not be confused.
Ketosis is the default state of the body, it is simply fat mobilization. When people sleep, when people skip a meal, when people are born, when people “Eat Less and Move More” - they are mobilizing fat for energy, and that is the metabolic state of ketosis.
From the paper above:
Babies run on ketones, using ketosis, from the moment they are born.
The body requires constant energy, at all times, the liver can both produce glucose on demand, and ketones on demand. People who persist in a ketogenic metabolism power their brain primarily with ketones, which has many benefits, but the most significant one being that ketones pass into the brain even in individuals with high insulin resistance.
This is very important - making ketones does not use protein. Muscles do not waste in ketosis. The body stores fat, and uses fat, normally without negative consequences.
Producing glucose on demand uses protein, which is a limited and precious resource in humans.
In non-T1D populations, ketones themselves are part of the self-regulation of ketone levels preventing ketoacidosis .
Under normal circumstances if ketones are too high they get peed away, to maintain blood acid balance.
Red blood cells, and 5-30% of brain cells, require glucose - the rest of the body can run on fat. This is why ketosis is not stressful on the body.
KETONES ARE NOT PATHOLOGICAL, KETONES ARE NOT DANGEROUS. In the same way that blood glucose is necessary and healthy in the proper ranges, the same is true for ketones.
What about T1Ds and Ketoacidosis?
Three things are required - No insulin, High blood glucose, and high blood ketones.
Insulin is a super hormone, and in its absence the body doesn’t self regulate. Ketoacidosis requires the absence of insulin, it cannot happen in the presence of insulin.
Does this mean ketosis is dangers for T1Ds? No, absolutely not!
Dr. Bernstein is the most outspoken T1D and keto advocate. Most famous for Dr. Bernstein’s Diabetes Solution: The Complete Guide to Achieving Normal Blood Sugars - https://archive.org/details/drbernsteinsdia00bern - Dr. Bernstein passed away last month at 90 years old.
https://www.diabetes-book.com/laws-small-numbers/
My understanding from Bernstein’s work is that the reason for carb loading is to avoid hypoglycemic events, which is easier to do when carb loading (you raising the ceiling and the floor). However on a low carb intervention (after the 6 week adaptation phase) the body is using fat for most systems, so glucose dips are far less likely, and overall glycemic control becomes much better.