The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Most Replayed Moment: This Diet Could Fix Your Mental Health! - Dr Georgia Ede
Episode Date: August 8, 2025Dr. Georgia Ede is a psychiatrist and nutrition expert specialising in the impact of diet on mental health. She advocates for the ketogenic diet as a powerful tool for treating mental health disorders.... Dr. Ede discusses how the ketogenic diet can help improve brain health by reducing inflammation and balancing brain chemicals. She explains its potential benefits for treating mental illnesses and enhancing cognitive function. Listen to the full episode here! Spotify: https://g2ul0.app.link/MvucGbFLDVb Apple: https://g2ul0.app.link/cM7SL4ILDVb Watch the episodes on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/%20TheDiaryOfACEO/videos Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This keto diet, you did a study on the ketogenic diet.
I've got the study here.
The ketogenic diet for refractory mental illness, a retrospective analysis of 31 in patients.
What is the ketogenic diet for someone that might not know?
So a lot of people think, or they've heard about a ketogenic diet as a weight loss diet.
They think of it maybe it's a fad weight loss diet.
They think of it as a very, very low-carbohydrate diet.
They might think of it as a diet that's very high in meat and dairy products.
But actually, the ketogenic diet was originally created in 1921, more than 100 years ago,
to stabilize brain chemistry in children with severe seizures.
And this was long before the availability of useful seizure medications.
So these were children who were having multiple seizures per day in many cases.
And so the ketogenic diet was designed back then, created back then a very strict version of the ketogenic diet
to get as close as possible to fasting without starving children to death.
Because for millennia, people had noticed that those with epilepsy would often improve if they were fasting.
but you can't fast forever. So how do you get close to fasting? This is the original fasting
mimicking diet. How do you get as close to fasting as you can while still providing some
nutrition? So that was the original goal of the ketogenic diet. It was very successful
for seizures. More than 50% of children had more than 50% and adults as well. It's since been
shown. More than 50% response rate in children and adults and 10 to 20% completely free of seizures
following a ketogenic diet.
How is it acting on the brain?
What's it doing to the brain?
The ketogenic diet does many, many things.
It's like a multi-purpose tool for brain health.
So one thing it does, because we talked about how some of the root causes of mental
illnesses, which are only relatively recently a focus of research, are inflammation
and oxidative stress and insulin resistance.
The ketogenic diet reduces inflammation.
it reduces oxidative stress, and it reduces insulin resistance. It also improves the balance of
chemicals in the brain. So a lot of people think of mental illnesses as problems with chemical
imbalances in the brain. And these are the chemicals that they're talking about. You might have heard of
serotonin or dopamine or norophenephrine. There are others, glutamate, gaba. Many different chemicals in the brain
are associated with, or in some cases, even very much causing mental health symptoms.
But the question is, what's causing those chemical imbalances in the first place?
And one of the things that's causing those chemical imbalances is that inflammation and oxidative
stress.
But another thing is that the brain is, if you're feeding it the wrong way, it will not be
able to, in many cases, produce energy reliable.
and if it can't produce energy reliably, all kinds of things will go wrong. And in quite
spectacular fashion, what actually goes wrong is going to depend on who you are. And that's
where our individual differences come in. So if you and I eat exactly the same bad diet,
depending what runs in your family and how you've lived your life to this point, you might
develop Alzheimer's disease, you might develop bipolar disorder, you might develop type 2 diabetes,
you might develop fatty liver disease, I might develop completely different conditions.
I might develop cardiovascular disease. I might develop depression. I might develop ADHD.
And that's where the individual differences are. But all of these conditions are just metabolic malfunction,
really, at the heart of it. That's what's going on. If cells aren't functioning properly,
you will develop a disease, physical and mental diseases, and which ones you get, it's really
kind of luck of the draw. But you have tremendous control over what you are at risk for if you
understand how to help your cells operate at their personal best.
Why is it so hard to stay on the ketogenic diet? I've managed to do it for, I was saying to you
before we start recording, once a year, around this time of year, I do it for about eight weeks,
and it has a really profound impact on a lot of my life.
It helps me feel more focused.
My body composition radically changes faster than any other diet
or thing that I've ever tried faster than just exercise alone.
I sleep a little bit better as well I noticed.
But you've been doing it for a long time.
You've been doing it for roughly almost 10 years.
For the better part of 12, I mean, more often I'll say,
I've been following a ketogenic diet for 12 years, and I agree with you, it's not always easy.
I'm not perfect about it myself, but I have been on the keto giant diet, the lion's share of the last 12 years.
It being hard is an important factor.
Yes.
Because when you're trying to prescribe it to somebody who has got treatment-resistant depression or is really suffering in some way, I imagine they'll find it even harder than I do.
Yes and no.
Okay.
So it's hard.
Well, it's definitely, there's no question about it that's hard to eat.
eat a low-carbohydrate diet and a high-carbohydrate world.
Yeah.
So there's that.
There's the environmental temptations and the social temptations and the habits and the
addiction.
Sugar addiction is a very real biochemical phenomenon.
So there's that.
But, I mean, I've been, I had a weight issue growing up.
Everyone in my family did.
And I've been on lots of different diets in my life.
This is the easiest one to stay on.
I can't say about any other diet that I've followed for 12 years.
And the reason why is this diet really stabilizes appetite hormones.
So your cells are getting energized in between meals.
You're not getting those spikes and crashes in glucose, which cause spikes and crashes in
appetite hormones, satiety hormones, stress hormones, reproductive hormones, brain chemistry.
You're not getting, you're not on that roller coaster anymore.
So your cells are being satisfied. They're getting the energy needs satisfied in between meals,
and everything is quiet and calm on the inside. It doesn't mean you're 100% protected against
temptation. So I describe it to my patients with food addiction. I describe being in ketosis as a suit
of armor. You know, the sword can still get you, but you're not 100% protected, but you've got a real
fighting chance. And for anybody who's never tried a ketogen,
diet and been on it for at least, I would say, six to 12 weeks.
Most people have no idea how much easier it is to follow a healthy eating plan when their
appetite is in good control.
A lot of people know they've shifted into ketosis without even checking their ketone meter
because they can go for so long without eating whether I've been thinking about food.
They can work through lunch and not even realize that they've missed a meal.
Most people, the way we eat, most of us now, are thinking about food all the time.
You haven't even finished breakfast and you're already thinking, what can I have for lunch?
You're carrying food around with you everywhere you go.
You're eating at least six times a day in many cases.
This is not the, I mean, we would never have survived as a species if we needed to eat six times a day.
So we're not eating in a way that is nourishing us and satisfying us.
We're eating in a way that's making us hungry.
I find what you've said there to be sort of true in my experience, especially in the context of the rollercoaster analogy. So when I'm not on ketosis, I do feel like sometimes I'm in a bit of a roller coaster of like temptation, craving, etc. And then when I do ketosis and I get past the first week or two, the roller coaster seems to stop. I'm off the roller coaster. It's then maybe six, eight,
weeks later, you're busy, life happens, you're traveling, you're tired, that temptation
creeps in. And it just takes that one moment of weakness in my head to then fling me off
ketosis and all my effort is gone. And in my head, the way I've always thought about it,
and I'm sure this is wrong, but I've thought about it like, it takes a couple of days to get
into a state of ketosis. And then once you're in, and I usually get a headache on my way into
ketosis. I feel a little bit bad on the way in. And then once I'm in there, it's fine. So when I
have something that breaks my keto. This is what I refer to me. My girlfriend talked about it.
I've broken my keto or whatever. I think, oh my God, I've got to go through another headache
and another five days of, you know, getting back into it. Is that correct?
It's a very common experience because there are these adjustments that happen inside with your
physiology as you're shifting from one operating system to another. When you're shifting from
a carbohydrate burning system to a more, you're shifting your racial
of your fuels, so the body and the brain are hybrid engines, so we're never burning 100% fat,
we're burning a mixture of fat and carbohydrate. When you're shifting from a system that's
fueled almost entirely by carbohydrate almost all the time to a system where you're burning
more fat than carbohydrate, that's uncomfortable for some people shifting back and forth,
especially if what they have, if the reason why you've, quote, broken your keto,
is because you've had something that has a lot of refined carbohydrate in, a lot of sugar or flour in it, for example.
So it depends on what you've eaten and how much and for how long.
But many people do experience the so-called keto flu, when they are shifting from a carbohydrate-based system to a fat-based metabolism.
And much of this can be prevented in a couple of different ways.
One is with electrolyte supplementation, supplementing electrolytes to keep your salt balance
even as you're transitioning.
And another is by transitioning slowly onto the ketogenic diet rather than all at once.
And there are other tips in the book about how to do this more comfortably.
But those are the two big ones.
And going slowly.
So in the book, I don't recommend that people start on a ketogenic diet just straight away,
like learn about it on a Monday, start it on a Tuesday.
but ease into ketosis over a week or two.
And there's a kind of a moderate carbohydrate plan in the book that allows people to do this.
So you follow that plan for a couple of weeks to gradually lower those glucose and insulin levels.
It's going to be a lot more comfortable.
It's going to be a lot less of a shock to the brain and body.
And if you're supplementing electrolytes and going slowly, most of these, quote,
keto flu symptoms will not occur.
or they'll be very brief and mild.
So, again, these are positive.
It's a positive change to have these electrolyte changes.
And all of these things are good, but there is this transition period, which can sometimes
be uncomfortable.
And this is not to say that it's dangerous.
Again, it's a very, we're designed.
Our biology is designed for us to be able to shift back and forth between fat and
carbohydrate as fuel sources, but many of us have lost some of our metabolic flexibility
because we've done some damage to our metabolic engines by eating the wrong way for too long,
so we don't shift as comfortably back and forth as we used to be able to.
I guess most people don't even know what foods are included in a keto diet,
because most diets are restrictive to the point that, you know, people think they just make
your life miserable. But what are the sort of big misconceptions you've seen with the foods
you're able to eat on a ketogenic diet?
Yeah, so because a ketogenic diet, because the definition of a ketogenic diet is any way of eating
that lowers insulin levels enough to turn on fat burning and generate ketones in the blood,
because it's about insulin, it's really not a food list.
So you can, you can, it's not about plants and animals, it's not even about fat or carbohydrate,
it's about understanding how to lower your insulin levels, which you can do with a V.
dietary pattern, with a vegetarian dietary pattern, with an omnivore dietary pattern,
or even with a carnivore dietary pattern. So whatever your dietary preferences are,
you can get the benefits, the brain healing benefits of ketosis. So it's not about the foods
you're eating. It's more about understanding what raises and lowers insulin. The things that raise
and lower insulin are refined carbohydrates, whole foods carbohydrates, refined proteins, like protein
powders, whole food sources of protein. And guess what barely touches insulin at all?
Fat. Fat is metabolically the quietest and safest macronutrient you can eat because it barely
stimulates insulin. Is ketosis a state? Like do I, is it like a binary state? Like now I'm in
ketosis, and now I'm not?
So, yes, but there's, there's, yes, let me put it this way, that most experts will agree
that in order to be, quote, in ketosis, your level of beta-hydroxybuterate on a blood ketone
meter, a blood ketone meter is prick your finger and put a drop of blood on the
little test strip, and it will read the amount of a particular ketone in the blood
called beta-hydroxybutyrate, and it will give you a reading. If that reading is 0.5 millimole
or higher, you are in ketosis. So what does that mean? Why is the cutoff 0.5? Because three
things have to happen for you to get to at least 0.5. One is your glucose levels have to come
down. The second thing is your insulin levels have to come down. The third thing,
is you have to burn off a certain amount of the stored starch in your liver. We have a storage
tank for carbohydrate in our liver. It's not very big. It holds less than a day's worth of
carbohydrate because really as animals, we're designed to store energy as fat. Carbohydrate's
there for quick energy emergency short term. The fat, for better or for worse, we have
almost an unlimited capability to store fat. We can store months and months.
months and months worth of that. And so, but we can only store a very small amount of carbohydrate.
So if your storage tank in the liver is full, your body will not switch to fat burning because
it says, oh, we've got plenty of starch to burn. Let's start there. Once it comes down to a certain
point, the body goes, oh, we're running out of energy. Let's go to fat now. And that's when the liver
will start breaking fat down, whether it's fat on your body or fat from your plate, and start
chopping it up into these ketones. And so those three things have to happen. And once that happens,
you'll see the ketone levels rise on the meter. So most people who are not eating a ketogenic diet
are walking around with ketogenic levels either undetectable or their point two or their point three.
They might float up into above point five every once in a while if they're not eating for a long time
or if they've just exercised. But for the most part, most people eating a typical diet are not,
in ketosis. And when you get above point five, a lot of metabolic magic starts to happen,
because there are lots of pathways in the body and brain that are not very active unless you're
in ketosis, and those are the healing pathways, the recycling and maintenance and cleanup pathways,
the recovery pathways. All of us, this is something that I came to appreciate a number of years
ago, as I've been studying this, is that there are many people, unfortunately, or fortunately,
there are many people who discover with mental health issues that they need to be in
ketosis long term in order to be well. But I've become convinced by the science that all of us
need to be in ketosis, at least intramently. All of us need to spend some time in ketosis on a
regular basis or else we can't heal. We'll only be, it's like a, it's like a manufacturing
plant where the plant is just running 24-7, 12 months a year, and they never take time to
replace the parts or clean up the floor or, you know, they never do any maintenance work or
repair work. And so eventually everything breaks down. And when you say ketosis again,
you're not saying the keto diet, you're saying the low levels of glucose,
and insulin in the blood. And that can be achieved by calorie restriction, potentially fasting,
I guess you could achieve it, and other diets like the Mediterranean diet if administered in the
right sort of doses, right? Well, we should come back to the Mediterranean diet a minute,
but first of the first part of your question is important because ketosis is, you can, as you said,
you can get into ketosis a variety of different ways. If you're eating properly, and this would have
been our evolutionary heritage, our ancestors, especially our prehistoric ancestors,
they didn't have access to these lots and lots of refined carbohydrates a long time ago.
They were eating carbohydrates from whole foods, fruits and starchy root vegetables, right?
And so even grains and beans are very, very relatively much newer sources of carbohydrate.
So let's think about fruits and vegetables.
But they would have been, we can only guess, looking at their diets.
We don't have proof of this, but think about it, if you're eating in a way where your
insulin levels are allowed to come down overnight, if you're eating a balanced diet, so
to speak, but it's got everything it needs in it, and it's not giving you exaggerated spikes
in your glucose and exaggerated spikes in your insulin, and you're not eating six times a day
or all day long, your insulin levels will naturally come down overnight, and that will allow
you to go into a healing mode. So I believe that if people have the right information about what
a healthy diet is supposed to look like, they may not even need to, in many cases, especially
if you're younger or athletic or don't have a lot of metabolic damage already. You may not need
to lower your carbohydrate intake during the day. You might just need to be careful about
what kinds of carbohydrate you eat and how often. So, for example,
example, it's known that in children who are eating a regular diet, many of them wake up the next
morning in ketosis. They're metabolically much healthier than we are as we get older. So they're
much more metabolically flexible. And so now they didn't go on a ketogenic diet. They're eating a
regular diet. They slept overnight, didn't eat anything the next morning they were in ketosis.
That's not true for all children, but it's true for enough children that we know it's
possible. Most adults, it takes them several days at least to get into ketosis, even if they're not
eating anything at all. So fasting can take two to three days at a minimum for most people to get
into ketosis, but some people it can take a whole week. What you just listened to was a most
replayed moment from a previous episode. If you want to listen to that full episode, I've linked it
down below. Check the description. Thank you.
Thank you.