What a whirlwind of a week! The polar vortex swept in just about the time I boarded a plane to (supposedly) sunny California to present my case study on Ehlers Danlos Syndrome and the Ketogenic Diet at the 2019 Metabolic Health Summit. 

Bonnie Nasar RDN with poster presentation

California was MUCH warmer than New Jersey, but unfortunately rainy. Wet weather didn’t bother me a bit, though, because I stayed inside savoring every word I heard from some truly amazing physicians and researchers presenting their incredible research on the new horizon of ketogenic nutrition and metabolic diseases. 

Perhaps the most astounding fact I learned was presented by the esteemed Dr. Sarah Hallberg: only 12.2% of people in the United States are considered metabolically healthy. The implications of this are far-reaching. Our country is sick, and we need to change dietary habits to remedy it. Lectures on brain health, heart health, and metabolic health were discussed at length. Breakout sessions were peppered with inspiring stories of personal change and motivation to education the public. 

One more fun fact I learned: Babies are born into ketosis and mother’s milk contains medium-chain triglycerides to keep babies in a state of ketosis so the brain can access fat! Fat is an essential part of brain development, so this is likely nature’s way of optimizing it. Very fascinating!

I learned so much regarding the science behind this 100-year old medical grade diet, which is slowly being adopted as a better way to eat, when done under proper medical and/or dietetic supervision. We have lived for decades in fear of dietary fat, when all along it has actually been the simple carbohydrates like sugar causing us to fall ill. Think back to the 1980s when we swapped fat for carbs in products such as Entenmanns and Snackwells- the rate of obesity and diabetes have skyrocketed since. 

Most interesting to me was the science behind “insulin resistance” in the brain, which does not utilize glucose as it should. Some neuro-inflammatory brain diseases have shown reversal with a proper ketogenic diet. 

I would like to thank my fellow dietitian colleagues, Beth Zupec-Kania and Laura Shammah for guiding me and being my support system through my professional journey. I would also like to give a shout out to the inspiring dietitians I met at the Metabolic Health Summit, Heather Ayala, Catriona Kiernan, L.J. Amaral, and Tara Finnerty.

Bonnie Nasar RDN with colleagues
Bonnie Nasar RDN, Healther Ayala MS RD, and Caitriona Kiernan RD at the Metabolic Health Summit

And let’s not forget the speakers! Here is a partial list of the phenomenal speakers from which I had the privilege of learning. Click on each name to watch the docs in action via YouTube :

Dr. Stephen Phinney, Obesity Physician

Dr. Sara Hallberg, Diabetic Physician

Dr. Jeff Volek, Nutrition Researcher

Dr. Eric Westman, Internist

Dr. Georgia Ede, Psychiatrist 

I also had the pleasure of meeting Audra Wilford co-founder of the MaxLove Project , an organization that gives support to families with children diagnosed with brain tumors, and James Abrams, co-founder of The Charlie Foundation, an organization that supports epileptic patients and their families with the ketogenic diet. I was interviewed by a wonderful Functional Medicine physician, Dr. Paulina Vega, from Chile, which was such a treat! 

A very sincere thank you to the powerhouse trio that put on such an amazing Metabolic Health Summit- Angela Poff, Victoria Field, and Dominic D’Agostino. I am so grateful I had this opportunity to further my knowledge of metabolic disease as it relates to nutrition, and I look forward to integrating this cutting edge information into my private practice.