The Surprising Origins of Low-Carb and Ketogenic Diets
When people ask who’s idea was this on a low-carb or ketogenic diet, the answer traces back over 150 years. The modern low-carb movement didn’t start in the 1970s with Dr. Robert Atkins. It began in 1863 when British undertaker William Banting published his pamphlet “Letter on Corpulence.” After losing 50 pounds on a diet of meat, fish, and vegetables while avoiding bread, sugar, and beer, Banting’s story became an international sensation. This was the first popular low-carbohydrate diet for weight loss.
Medical Roots: The Ketogenic Diet for Epilepsy
The true ketogenic diet emerged in 1921 at the Mayo Clinic. Dr. Russell Wilder created it as a medical treatment for children with epilepsy. By drastically limiting carbohydrates to under 50 grams daily and increasing healthy fats, the body enters ketosis, producing ketones that reduce seizure activity. Before anticonvulsant drugs, this approach helped thousands of children. In my book The CFP Reset, I explain how we borrow this same metabolic state but adapt the macronutrients for busy adults over 45 who also battle insulin resistance, joint pain, and hormonal shifts.
Atkins, Ancel Keys, and the Modern Revival
Dr. Robert Atkins popularized low-carb eating in 1972 with his bestselling book. He reported that patients on very low carbohydrate plans lost weight without feeling hungry. Meanwhile, researcher Dr. Ancel Keys’ flawed Seven Countries Study had pushed low-fat guidelines, creating decades of high-carb food pyramids that contributed to today’s obesity and diabetes epidemic. By the early 2000s, studies began validating what Banting and Wilder observed: limiting refined carbs improves blood sugar, blood pressure, and weight. For our 45-54 community managing diabetes alongside weight, we target 20-50 grams of net carbs daily to achieve nutritional ketosis while protecting lean muscle.
Applying Ketogenic Principles in Real Midlife Life
At CFP Weight Loss we don’t prescribe the strict medical ketogenic ratios of 4:1 fat-to-protein. Instead, we use a flexible low-carb template that fits real schedules—no complicated meal plans or gym marathons. Focus on protein-first meals (25-30g per sitting), non-starchy vegetables, and healthy fats like avocado and olive oil. Walk 20 minutes daily to ease joint pain instead of high-impact exercise. Track fasting blood glucose and ketones with affordable meters to confirm you’ve reached therapeutic ketosis (0.5–3.0 mmol/L beta-hydroxybutyrate). Most members lose 1–2 pounds weekly while stabilizing blood pressure and reducing diabetes medications under physician guidance. The science is clear: lowering insulin load reverses metabolic damage that diets high in processed carbs created. Start simple—swap your breakfast bagel for eggs and spinach—and build from there. Sustainable success comes from consistency, not perfection.