A woman points to the keto diet and various foods.
Table of Contents
The ketogenic (keto) diet is still a big deal in 2026—but not for the same reasons people talked about it years ago. Today, keto is treated less like a trendy “hack” and more like a serious nutrition therapy that can help certain health goals when it is done correctly and monitored over time.
That shift matters because keto has real strengths (like epilepsy support, better blood sugar control for some people with type 2 diabetes, and fast early weight loss). But it also has real risks and limitations, especially around long-term heart and blood vessel health—mainly depending on what fats you choose, how long you stay on it, and what your personal risk factors look like.
In 2026, the most useful way to think about keto is simple:
Keto can be helpful for specific goals
Keto is not “for everyone”
Keto works best when it’s personalized, planned, and supported by a healthcare team
A ketogenic diet is a very low-carb, higher-fat, and moderate-protein way of eating. The goal is to induce nutritional ketosis, in which the body uses fat (and ketones) for much of its energy instead of glucose from carbohydrates.
Many people aim for keto because it often leads to:
Lower appetite
Faster early weight loss (often water weight first)
Improved blood sugar markers in some people
Lower triglycerides in many cases
But the same low-carb structure that creates results can also create problems if the diet is built on the wrong fats, if fiber and minerals are neglected, or if a person has medical risks that make keto unsafe.
Keto was not invented for weight loss. It has a long history as a clinical dietary therapy for epilepsy, especially when seizures are hard to control. Many epilepsy programs use keto under close supervision, sometimes with specialized versions (like modified Atkins or MCT-based approaches).
A key point here is that medical keto for epilepsy is typically:
Structured
Clinically monitored
Supported by specialists and dietitians
In 2026, keto continues to be used as a strategy to improve insulin sensitivity, reduce glucose spikes, and improve markers such as A1C for some people—especially when it leads to meaningful weight loss or carbohydrate reduction that a person can sustain.
At the same time, major clinical voices keep repeating an important truth: keto is restrictive, and there are other eating patterns that can also lower A1C and support weight loss with fewer downsides for many people.
Keto often causes rapid early weight loss, especially in the first weeks. Some of that is body fat, but some is water loss from the use of stored glycogen (carbohydrate storage).
That early “quick win” is one reason keto has staying power culturally in 2026. But the modern view is more realistic:
Early results can be motivating
Long-term success depends on habit consistency and a plan that fits real life
There is growing interest in “metabolic psychiatry” and brain-energy science. Some early clinical studies suggest keto may improve metabolic health and may also support certain psychiatric symptom areas—especially in people whose metabolic markers worsened on some medications.
Also, very recent reporting (February 5, 2026) covered a study suggesting people with depression may benefit, while also stressing that researchers are not ready to broadly recommend keto for depression yet.
Important reality check:
The mental health research is promising, but still early
Keto should not replace mental health treatment plans
Most experts frame it as a possible support tool, not a standalone cure
Some athletes like keto because:
They feel steadier energy
They like appetite control
They want short-term body composition changes
However, performance is not universally applicable. High-intensity training often relies heavily on carbohydrates. For many athletes, a strict keto approach may reduce peak sprint output or make training feel harder—especially if electrolytes, calories, or recovery carbs are not planned well. (This is one reason “keto in 2026” often becomes cyclical, targeted, or modified instead of strict forever.)
This is where the debate gets serious.
Many studies show keto can:
Lower triglycerides
Raise HDL (“good cholesterol”)
Multiple credible sources warn that keto can increase LDL (“bad cholesterol”)—sometimes significantly—especially depending on genetics, baseline risk, and fat choices.
A well-known pattern in the research is:
Triglycerides often go down
HDL often goes up
LDL may rise (and for some people, it rises a lot)
When keto is built on a lot of butter, fatty processed meats, and heavy cream, it can become a “high saturated fat lifestyle.” That is one reason Harvard Health Publishing warns about LDL increases and heart risk concerns with keto patterns that skew heavily toward saturated fat.
Even sources that acknowledge benefits often still emphasize fat quality:
Choose more unsaturated fats (olive oil, nuts, seeds, fish, avocado)
Be cautious with “unlimited” saturated fat thinking
A 2024 study reported by UT Health San Antonio suggested that continuous long-term ketogenic dieting in animals was associated with increased cellular senescence (“aged cells”) in multiple organs, whereas intermittent “keto breaks” did not show the same pro-inflammatory aged-cell effects.
This does not prove keto is harmful to every human long-term, but it adds to the 2026 idea that:
Strict forever is not the only way
Intermittent, cyclical, or personalized keto may reduce risk for some people
In 2026, the more accurate mindset is:
Keto is a structured clinical tool. It works best when:
A person has a clear reason for using it
There is a plan for labs and safety
Food quality is high
The person has an “exit strategy” or a long-term version that is livable
This is exactly why many health systems describe keto as strict and hard to maintain without guidance.
Here are common modern patterns people use instead of strict keto forever:
Mediterranean-style keto (more fish, olive oil, nuts, veggies)
Higher-fiber keto (more non-starchy vegetables, chia/flax, psyllium if needed)
Cyclical keto (planned higher-carb days)
Targeted keto (carbs around workouts)
Medical keto with monitoring for specific conditions
Aim for fats that support heart health:
Extra-virgin olive oil
Avocado and avocado oil
Nuts and seeds (watch portions)
Fatty fish (salmon, sardines)
Olives
Small amounts of dairy if tolerated (not as the “main fat”)
Treating bacon and butter as “free foods”
Skipping fiber completely
Forgetting electrolytes and hydration
Not checking LDL/ApoB if risk is high
Staying strict despite side effects
A key belief in 2026 is that keto is safest and most effective when healthcare professionals work together.
A nurse practitioner can help with:
Screening and contraindications (kidney disease risk, liver issues, pregnancy, eating disorder history, medication interactions, rare metabolic disorders, and more)
Baseline and follow-up labs (A1C, fasting insulin if appropriate, lipid panel, kidney markers, thyroid markers if needed)
Medication safety (especially for diabetes meds, where hypoglycemia risk may change fast with carb restriction)
Building a plan that matches the patient’s preferences and health goals—without shame or bias
This is consistent with how professional education resources describe the implementation of keto: monitor, track outcomes, and manage adverse effects within an interprofessional team.
Chiropractic care does not “replace” nutrition. But it can be a powerful partner because it supports the body systems that influence long-term success, including:
Pain control that makes walking and exercise more realistic
Mobility and joint mechanics that reduce flare-ups
Posture and spinal function that can affect breathing, training form, and recovery
Nervous system regulation strategies (stress, sleep routines, breathing patterns)
A structured “care plan” mindset that improves follow-through
In Dr. Jimenez’s integrative model, keto and metabolic nutrition are positioned as part of a broader plan that also includes functional medicine principles, musculoskeletal care, and long-term lifestyle management—especially for individuals seeking to improve metabolic syndrome patterns and overall wellness.
In real-world clinical work, many people do not fail because they “lack willpower.” They struggle because pain, poor sleep, high stress, and low mobility make consistency hard. Addressing structural and recovery barriers while nutrition is being adjusted can make the plan more doable—and safer—over months, not just weeks.
Review medical history and medications with a clinician
Decide your goal (blood sugar, weight, epilepsy support, short-term reset, etc.)
Get baseline labs, especially if you have cardiometabolic risk
Build meals around protein + non-starchy vegetables + high-quality fats
Keep hydration and electrolytes consistent
Track symptoms: energy, sleep, mood, bowel habits, training tolerance
Re-check lipids after the body adapts (especially LDL trends)
If LDL climbs sharply, adjust fat sources and overall plan with your clinician
Consider a “keto break” or modified approach if long-term strict keto is not fitting your risk profile
Keto is not automatically safe for everyone. Strong medical guidance matters if you have:
Kidney disease risk or history of kidney stones
Significant cardiovascular risk or known high LDL/ApoB
Pregnancy or breastfeeding
A history of eating disorders
Liver disease concerns
Rare fat-metabolism disorders (important but often missed)
In 2026, keto is best considered a targeted therapy, not a universal lifestyle rule.
It remains important because it can:
Help with epilepsy management in specialized settings
Improve metabolic markers for some people with type 2 diabetes
Support short-term weight loss and appetite control
Shows early promise in mental health research (still developing)
But it is still controversial because:
LDL can rise in some people, sometimes dramatically
Long-term effects are not fully settled, and newer concerns (like cellular aging signals in animal work) support the modern “keto-with-breaks” idea
That is why the 2026 version of keto is more personalized—and why a team approach (nurse practitioner + chiropractic care) can create a safer, more complete plan that supports both metabolism and the body systems (pain, mobility, nervous system regulation) that determine whether the plan can actually be sustained.
Keto diet risks and LDL cholesterol Harvard Health Publishing. (2024, March 28).
Keto diet is not healthy and may harm the heart Harvard Health Publishing. (2024, May 1).
What is the keto diet, and can it be beneficial for you? UC Davis Health. (2025, May 14).
Pilot study shows ketogenic diet improves severe mental illness Stanford Medicine. (2024, April 1).
Ketogenic diet intervention on metabolic and psychiatric symptoms in schizophrenia or bipolar disorder PubMed. (2024).
Study finds people with depression can benefit from a ketogenic diet WBUR. (2026, February 5).
A long-term ketogenic diet accumulates aged cells in normal tissues, UT Health San Antonio-led study shows UT Health San Antonio. (2024, May 17).
Ketogenic diet induces p53-dependent cellular senescence in multiple organs Journal title in PMC. (2024).
A review of ketogenic diet and lifestyle Journal title in PMC. (2022).
Pros and cons of the keto diet Northwestern Medicine. (n.d.).
The ketogenic diet: Clinical applications, evidence-based practice, and implementation National Center for Biotechnology Information. (2023).
Scientific evidence underlying contraindications to the ketogenic diet Journal title in PMC. (2020).
The ketogenic diet is not for everyone: Contraindications, cautions, and adverse effects PubMed. (2026).
Nurse practitioners exploring obesity treatments in endocrinology American Association of Nurse Practitioners. (2025, December 23).
Ketogenic diet explained DrAlexJimenez.com. (n.d.).
Metabolic syndrome (functional medicine articles) DrAlexJimenez.com. (n.d.).
Board certified nurse practitioner (FNP-BC): Dr. Alex Jimenez (integrative model) DrAlexJimenez.com. (n.d.).
Professional Scope of Practice *
The information herein on "Keto in 2026: A Powerful Tool for Health Goals" is not intended to replace a one-on-one relationship with a qualified health care professional or licensed physician and is not medical advice. We encourage you to make healthcare decisions based on your research and partnership with a qualified healthcare professional.
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Welcome to El Paso's Premier Wellness, Personal Injury Care Clinic & Wellness Blog, where Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, FNP-C, a Multi-State board-certified Family Practice Nurse Practitioner (FNP-BC) and Chiropractor (DC), presents insights on how our multidisciplinary team is dedicated to holistic healing and personalized care. Our practice aligns with evidence-based treatment protocols inspired by integrative medicine principles, similar to those found on this site and our family practice-based chiromed.com site, focusing on restoring health naturally for patients of all ages.
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email: coach@elpasofunctionalmedicine.com
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Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC*, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, CCST
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