Study: Ketogenic diet has potential to treat irritable bowel syndrome

However, Ms. Gannett was determined to make the fundamental changes necessary to overcome this dilemma, so she worked hard over the past decade. She switched her metabolism from digesting carbohydrates (glycolysis) to digesting fats (ketogenic metabolism) to starve the cancer cells, successfully stopping the cancer from growing, and the results were so significant that she became a coach, helping others get tested and develop personalized ketogenic diets.

“I wanted to live, so I decided to take this approach and find people who would support me in my quest to find the root cause of cancer. I became addicted to putting the pieces of information together into a puzzle, and the process gave me a lot of inspiration and hope, and I wanted to do this for other people,” she said. “I feel better at 59 than I did in my 20s.”

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