Bryan Braning
Monday, August 25, 2025
Karen, a 61-year-old PE teacher with Italian heritage, suffered from high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and chronic knee and ankle inflammation from her high-carb traditional Italian diet. After success with Atkins 20 years prior and then keto, she discovered the carnivore diet through Dr. Ken Berry and Kelly Hogan. Despite initial gut issues during transition, she completely eliminated her joint pain, gained energy, lost weight, and now actively participates in hiking, kayaking, and pickleball.

Karen's High-Carbohydrate Italian Diet and Health Issues
Karen's grandparents are from Italy, and she says the traditional high-carbohydrate Italian foods have always been a big part of her life. She says growing up, and even into adulthood, her diet consisted of pasta, sandwiches, bagels, pizza, and french toast– to name a few. She said she would occasionally eat some eggs, bacon, or another type of meat with her carb-loaded meals, but her diet didn't revolve around meat. She says she snacked a lot, especially on candy and other high-carb treats.
Low-Carb Diets: Atkins and Keto
Karen is a physical education teacher for children from grades kindergarten to fifth grade, so she says she has always been somewhat active. However, she began noticing her diet was causing health issues that she could not ignore. She had high blood pressure and high cholesterol, and she found her knees and ankles had a lot of inflammation and would completely ache.
Karen started to notice that eating carbohydrates caused her body to become inflamed. One of Karen's doctors suggested she try a low-carb diet. Karen said she was familiar with low-carb from the Atkins diet she tried around twenty years prior. She succeeded with the Adkins diet twenty years ago but slowly regained her old habits. However, because of her previous experience, she knew eating low-carb would help her.
She decided to try a low-carb diet and jumped into the ketogenic diet. Karen says she noticed many health benefits from following the keto diet. Her ailments began to improve and she felt better. However, her knees and ankles continued to ache, even while on the keto diet.
Discovering the Keto-Carnivore Diet through Dr. Ken Berry and Kelly Hogan
She came across Dr. Ken Berry, an advocate for the keto-carnivore diet. She said at first the idea of only eating meat sounded crazy, but after listening to him more and to Kelly Hogan, another advocate, she decided to try it.
Karen initially struggled with gut issues when she transitioned from the keto to the keto-carnivore diet; eventually, her body worked itself out. Karen says the keto-carnivore diet kicked her health "up a notch."
The Benefits of the Keto-Carnivore Diet for Karen: No More Pain and Increased Energy
While on keto, she was still experiencing pain in her knees and ankle, but now that she is a keto-carnivore follower, that pain is gone. Karen says at sixty-one years of age, she hasn't felt better. She has regained energy and even lost a little bit of weight.
Karen's Simple Meat-Based Diet and Active Lifestyle
Karen says she eats two to three meals daily and listens to her body. She is very active these days and is even a member of a local group of women who call themselves the "Yak-Yak Sisters." She says the group started as a kayaking group for several gal friends but has now evolved into the women hiking, playing pickleball, and other activities.
Karen's Keto-Carnivore Role Models: Dr. Shawn Baker and Judy Cho
Karen loves learning from the keto-carnivore community and follows Dr. Shawn Baker and Judy Cho. Karen was also recently interviewed by Kelly Hogan on her podcast. She even says this way of eating has introduced her to several friends. She is very grateful for all that she has gained through the keto-carnivore community, and she says she is "never going back."
Disclaimer: These testimonials are from people who shared their success stories on keto carnivore diet which is Revero’s nutrition therapy method. They are not from actual Revero patients. Clinical results are not guaranteed and outcomes are specific to each patient.

Bryan Braning
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Bryan Braning
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Bryan Braning
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Bryan Braning
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Bryan Braning
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Bryan Braning
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Bryan Braning
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Bryan Braning
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Bryan Braning
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