Is It Safe to Eat Low-Carb While Breastfeeding? Yes, it is safe, as long as you don’t go under 50g of carbs per day. To enter ketosis, you can consume anything under 100g of carbs per day.
Yes, it is safe, as long as you don’t go under 50g of carbs per day. To enter ketosis, you can consume anything under 100g of carbs per day. This is called a moderate keto diet—30% protein, 40% fat, and 30% carbs. Prehistoric women breastfed their children with hardly any carbs, sugar, or grains in their diets; they ate mostly meat. So, keeping your carbs at 30% should not affect your supply unless you drop your calories too low.
Some mothers have reported a reduction in milk supply during ketosis; this is primarily due to other related factors, such as the following:
While breastfeeding, you lose lactose (sugar) via breast milk (approximately 30g per day).
Most vegetables, nuts, seeds, and berries contain carbohydrates, but avoid all refined carbs, such as those found in baked goods and pasta.
Research suggests that babies are born in a natural ketosis state. While nursing, they remain in this ketogenic state. Your breast milk is about 60% fat! So, if babies are born to cope in this ketogenic state, then surely it should not be an issue for the mother to follow a MODERATE keto diet.
Here are the results from one study done in 2009 comparing high-fat (low-carb) vs. low-fat (high-carb) diets in breastfeeding women.
Based on this study, they concluded that mothers could follow a high-fat/low-carb diet safely without affecting the milk quality and quantity produced. Even though we have the results from this one study, most information on this topic is diversified and scarce; therefore, it is best to adopt a moderate keto diet (at least 50g carbs per day) while breastfeeding.
Suppose you know what your body is telling you, keep an eye on your milk supply, your baby’s diaper output, and weight gain, and implement the above information. You should be on your way to healthy weight loss while successfully breastfeeding your baby. Please always talk to your doctor before changing your diet, especially if taking any medication.
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Reference
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