Problems With Paleo & Low-Carb Diets

This is the Paleo article I didn’t want to write.

No wait.  I take that back.  I desperately wanted to write it, because the Paleo obsession with meat and its attack on starch drove me up the wall.  But at the end of the day, I couldn’t stay angry at the Paleo Diet.  Though the original popularization of Paleo was aggressively put forth by Dr. Loren Cordain with a meat pyramid that made my environmentalist-anti-industrial-meat-production sensibilities shudder in horror, many of the spin-offs of the Paleo movement have a much more docile message: don’t process your food.

Simple.

Oh yeah, and don’t eat refined “fast-carbs,” as I like to call them (i.e., fine flour products, sugars, syrups, extracts, alcohol).

That’s easy.  And that sounds just like every other sensible diet that works.

But what kills me is the Paleo avoidance of whole food starches like whole grains, bean, legumes, and potatoes.  What gives?

If you had given me sixty seconds to say it all, I would have sucked up a bunch of air like Ace Ventura and proceeded rapidly with something like this:

  • Carbs are essential for performance, especially for endurance.
  • Our anatomy far more resembles than of an herbivore than it does that of a carnivore.  In light of this, as omnivores, it makes more sense to lean toward the herbivore end of the food spectrum.
  • Carbs are overwhelmingly abundant in nature compared to fats and proteins, though marginalized terrains don’t offer enough of the carbs we can actually eat, and therefore lead us to rely more heavily on animal-sourced calories.
  • Carbs have a unique ability to make us fat if we eat too many of them; this would actually be an evolutionary advantage, especially with fructose consumption. Interestingly, it is nearly impossible to become fat on a high whole carb diet if fat intake is limited.
  • Carbs regulate serotonin and digestive contraction.
  • Carbs mostly break down into glucose, which is our preferred energy source; glucose metabolism is the oldest form of energy metabolism identified.
  • The Paleo movement is egocentric, especially for men; any diet that makes us feel more manly, more aggressive, and more dominant over our environment (read: top of the food chain) would clearly gain favor, as demonstrated by the Crossfit movement.
  • Crossfit, a popular and generally-looked-down-upon, dangerous and poorly-implemented fitness fad (at least from my surveys of other exercise physiologists–I’ll save this critique for another article) promotes a style and intensity of fitness appropriate to the limitations of a low-carb diet.  Metabolic conditioning workouts lasting 5-20 minutes do not draw heavily on glycogen stores.
  • Re: Crossfit and its Paleo appeal to functional training – I can’t think of any circumstance in which a paleolithic human would ever need to perform a true Olympic lift, or could actually handle such weights in their natural, awkward, unbalanced forms (logs, rocks, etc.).  Olympic lifting, at least, requires considerable and impressive technique; power lifting, also a mainstay of Crossfit, is less technical and certainly another ego-driven endeavor.  It comes as no surprise to me that meat-eating and Crossfit are happily married.
  • High protein, low-carb diets are not only dehydrating, they require much more intensive digestive and metabolic effort, and the net energy gained from such diets is poor.  While this is helpful to a sedentary fat person who wants to lose weight without working out, it is not beneficial to people who must move all day.
  • Blood samples from plant-based meals are cleaner and less cloudy than those from animal-based meals; this, too, should have implications on cardiovascular efficiency.
  • High meat consumption–especially red meat–is acidifying and overly “yang.”  This can be no better than a “yin” dominated diet of refined foods, alcohols, and stimulants.  The name of the game is balance, and Paleo is nothing more than a re-packaged Atkins diet with marginal flexibility around fruits and vegetables (as long as they don’t grow underground).
  • Intermittent fasting packaged as “replicating” paleo life is a joke.  This is nothing more than promoters establishing–through their dietary protocols–a guarantee to deplete glycogen stores (the first to go during a fast) so that you must always be in a state of gluconeogenesis (a metabolic pathway that results in the generation of glucose from non-carbohydrate sources).
  • Paleo Diet is nothing more than a fad diet book that makes impatient, lazy people happy with a scientifically proven (thanks to the attention drawn from the Atkins movement) failsafe way to burn fat.
  • The Paleo Diet’s environmental impact (if applied on a large scale) is nothing short of a suicide mission for the environment, considering our capacity for land animals.
  • The Paleo Diet completely ignores less glamorous aspects of paleolithic life: namely, consumption of insects, parasitic infection rates and their inhibition of autoimmune disorders and allergies, and the inevitable consumption of feces and dirt.
  • The Paleo Diet unfairly names protein and fat consumption as being responsible for encephalation (increase brain size) in relation to a decrease in the size of the gut.  It is far more likely that encephalation resulted from the implementation of cooking food, thereby reducing its mass, “pre-digesting” it, creating greater bio-availability of its nutrients, and increasing net energy after digestive effort.
  • The Paleo Diet claims that agrarian life led to shorter, weaker, sicker humans.  This is unfounded.  The evidence points in all directions; many agrarian peoples fared better than hunter-gatherer groups; the inverse is also true.  Ultimately, height and strength is a factor of nutrition, parasitic load, and physical activity more than it is a factor of meat consumption.
  • Meat and animal sources of protein are high in certain amino acids which are strongly linked to cancer growth (i.e., methionine).
  • The Paleo Diet denies (or at least tries to ignore) the well-established lipid hypothesis, which has established the link between cholesterol and heart disease.  Saturated fat, a mainstay in the paleo diet, is strongly associated with increased LDL (bad) cholesterol.  (Learn more about lipids in this reader-friendly article.)
  • Bad breath is usually a sign of a health imbalance.  Bad breath is a common sign of ketosis, which is a desired effect of low-carb diets.  Constipation is also strongly correlated with high protein consumption.

This was just my superficial rant.

I’ll stop here.  I won’t dig any deeper, because Plant Positive does it so much better, and I’d much rather give homage to his thorough, well-reasoned, calm discussion of scientific research he uncovered.

It you are serious about your health–I mean, if you really are on a mission to avoid all the bad diseases of affluence and live a long, energetic life–then I DARE you to take the time to watch the entire PRIMITIVE NUTRITION series by Plant Positive.

Budget about 9 1/2 hours.

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12 Comments

  1. Have you seen that movie Fat Head? Any thoughts on that? It’s really pro paleo

    Reply
  2. Have you seen that movie Fat Head? Guy eats at McDonalds for 30 days but loses weight? It’s totally pro paleo

    Reply
    • Paleo works for weight loss. Absolutely it does. That’s why it’s a fad diet. It’s everything else I’m concerned about.
      Fun fact: Dr. Atkins also had heart disease.

      Reply
  3. Atkins and Paleo are not the same thing. I suggest you do a little more research into Paleo as it seems that you haven’t.

    Reply
    • I lump Atkins, paleo, and low carb together because they all share the avoidance of concentrated carb sources. If you read my previous post, you will hopefully (though perhaps I did not make myself clear) see that I am not completely in disfavor of the paleo diet. There are a lot of wonderful things I can say about it. This post is a focus on paleo as promoted by Cordain. The plus side to paleo, vs Atkins, is the emphasis on vegetables and some fruits. Also, paleo is not very keen on dairy. Paleo also emphasizes lean meats, as opposed to fatty ones, unlike Atkins. The saturated fat to LDL connect is difficult to avoid, and it is my belief that the paleo community is sensitive to this.

      In light of all this, perhaps I should not categorically criticize paleo, since there are many versions of it, strict to flexible and light. Then bottom line is that the over-focus on animal sources of food at the expense of carbohydrate rich food leaves me perplexed and concerned.

      I appreciate your comment.

      Reply
  4. Similar to above, and as I beleive you know, there are many forms of paleo. Strict paleo, similar to ANY very strict diet is something I would not categorize as healthy. But I would like to emphasize that you mention paleo doesn’t like veggies that come from underground… That is only true of WHITE potatoes (and there is a movement towards accepting these as well). But things like carrots, turnips, beets, sweet potatoes, parsnips and other tubers are highly encouraged especially if you feel you need additional carbs in your diet for people such as endurance athletes or teenagers etc. I am not paleo, but I lean that way, but I do consume a lot of dairy because I handle it well and I consider it a more sustainable, enjoyable and cheaper way to get additional protein and carbs in my diet. I really like your post though, particularly as it pertains to Cordain’s version of paleo. Personally I like Mark Sisson’s “Primal” approach which allows for more flexibility and acknowledges AND deals with a lot of the downfalls that you mention here. He recommends that the average person who doesn’t need to lose weight can do well on about 100-150 grams of carbs a day, which would not be considered low carb in comparison to something like atkins, but would in comparison to what most people eat.

    Reply
    • Agreed. Many forms of paleo. One form, which was followed by my roommates (and promoted tremendous weight loss in one of them) included all the grass fed beef, fish, and other animal foods as desired (barring dairy), 1/2 stick of butter blended into a cup of coffee in the morning, and as many vegetables as possible provided they did not grow below ground. No grain. No legumes. No concentrated starch. My roommate was a sedentary software programmer, and between the intermittent fasts, the coffee, and the cigarettes to distract him from hunger, he slimmed down admirably. He also demonstrated appalling physical performance and stamina when he trained with me. My other roommate, jealous of his success, tried the diet as well. He was lethargic and constipated, and was unable to train without severe bouts of dizziness and muscular fatigue, and eventually stopped the diet.

      Needless to say, that was just ONE version of paleo/low-carb. And a bad one, I might say.

      Sisson probably has a more balanced approach. The video series I linked to, by Plant Positive, has quite a bit to say about Sisson, if you are interested. I don’t play sides over which paleo promoter is best, but you might like to take a look. Plant Positive criticizes Sisson’s logic, foremost, but even if an argument isn’t sound, it doesn’t mean the conclusion is incorrect. However, Sisson is accused of being a cholesterol confusionist, which is meaningful to anyone trying to avoid heart disease, and not merely overweight.

      Reply
  5. Buffy

     /  October 31, 2012

    I want to hear your opinion on Crossfit…

    Reply
  6. Neil Dorrel, CAIA

     /  October 31, 2012

    Great blog. Great writing as always.

    I lost my job today. Fuck. I think I’m just going to bail and join you and yours on the poverty tour.

    Neil Dorrel, CAIA Managing Director Lyrical Partners L.P. +1 310 595 5995 mobile

    Reply
  7. some paleo diets only allow 6 oz of protein a day not all you can eat.

    Reply
  8. Interesting article, but can’t agree with the “well established” lipid HYPOTHESIS (defined as a supposition or proposed explanation made on the basis of limited evidence as a starting point for further investigation; A proposition made as a basis for reasoning, without any assumption of its truth). The body needs cholestrol and saturated fats, just gotta get them in the right amounts from the proper sources (grass-fed organic meats, eggs; organic virgin coconut oi).

    Reply
  1. Crossfit – A Cool Idea, Poorly Implemented « Maria Mae Stevens

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