Article

Ketogenic Diets, Reviewing This Approach As a Treatment of Epilepsy and Seizures

Topic: Dieting and Weight LossPublished February 16, 2020

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Ketogenic Diets is such a valuable book that it should be the primary point of education for foundational knowledge for all people involved the Ketogenic Diet for the reduction of seizures in epilepsy - parents and professionals alike. It has "saved the lives " of thousands of youngsters with seizures and epilepsy who were previously unresponsive to traditional ketogenic diet treatment with anti-epileptic drugs or surgery. Using the Keogenic Diet has brought life and joy back into families who had lost hope for their epileptic child, who, once on the diet, reportedly gradually regain alertness, energy, happiness and lost physical milestones. All 4 contributing authors of Ketogenic Diets (John Freeman now deceased, in Jan '14, although his legacy will live forever) work at the Johns Hopkins Hospital and are absolutely eminent and influential in their field, including the use of the Ketogenic Diet to reduce seizures in situations of refractory epilepsy. Their contribution to the lives of so many families is unimaginable. John Freeman: Paediatric Neurologist and ethicist, founding Head of the John Hopkins Paediatric Division of Paediatric Neurolgy and Head of the Birth Defects Clinic. Eric Kossof: Associate Professor of Neurology and Pediatrics, "has dedicated his career to investigating and researching the impact of putting children and adults with epilepsy on a 90% fat diet to control their seizures." Zahava Turner: Dietician. James Rubenstein: Neurodevelopmental paediatrician. The concept of this once controversial but amazing diet, which contains up to 90% fat and very little protein or carbohydrate, forces the brain to break down fats for the body's need of energy, because of the absence of the normal source of energy, glucose. Although recognized as early as the 1920, it was Freeman who re-instigated this approach to treating refractory epilepsy in the 1980's,adhering to his ethics and withstanding professional criticism. The book states clearly that the Ketogenic Diet can't be approached lightly. It requires total commitment and discipline of the oldsters . The meal preparation needs are time consuming, precise and constant. It is essential to have the Ketogenic Diet managed and supervised by a neurologist and dietician, because despite the amazingly positive outcomes for 60% of people using the diet, significantly children, there are potentially serious side affects which need regular and constant monitoring. It must be the joy of success and the evidence of regained developmental loss that fuels the parents determination along this difficult path of strictly adhering to the Ketogenic diet. In it's 5th edition, the authors now have included over a decade of scientifically analysed data as well as exciting current research to explain how the diet works, exactly how it needs to be used, how and when it can be modified with a little flexibility ( including the Modified Atkins Diet for Epilepsy).

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