True. You have me there. But, your follow-up post...
...doesn't exactly contradict the pieces I linked. That you have to take extra measures to relieve stress in order to cope with a diet says something about that diet. Again, just saying.
I was not contradicting, I was saying you can do a keto lifestyle change and still control your cortisol levels.
Also the article did not say Keto clearly raises cortisol levels. Some people cannot handle the change or do it too drastically. The fault therein lies with person not the change in lifestyle.
As the article states:
Research has indicated that a ketogenic diet raises the stress hormone cortisol to increase energy levels in the face of reduced carbohydrate availability. However, it is still up for debate whether this increase in cortisol is harmful or innocuous. Nonetheless, I recommend taking extra care to manage your stress while on a ketogenic diet. Getting plenty of sleep, exercising, and engaging in a regular stress-reduction practice can help you keep your baseline stress levels low and reduce the potential for chronically elevated cortisol.
People who have not done Keto usually don't understand the adjustment period and how you feel afterwards. As I,
@destriero and maybe
@Baron and anyone else can attest, there is an adjustment different for every person from a few days to a few weeks but when it kicks in, it feels great.
It is not for everyone and I don't force it on anyone, but do feel the need to discuss since the current fad market spreads such falsehoods on it rather than reading the science.
I did not see the research cited to read on links between keto and cortisol and the author claim it is up for debate, but any change can put an initial strain on your body. I bet research shows that beginning a new workout regiment can raise the stress hormone cortisol due to new strain on the system.
And since the counter is simply getting more sleep and under taking stress reducing practices shows the change is not truly structural but merely a temporary adjustment. All people go through adjustments when changing their lifestyle form quitting smoking to eating healthier to starting to exercise. It makes sense.