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    Home ยป Learn About Paleo & Keto Diets

    A Practical Guide to Carb Tolerance and Insulin Sensitivity

    Last Modified: Feb 3, 2023 by Paleo Leaper ยท This post may contain affiliate links ยท Leave a Comment

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    One of the biggest reasons why people go Paleo is the metabolic benefits. Most people find Paleo to be very therapeutic for a whole cluster of carb-related problems: high blood sugar (or the rollercoaster of highs and lows), insulin resistance, and all the related issues. These issues can make weight loss difficult or impossible, but on the flip side, addressing them through diet can make it easier and more pleasant than you ever thought could happen!

    On the other hand, though, there are a lot of myths and half-truths floating around about diet, exercise, and carb metabolism. So hereโ€™s a quick review of what it all means, and the evidence supporting various different complementary strategies for improving your carb tolerance (preview: itโ€™s so much more than dietary carbs).

    Note: This article is not written for diabetics. Diabetes is a very complicated disease and strategies that are right for other people might not be appropriate. If you have diabetes, see a doctor!

    What Is โ€œCarb Toleranceโ€/Insulin Sensitivity?

    insulin

    (If you already know how insulin and glucose work, this section has nothing new for you; just skip down to the next one)

    Very simply put, insulin sensitivity (or โ€œcarb toleranceโ€ in everyday language) is a healthy hormonal state that allows your body to digest and store carbohydrates without a problem.

    In healthy people, hereโ€™s how it works:

    • You eat something with carbs (letโ€™s say a potato, but it could be anything).
    • Your digestive system breaks down the starch in that potato into glucose. Glucose is a simple sugar โ€“ this is the form of carbohydrate that youโ€™ll either use for energy or store as fat.
    • Your blood sugar temporarily rises as the glucose enters the bloodstream. This is not a big problem, becauseโ€ฆ
    • Insulin (produced in the pancreas) shows up to take the glucose out of the bloodstream and store it somewhere else (typically the muscles, liver, and/or fat tissue) for future use.
    • Later in the day, when you need some energy, you can use the stored glucose.

    Unfortunately, that system doesnโ€™t always work quite so well. Insulin resistance is what happens when insulin tries to store glucose, but the rest of your body resists the insulin signal: it wonโ€™t let the glucose in. Glucose just chilling in the bloodstream is dangerous, so it gets stored as fat - not the result most of us were hoping for.

    What Causes Insulin Resistance?

    If youโ€™ve been around the Paleo world for any length of time, youโ€™re probably familiar with an explanation that goes like this: eating too many refined or simple carbs overwhelms the bodyโ€™s capacity to store glucose, causing insulin resistance and eventually diabetes.

    Itโ€™s true that eating a lot of refined carbohydrates is one cause of insulin trouble โ€“ see this study, for example, but just blaming โ€œcarbsโ€ is missing the point.

    For one thing, plenty of people in traditional cultures eat a high-carb diet but donโ€™t get diabetes โ€“ the Kitavans are the most obvious example. And a very low-carb diet can actually cause insulin resistance as part of the starvation response.

    Carbs are one piece of the puzzle, but the puzzle doesnโ€™t end there. So instead of just carbs, take a look at a few other things that can contribute to insulin resistance:

    • Visceral fat accumulation. Insulin resistance can cause fat gain, but fat can also contribute to insulin resistance, especially visceral fat. Visceral fat is fat around the organs; typically it shows up as a โ€œbeer belly.โ€ If you touch visceral fat, itโ€™s hard, not squishy or jiggly. Regardless of how it got there, visceral fat probably contributes to insulin resistance (interestingly enough, the jiggly subcutaneous fat that most women have around their stomach and thighs doesnโ€™t contribute to insulin resistance)
    • Chronic inflammation. Chronic, low-level inflammation (from things like Omega-6 overload or chronic lifestyle stress) is a major driver of insulin resistance.
    • Diets high in both fat and sugar. Plenty of studies have shown that a junk food-esque high-fat and high-sugar diet will reliably induce insulin resistance.
    • Sleep deprivation and chronic stress. As this review puts it, โ€œsleep deprivation induces insulin resistance in multiple metabolic pathways in both healthy subjects and patients with type 1 diabetes.โ€ Stress also contributes to insulin resistance. In this study, for example, greater job stress was associated with much higher risk of metabolic syndrome.

    Instead of just looking at carbs (which donโ€™t cause insulin resistance in the absence of other factors), it might be accurate to say that โ€œthe modern dietโ€ or โ€œa modern diet high in refined carbs among all kinds of other bad stuffโ€ causes insulin resistance. Sure, that diet is high in refined carbs. But itโ€™s also high in inflammatory Omega-6-rich junk oils like corn and soybean oil and gut irritants like wheat. It's typically excessive in sugar and calories, which is a great way to gain some visceral fat And it's accompanied by the chronic stress of sitting in traffic and working overtime, and the crazy pace of a life so fast nobody has time to relax.

    Thatโ€™s the difference between the average couch potato (high-carb, high-junk, high-stress, insulin resistant) and the average Kitavan (high-carb, low-junk, low-stress, insulin sensitive). Insulin resistance is not โ€œjust about carbs.โ€ And fixing it involves a lot more than โ€œjust cutting carbs.โ€ Fixating on carbs is easier, but itโ€™s not the whole story, and probably wonโ€™t get you the best results. So read on to see what various studies have tested and how it turned out.

    Paleo and Insulin Sensitivity: Carbs and Beyond

    Carbs

    Even though insulin resistance isnโ€™t all about carbs, lowering carbs from high to low-moderate can still help โ€“ but if you actually look at the research, you might be surprised at how many carbs you can โ€œget away with.โ€ Paleo reduces carbs to an insulin-sensitizing level almost automatically even without restricting starchy vegetables like sweet potatoes!

    For example, this review found that low-carb diets were better for insulin resistance than low-fat, but if you look at the actual โ€œlow-carbโ€ diets involved, most of them were around 40% carbohydrate! To get a 40% carb Paleo diet, youโ€™d have to eat a big potato or sweet potato with every single meal. Most people would just get bored of that many potatoes, so Paleo will naturally be even lower in carbs than the โ€œlow-carbโ€ diets that helped in that review. If you want to try full-on ketosis, it may be useful (especially as a temporary therapeutic tool), but all the evidence suggests that itโ€™s still possible to improve carb tolerance on a moderate-carb Paleo diet.

    Inflammation and Stress

    Going Paleo virtually eliminates refined carbs, but that still doesnโ€™t address all the problems with the modern diet that lead to insulin resistance. Another biggie is chronic, low-grade inflammation. Some strategies for managing inflammation include:

    • On top of eating a basic Paleo diet (no soy, no vegetable oil), limit Omega-6 fats (nuts and seeds) and eat plenty of Omega-3s (fish and seafood).
    • Get plenty of sleep.
    • Manage your stress.
    • If necessary, lose visceral fat. Carrying a little extra jiggle in your hips isnโ€™t a risk for insulin resistance: thatโ€™s subcutaneous fat. But an apple shape indicates that you have some visceral fat to lose.

    All these strategies will also help keep your gut flora happy - and as usual, gut flora probably have something to do with the problem, even if we aren't sure exactly what.

    Exercise

    Exercise gets its own heading because it helps in so many different ways. For one thing, itโ€™s powerfully anti-inflammatory โ€“ both because of the exercise itself and because of the weight loss it can help with. It also depletes stores of glucose in your muscles, which helps improve insulin sensitivity by providing more storage capacity for glucose in the first place.

    The research backs that up. According to this study, weight loss induced by exercise was much more effective at improving insulin sensitivity than weight loss induced only by calorie restriction. Both aerobic (โ€œcardioโ€) and anaerobic (weightlifting, sprinting, strength training) exercise has shown benefits in various different studies. This review (free full-text) has a good summary of recent evidence on exercise and insulin sensitivity, although youโ€™ll have to scroll down to the second half to read it.

    Summing it Up

    Paleo is a great diet for metabolic healing, but not just because it lowers carbs! You can do all kinds of non-carb-related things to improve insulin sensitivity: reduce inflammation, get enough sleep, manage stress, and lose weight if you have weight to lose.

    Itโ€™s also important to note that an insulin-healing diet doesnโ€™t necessarily have to be extremely low-carb. Even if a low-carb diet helps in the short term, the goal shouldnโ€™t be to shun carbohydrates forever. Thatโ€™s a therapeutic tool, but the ultimate goal should be regaining metabolic flexibility and normal insulin signaling, so you can enjoy the benefits of carb-rich foods if and when you want them.

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