kierkegaardian
Member
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2020
- Messages
- 40
So on all of the three diets mentioned above I seen that women dieters, even if they lose weight tend to maintain their breast size or grow larger breasts. And many women noted losing their fat around the midsection, but not in the hip/butt area.
Similarly, men tend to report more frequent or a return to morning erections and even such better blood flow that their erections are bigger, more vascular, etc.
The anecdotal evidence is common in the forums and subreddits related to these diet plans, for Peating, you see those reports here.
I'm trying to figure out what the overlap is in these dietary approaches that would cause this. My suspicion is the massive increase in saturated fat intake, decrease in PUFA, and perhaps the increase in high quality protein.
The Keto diet subreddit for women has lots of weightloss posts complaining about breast size loss. And I've not seen anything one way or the other about male sex issues in the keto forums.
But the idea of a more completed puberty or hormone regulation from cutting out PUFA and decreasing exposure to other dietary hormone disruptors seems most likely.
Any thoughts or personal experience of that sort?
Similarly, men tend to report more frequent or a return to morning erections and even such better blood flow that their erections are bigger, more vascular, etc.
The anecdotal evidence is common in the forums and subreddits related to these diet plans, for Peating, you see those reports here.
I'm trying to figure out what the overlap is in these dietary approaches that would cause this. My suspicion is the massive increase in saturated fat intake, decrease in PUFA, and perhaps the increase in high quality protein.
The Keto diet subreddit for women has lots of weightloss posts complaining about breast size loss. And I've not seen anything one way or the other about male sex issues in the keto forums.
But the idea of a more completed puberty or hormone regulation from cutting out PUFA and decreasing exposure to other dietary hormone disruptors seems most likely.
Any thoughts or personal experience of that sort?