Keto Diet: What it is, how it works and why it may not be safe

Want to learn more about the keto diet? Here’s how it works and why it may not be safe for everyone

Keto diet - eggs and bacon
(Image credit: Shutterstock)

The ketogenic, or ‘keto diet’ for short, is a low carb ‘body hack’ diet that claims to trigger an alternative metabolic state in the body, leading to weight loss. Ketosis is a state your body enters when it isn’t getting enough carbohydrates from dietary sources and switches to burning the body’s fat reserves. This creates something called ketones, which can be used as energy. If someone’s blood ketone levels reach more than 0.5 millimoles per liter then they are in a state of ketosis. 

While this sounds like the ultimate body hack and a quick way to shed excess weight, the extreme nature of the diet makes it unsustainable, and many people find that once they switch back to carbohydrates as a source of energy, they regain the weight lost while on the keto diet. This is because the keto diet simply isn’t designed for long term use, being originally designed to support medication-resistant epilepsy in children.

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Lou Mudge
Health Writer

Lou Mudge is a health writer based in Bath, United Kingdom for Future PLC. She holds an undergraduate degree in creative writing from Bath Spa University, and her work has appeared in Live Science, Tom's Guide, Fit & Well, Coach, T3, and Tech Radar, among others. She regularly writes about health and fitness-related topics such as air quality, gut health, diet and nutrition and the impacts these things have on our lives. 

She has worked for the University of Bath on a chemistry research project and produced a short book in collaboration with the department of education at Bath Spa University.