WHAT IS A LOW CARB DIET?

The Complete Filipino Guide to Weight Loss, Hypertension Control, Diabetes Improvement & PCOS Support

If you’re a Filipino professional struggling with:

  • Weight gain

  • Rising blood pressure

  • Pre-diabetes or Type 2 diabetes

  • PCOS and fertility issues

  • Fatty liver

  • Constant fatigue

Then you are asking the right question:

What is a low carb diet — and can it really help?

I once stood where you are.

At 95kg, dealing with metabolic warning signs and seeing people around me develop hypertension and diabetes, I knew I had to understand what was truly happening inside the body.

One year later:

95kg → 68kg.

No calorie counting.
No starvation.
No extreme cardio.

Just structured low carbohydrate nutrition — later combined with intermittent fasting.

This article is your definitive Filipino guide.

If you’re new here, explore more structured guides at
👉 Low Carb Ph


What Is a Low Carb Diet?

What is low carb diet you need to know
What is low carb diet you need to know

A low carbohydrate diet reduces carbohydrate intake and prioritizes:

  • Protein (eggs, meat, fish)

  • Healthy fats (butter, coconut oil, olive oil, animal fats)

  • Non-starchy vegetables (kangkong, pechay, malunggay, spinach, cabbage)

It minimizes:

  • White rice

  • Bread (pandesal)

  • Sugar

  • Cakes

  • Root crops

  • Ultra-processed foods

  • Seed oils (canola, sunflower, palm blends, safflower and many more)

The purpose is simple:

👉 Lower insulin.

And insulin is the real driver of fat storage, insulin resistance, and many metabolic diseases.


Why Insulin Is the Real Problem

When you eat carbohydrates:

Carbs → Glucose → Insulin spike

Insulin does 4 major things:

  1. Stores fat

  2. Blocks fat burning

  3. Promotes sodium retention (affecting blood pressure)

  4. Drives insulin resistance over time

This concept is supported by research such as the carbohydrate-insulin model discussed by David S. Ludwig in JAMA Internal Medicine (2018), which explains insulin’s central role in fat storage and obesity progression.

When insulin remains elevated chronically:

  • Fat accumulates

  • Blood sugar dysregulates

  • Blood pressure rises

  • Hormonal imbalance worsens (PCOS)

Lower carbohydrate intake reduces insulin demand.

Lower insulin allows fat burning.


My Personal Story: 95kg to 68kg, Height 5’8″

I began with lazy low carb:

  • Removed rice

  • Removed sweets

  • Increased protein

  • Focused on eggs daily

But I made a mistake.

I did not combine it with intermittent fasting early.

Once I added fasting (16:8), fat loss accelerated.

Within 12 months:

  • 27kg lost

  • Cravings disappeared

  • Energy stabilized

  • Mental clarity improved

  • Blood markers normalized

The real transformation was metabolic, not cosmetic.

That experience led me to build https://www.lowcarb.ph to educate Filipinos using science-backed evidence and practical application.

healthy low carb foods


The Science Behind Low Carb (Embedded Evidence)

Low carb is not a fad.

It has been studied for decades.

1️⃣ Weight Loss & Cardiovascular Risk

A randomized trial published in Annals of Internal Medicine showed that low-carbohydrate diets resulted in greater fat loss and improved cardiovascular markers compared to low-fat diets (Bazzano et al., 2014).

2️⃣ Type 2 Diabetes Management

A one-year clinical trial led by Sarah Hallberg demonstrated significant HbA1c reduction and reduced diabetes medication dependence using a low-carbohydrate approach (Hallberg et al., Diabetes Therapy, 2018).

3️⃣ Blood Pressure Improvement

Meta-analysis in Archives of Internal Medicine (Nordmann et al., 2006) showed low-carb diets improved triglycerides and blood pressure markers.

4️⃣ Kidney Safety

Contrary to myths, long-term research in American Journal of Clinical Nutrition (Brinkworth et al., 2010) found no adverse kidney effects in overweight adults without existing kidney disease.

5️⃣ PCOS & Hormonal Balance

Research by Eric Westman and colleagues demonstrated improvement in weight and hormonal markers in women with PCOS on ketogenic diets (Nutrition & Metabolism, 2005).

The evidence is consistent:

Lower carbohydrate intake improves metabolic markers in insulin-resistant populations.


Who Benefits Most in the Philippines?

Based on my experience helping people close to me:

1️⃣ Overweight Professionals (25–55)

  • Sedentary lifestyle

  • High stress

  • High rice intake

  • Fast food dependency

Low carb stabilizes energy and reduces cravings.


2️⃣ Hypertensive Individuals

Many people I guided saw:

140/90 → 120–130/80

Insulin influences sodium retention and vascular stiffness.

Lower insulin often correlates with improved BP.

Can a Low-Carb Diet Lower Blood Pressure Research & Real Results
Can a Low-Carb Diet Lower Blood Pressure Research & Real Results

3️⃣ Pre-Diabetics & Type 2 Diabetics

Type 2 diabetes is primarily insulin resistance.

Reducing carbohydrates reduces glucose load.

Lower glucose = lower insulin demand.


4️⃣ Women With PCOS

PCOS is strongly tied to insulin resistance.

Lowering insulin improves:

  • Ovulation

  • Hormonal regulation

  • Weight management

  • Fertility potential


Real Filipino Case Studies

Case Study 1: 41-Year-Old Male

Start: 89kg
Duration: 6 months
Current: 65kg

BP improved from 140/90 → 125/80.

Approach:

  • Moderate → strict low carb

  • Eggs daily

  • Grass-fed meat

  • No rice

  • Leafy vegetables

24kg lost.


Case Study 2: 31-Year-Old Female

Start: 75kg
3 months → 64kg

Removed:

  • Bread

  • Sweets

  • Processed snacks

Added:

  • Protein-focused meals

  • Leafy greens

  • Proper cooking fats

Improved hormonal stability and confidence.


Case Study 3: 37-Year-Old Male

Start: 95kg
8 months → 73kg

BP from 145/90 → 130/80.

Transition:
Lazy low carb → strict keto → carnivore-focused.

22kg lost.

Improved mental clarity.


My Structured Low Carb Framework

I use a progression model:

Phase 1: Lazy Low Carb

Remove:

  • Rice

  • Corn
  • Sugar

  • Root Crops
  • Bread

Focus on protein.


Phase 2: Moderate Low Carb (50–100g carbs)


Phase 3: Strict Keto (<30g carbs)


Phase 4: Carnivore + Leafy Greens

Eggs.
Grass-fed meat.
Green vegetables.

No calorie counting.

Protein-first approach.


Phase 5: Maintenance

Return to moderate low carb after goal weight.


Filipino Foods: What to Avoid

  • White rice

  • Pandesal

  • Root crops (ex: kamote, gabi, patatas, cassava)

  • Cakes & sweets

  • Processed foods (ex: hotdogs, sausage, meatloaf)

  • Seed oils (canola, sunflower, palm blends, safflower and many more)
    (we will tackle all the unhealthy cooking oils in a separate article)


Filipino Low Carb Foods (Budget-Friendly)

  • Eggs (most affordable protein)

  • Pork

  • Chicken

  • Beef

  • Fish

  • Kangkong

  • Repolyo
  • Pechay

  • Malunggay

  • Eggplant
  • Spinach

  • Coconut oil

  • Butter

(Almost all the vegetables in Bahay Kubo song are good)

Low carb in the Philippines is not expensive.

Removing junk saves money.


Myth-Busting Section

Myth: Low Carb Damages Kidneys

Evidence shows no kidney damage in healthy individuals without pre-existing disease (Brinkworth et al., 2010).

High blood sugar is more damaging to kidneys than protein.


Myth: You Need Rice for Energy

The body can use:

  • Glucose

  • Fat

  • Ketones

Fat provides stable energy without crashes.


Myth: Fat Makes You Fat

Insulin drives fat storage.

Dietary fat does not spike insulin significantly.


Myth: Low Carb Is Expensive

Eggs are cheaper than fast food.

Vegetables are widely available locally.


Common Beginner Mistakes

  1. Not eating enough fat

  2. Not tracking carbs initially

  3. Using seed oils

  4. Ignoring leafy greens

  5. Overeating “keto snacks”

  6. Not pairing with intermittent fasting


Low Carb + Intermittent Fasting

After adaptation:

Add 16:8 fasting.

Benefits:

  • Improved insulin sensitivity

  • Faster fat burning

  • Mental clarity

  • Reduced cravings

This combination accelerated my transformation.

lowcarb for filipino complete guide


Beyond Weight Loss

Low carb improves:

  • Blood pressure

  • Blood sugar

  • Energy stability

  • Mental clarity

  • Confidence

  • Productivity

This is metabolic rehabilitation — not dieting.


What To Do Next

  1. Join the email list

  2. Download beginner meal plan

  3. Remove rice for 30 days

  4. Focus on eggs + leafy greens

  5. Consider adding fasting

Explore structured guides at
👉 https://www.lowcarb.ph

 

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