Keto diet only works for a week before problem that can cause obesity and diabetes appears, study on mice shows
- Research from Yale University suggests benefits of eating a high-fat, low-carb diet may be time-limited
- After a week on the diet, the body starts replenishing its stores of fat faster than they can be burned, the study indicates. A follow-up human study is needed

If the start of the new year led you to go on the ketogenic diet in an effort to lose weight, a new study suggests you may have been on it a little too long.
The study was recently published in Nature Metabolism and results indicate that over a limited time period, consuming a high-fat, low-carb diet can possibly offer health benefits to humans, Yale News reports. They include lowering the risk of diabetes and inflammation.

Vishwa Deep Dixit, lead author of the study, who is a professor of comparative medicine and immunology at the Yale School of Medicine, says the keto diet tricks the body into burning fat. The body acts as if it’s in starvation mode when the low consumption of carbohydrates causes glucose levels to drop.
Despite the body not actually being in starvation mode, it begins burning fat instead of carbohydrates. That leads to the release of ketone bodies, which are an alternative source of fuel. As ketone bodies burn in the body, gamma delta T-cells expand throughout.