USA Olympic Diver Brandon Loschiavo: 'How an Animal-Based Diet TRANSFORMED My Athletic Performance!
Dr. Anthony Chaffee interviews Brandon Luo, an Olympic finalist diver who competed in the 2020/2021 Olympics and is currently training for the upcoming Olympic trials. Brandon shares his journey from struggling with severe IBS symptoms for years through various dietary approaches, ultimately finding complete relief through a carnivore diet. His experience spans trying raw vegan diets, plant-based protocols, and following mainstream sports nutrition advice that included pasta and sandwiches between practices, all while dealing with debilitating digestive issues that required daily medication and significantly impacted his training and competition performance.
Brandon details his transition to a strict carnivore protocol for 6-8 months, eating primarily chuck roast and experiencing complete resolution of his IBS symptoms. He then evolved to an animal-based approach following a 90/10 or 95/5 rule, where he maintains animal foods as his foundation but allows 1-2 meals per week of other foods. This approach has allowed him to maintain digestive health while having flexibility for social situations and competitions. He discusses the dramatic difference in energy levels, recovery, and body composition compared to his previous plant-based experiments, where he lost 12 pounds of muscle in just three months.
The conversation explores the performance benefits Brandon experienced as an elite athlete, including improved recovery, stable energy throughout training sessions, and elimination of the afternoon crashes he previously experienced from carbohydrate-heavy meals. Both Brandon and Dr. Anthony Chaffee discuss the controversy surrounding carnivore nutrition in athletic settings, including confrontations with dietitians who criticized Brandon's dietary choices despite his improved health markers and performance. They examine the broader implications for athletic nutrition and challenge conventional wisdom about carbohydrate requirements for high-level sports performance.
Key Takeaways
- Complete IBS resolution occurred within 6-8 months of strict carnivore eating, eliminating the need for daily Imodium medication that Brandon had relied on for years
- Transitioning from a vegan diet to carnivore resulted in gaining 10 pounds of lean muscle mass in just 3 months, despite being an experienced lifter where newbie gains were unlikely
- Following a 90/10 or 95/5 animal-based approach allows dietary flexibility while maintaining digestive health - keeping all home meals animal-based while allowing 1-2 outside meals per week maximum
- Plant-based dieting led to losing 12 pounds of muscle mass in 3 months despite adequate training and protein supplementation, demonstrating the inadequacy of plant proteins for muscle maintenance
- Stable energy levels throughout training sessions replaced the dramatic afternoon crashes that occurred when eating pasta and sandwiches between practices as recommended by sports dietitians
- Cooking with olive oil at high temperatures can cause stomach upset due to oxidation - olive oil should be stored in the refrigerator and used cold, or avoided entirely for sensitive individuals
- Elite athletes face additional supplement risks due to drug testing protocols, making nutrient-dense whole foods like red meat preferable to protein powders and supplements that may contain banned substances
- Fat-adapted athletes can maintain the same performance output as carb-fueled athletes while avoiding energy crashes and the need for constant refueling during extended training sessions
- IBS Recovery Through Diet Change - Brandon's Athletic Journey
- Olympic Diver's Carnivore Diet Experience and IBS Treatment
- Six Month Carnivore Diet Protocol - Chuck Roast and Fat Adaptation
- Athletic Performance and Recovery on Meat-Only Diet
- Coffee and Plant Foods Causing Inflammation in Athletes
- Dietitian Confrontations Over Carnivore Diet Advice
- Vegan Diet Failure - 12 Pounds of Muscle Loss Experience
- Nutritionist Credibility and Plant-Based Diet Deficiencies
- Diet Progression from Standard American to Carnivore
- Converting Other Athletes to Animal-Based Diets
- India's Plant-Based Population and Diabetes Crisis
- Creatine Supplementation vs Natural Meat Sources
This is an auto-generated transcript from YouTube and may contain errors or inaccuracies.