Understanding the Math Behind Low-Carb and Ketogenic Diets
When people ask if the math is right on a low-carb diet or ketogenic diet, they usually mean calories in versus calories out. The short answer is yes, but the equation changes. Traditional diets focus purely on cutting calories, yet many in their 40s and 50s find this fails due to hormonal changes like perimenopause and insulin resistance. In my book The CFP Weight Loss Method, I explain that reducing carbohydrates lowers insulin, allowing your body to access stored fat more efficiently. This metabolic shift means you burn fat even if total calories aren't drastically reduced.
A standard ketogenic diet keeps carbs under 20-50 grams daily, protein moderate at 1.2-1.6 grams per kilogram of ideal body weight, and fats filling the rest. For a 180-pound person, this might look like 25g carbs, 110g protein, and 140g fat totaling around 1,800 calories. The magic isn't just the numbers—it's how this composition stabilizes blood sugar, reduces inflammation, and eases joint pain that makes movement difficult.
Why Traditional Calorie Counting Often Fails Midlife
Most beginners I've worked with have failed every diet before because they ignore hormonal realities. Declining estrogen and rising cortisol make fat storage around the midsection stubborn. A ketogenic diet addresses this by promoting ketosis, where your liver produces ketones from fat. Studies show participants lose 2-3 times more weight in the first 6 months compared to low-fat diets, with better preservation of muscle mass. For those managing diabetes and blood pressure, blood glucose often drops 20-30 points within weeks, sometimes reducing medication needs under doctor supervision.
The math works because you're not fighting hunger. High-fat meals increase satiety hormones like CCK and PYY, so people naturally eat less without obsessive tracking. This is crucial when insurance won't cover programs and time is limited—no complex meal plans required.
Practical Math Adjustments for Sustainable Results
Start simple: track net carbs (total carbs minus fiber) for the first two weeks. Use a basic app to log until you learn portions. Aim for 70-80% of calories from fat initially, but adjust based on progress. If weight loss stalls, calculate your true maintenance calories using an online TDEE estimator, then subtract 20%. For joint-friendly movement, begin with 10-minute walks after meals to enhance insulin sensitivity without pain.
In The CFP Weight Loss Method, I provide a 7-day starter template that requires just 20 minutes of prep weekly. Focus on whole foods: eggs, avocado, olive oil, fatty fish, and non-starchy vegetables. This approach overcomes embarrassment around obesity by delivering visible results quickly, building confidence to ask for help when needed.
Common Pitfalls and How to Get the Math Working for You
Many calculate macros incorrectly by overeating protein or hidden carbs in processed foods, kicking them out of ketosis. Test ketones with urine strips or a blood meter (aim for 0.5-3.0 mmol/L). Stay hydrated with 3-4 liters daily plus electrolytes to avoid keto flu. For middle-income families, this diet saves money by cutting expensive processed snacks.
Remember, the right math combines macros, hormones, and consistency. Thousands following CFP principles lose 15-40 pounds in 90 days while improving energy and joint comfort. Start today with one low-carb swap and build from there.