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Ketogenic Diet Can Trigger Hypomania

April 28, 2026by Chris Aiken, MD0
A diet that’s touted for bipolar may trigger hypomania

STUDY: Palmer CM, Front. Nutr. 2026;13:1815787

STUDY TYPE: Case series

FUNDING: Independent

Background

The ketogenic diet is growing in popularity, as research funding has poured in from wealthy donors. The newly funded trials are still pending, but this paper gives a taste of the risk, authored by Chris Palmer, whose popular book on brain energy has raised interest in keto for mental health.

The Case Series
  • 9 adults: 5 men, 4 women, average age 44
  • 7 of the 9 participants had no prior bipolar-spectrum diagnosis (1 had bipolar II, 1 had schizoaffective); 3 had major depression; 2 had no psych history at all.
  • Onset of hypomania or mania within 2 months (median 20 days, range 6-60) of starting ketogenic diet
  • Ketosis confirmed through urine or blood testing, manic symptoms confirmed with YMRS
  • Main symptoms: elevated mood, hyperactivity, decreased need for sleep (eg 2 hour/night). Duration: 67 days (range: 6 to 180 days).
  • 6 out of 9 remained on the diet because of perceived mental or weight-loss benefits.
Earlier Hints

Though is the first report on keto-mania, there is a past report on the keto-esque Atkins diet.

The “ketogenic high” is another possible explanation. After several weeks of fasting, the brain switches its energy supply from glucose to ketones, and that can bring a state of heightened mental clarity, energy, and focus; intense spiritual feelings and even hallucinations.

Even brief fasting may alter mood. When 20 Muslim patients with bipolar fasted for Ramadan (from sunrise to sunset), 45% had a new mood episode, 71% of which were manic phase.

Practice Implications
  • Though not addressed directly in the paper, this study raises doubts about ongoing efforts to treat bipolar disorder with the ketogenic diet.
  • Dr. Palmer places it in the context of many other therapies for depression that can trigger mania: Antidepressants, and rarely ECT, light therapy, and antipsychotics.
  • Learn about a diet for depression that is rated #1 for physical health and does not cause mania.

— Chris Aiken, MD
Director, Psych Partners
Editor in Chief, Carlat Psychiatry Report

What’s Your Take? Share in Comments
  1. Have you seen mental health benefits on the keto diet? Have you seen manic switches?

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