I think this may be a little bit overboard. You could say "I won't diet without AAS because deficits reduce anabolism". You may see a drop in strength on keto at first...due to glycogen depletion and water loss (and the accompanying appearance of smaller muscles) - but muscle wasting during most diets is way over played.
Well then you should not have thought it out so much. You actually went and read the studies and figured it out and left no room for debate
Actually, I think it was good how you kind of caught the different tissues having different reactions. We often forget this - our heard doesn't always respond the same way as our liver, etc. Some thing that are good for our heard are bad for our brain, etc.
I made my last comment before I realized there was an entire other page of comments and this is what I was getting at. If you're afraid of losing muscle, you will never go on a diet if you look at all the minor reductions in anabolism. Look at
hairygrandpa!
And good point about the environment - this is the point of having so many pathways....they can all be juggled and adjusted to fit a need; as long as you don't push one of them to the extreme and to the extent that you inhibit something so dramatically it has a problem recovering or you cannot change the situation effectively. This is kind of my point actually - people who are obese have a situation where they are forced to utilize fat for energy because it is so abundant. Then they diet and this makes their stored fat necessary for energy, which skews the pathways even more because now it is abundant AND the only source....but we keep going around on this.
Agreed....what's left to debate there?