For those of you who experience pain or other symptoms in response to dietary choices (e.g., indulge in saturated fat, red meat, sugar, etc) I'm interested in the timeline of such responses. If you have an off-diet day (say, a pint of ice cream, or, whatever food induces symptoms) how long does it take for the symptoms to appear? How long do they last once you go back to a liver healthy diet?
For everyone...does anyone have any information on the timeline of metabolic processes associated with liver health. For example, if I eat, say, ice cream and chocolate chip cookies...that intake would include a lot of simple sugar and saturated fat. A recent trend in dieting is calorie averaging over a period of days or a week. That is, people now suspect that deviations of hundreds of calories are not significant, as long as the weekly average is still a calorie deficit. I am wondering, 'though, if I ingest an overage of calories and then, say, do a long hike or bike ride, I assume the simple sugars will just get burned. But, what happens to the saturated fat? It still has to get processed through the liver, right? Anyone have a good understanding of the metabolic processes, timeline, and resulting inflammation in the liver? How long does it take the liver to "relax" from a spike in sugar or saturated fat? Do such once in a while inflammation/relaxation reactions leave scarring and fibrosis, bit by bit over time? Or, does the liver recover as long as the overall diet is healthy?
And, of course, for those of you who are true sugar addicts (you know who you are) does anyone have any understanding of what happens when you take in thousands of calories over your calorie budget in a day, or, say over a two day binge? (Yeah, I've easily hit 10,000 calories over budget in 48 hours. No sweat. So, any ideas on what a spike like that does to the liver? General GI system?
-Kokomodo