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Ketogenic Therapies

Ketogenic therapies are an integrated psychiatrist and dietician supervised, high-fat, low-carbohydrate, and moderate-protein diets designed to shift metabolism from using glucose to burning fat for ketones.

 

Originally for refractory epilepsy, ketogenic therapies are now expanding impact for mental health areas including depression, anxiety, bipolar disorders and expanded mental health support. 

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Recent Discoveries on Ketogenic Therapies

Most recently released by Stanford University on ketogenic therapy and mental health:

Keto therapy has been used to treat neurological disorders for more than 100 years.

In 1921, long before modern anticonvulsant medications, endocrinologist Russell Wilder, MD, discovered that the ketogenic diet could mimic the metabolic effects of fasting, long known to reduce seizures. More than a dozen randomized controlled trials have since shown that ketogenic diets significantly and safely stabilize neuronal networks, quelling seizures in many patients with epilepsy.

A growing body of evidence that includes Sethi's research suggests the diet, or ketogenic metabolic therapy as she prefers to call it, can also help patients with serious mental illness such as depression, schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. The relatively new field of metabolic psychiatry, founded at Stanford Medicine by Sethi, focuses on addressing metabolic dysfunction with ketogenic and other metabolism-focused therapies to improve mental health outcomes.

Keto therapy stabilizes neurons and reduces inflammation in the brain.​

Ketogenic therapy increases the ratio of gamma-aminobutyric acid to glutamate in neurons. Balancing these inhibitory and excitatory neurotransmitters helps suppress excessive neuronal firing that contributes to certain forms of mental illness.

"Bipolar mania involves fluctuations in energy states in which neuronal firing is more unstable," Sethi said, "and both anti-psychotic medications and ketogenic therapy can reduce that instability. We need neural network stability for mental health."

Ketogenic therapy significantly reduces inflammation in the brain — which is strongly associated with depression, anxiety, schizophrenia and bipolar disorder — by regulating immune signaling and reducing oxidative stress, among other probable mechanisms.

 

Many mental illnesses involve a significant metabolic component.​

Mental and metabolic illnesses frequently occur together: More than 40% of people with severe mental illnesses also have metabolic syndrome. Metabolic dysfunction certainly exacerbates symptoms of mental illness, Sethi said, but evidence indicates it might often be an underlying cause as well.  Metabolic syndrome and several forms of mental illness respond to many of the same medications. Similarly, they both also respond favorably to ketogenic therapy, Sethi's pilot study showed.

Keto therapy can help with metabolic syndrome and insulin resistance.

Many patients suffering from mental illness also experience insulin resistance, which can lead to metabolic syndrome. The ketogenic diet reduces insulin resistance in addition to promoting weight loss and improving blood sugar, triglycerides and high-density lipoprotein, or HDL, cholesterol levels.

Keto therapy drastically reduces carbohydrate intake, causing the body to burn fat for fuel (ketosis), thereby stabilizing blood sugar levels and decreasing inflammation. By relying on fats as fuel instead of glucose, a brain in ketosis bypasses the need for glucose and insulin to enter the brain for energy production, which is a problem for many people with mental illness.

Keto therapy should be considered supplemental to primary mental health treatment.

Ketogenic therapy is a serious medical intervention, not to be confused with the related but much less rigorous weight-loss diet that is based on similar principles. Keto therapy can interact dangerously with some anti-psychotic medications, as well as with other health conditions, so an experienced physician and trained nutritionist should guide and monitor it.

Because there are also several versions of the diet, a professional should work with patients to choose the best one. Sethi said the objective in her clinic is "not to replace conventional treatments with ketogenic therapy, but to use the diet as one powerful therapeutic metabolic tool among many."

Our Team

NSPA's partnership with Lighthouse Clinic expands support to clients. Our metabolic psychiatry team includes board certified Psychiatrist and Dietician with combined decade of experience on mental health services.

Outpatient Mental Health Clinic - North Shore Psychotherapy Associates

5555 N. Port Washington Road, Suite #300

Glendale, WI 53217

Office Phone: (414) 962-6764

Fax: (414) 360-6765

Insurance & Billing: (414) 215-0506

Email: 

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