Short answer: carbs aren’t the hero; saturated fat and ectopic fat are the villains. High-carb diets can improve insulin sensitivity when they’re low in saturated fat and built from whole, high-fiber foods. Yes, you’ll see bigger acute glucose bumps after carb-heavy meals, but over weeks the machinery gets more insulin-responsive because you’ve drained the gunk (lipid intermediates) out of liver and muscle. Spikes are theatrics; intracellular sludge is the plot. Not true for everyone, but that’s the gist.

Why “high-carb” can improve insulin sensitivity

“But carbs spike glucose more.”

Yes, post-meal glucose is higher on carb-heavy days. That doesn’t negate the training effect: over weeks, with low SFA and high fiber, tissues become more insulin-sensitive while liver/muscle fat falls. Multiple RCTs see improved insulin sensitivity even alongside higher mealtime glucose on the low-fat phase.

What about high protein / high SFA?

Is a high-carb pattern “best” for everyone?

No. Bodies are annoying like that.