A new mouse study suggests fasting every other day can help fend off diabetes
and protect brain neurons as well as or better than either vigorous exercise or
caloric restriction. The findings also suggest that reduced meal frequency can
produce these beneficial effects even if the animals gorged when they did eat,
according the investigators at the National Institute on Aging (NIA).
"The implication of the new findings on the beneficial effects of regular
fasting in laboratory animals is that their health may actually improve if the
frequency of their meals is reduced," says Mark Mattson, Ph.D., chief of the
NIA's Laboratory of Neurosciences. "However, this finding, while intriguing,
will need to be explored further. Clearly, more research is needed before we can
determine the full impact that meal-skipping may have on health."
In the study*, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences Online Early Edition the week of April 28, 2003, Dr. Mattson and his
colleagues found mice that were fasted every other day but were allowed to eat
unlimited amounts on intervening days had lower blood glucose and insulin levels
than either a control group, which was allowed to feed freely, or a calorically
restricted group, which was fed 30 percent fewer calories daily than the control
group. Despite fasting, the meal-skipping mice tended to gorge when provided
food so they did not eat fewer calories than the control group. This finding in
mice suggests that meal-skipping improves glucose metabolism and may provide
protection against diabetes, Dr. Mattson says.
In the same study, mice on these three diets were given a neurotoxin called
kainate, which damages nerve cells in a brain region called the hippocampus that
is critical for learning and memory. (In humans, nerve cells in the hippocampus
are destroyed by Alzheimer's disease). Dr. Mattson's team found that nerve cells
of the meal-skipping mice were more resistant to neurotoxin injury or death than
nerve cells of the mice on either of the other diets.
Previous studies by Dr. Mattson and his colleagues suggested that nerve cells
in the brains of rodents on a meal-skipping diet are more resistant to
dysfunction and death in experimental models of stroke and other neurological
disorders including Parkinson's, Alzheimer's and Huntington's diseases. Dr.
Mattson also has found that meal-skipping diets can stimulate brain cells in
mice to produce a protein called brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) that
promotes the survival and growth of nerve cells.
Dr. Mattson and his colleagues are currently studying the effects of
meal-skipping on the cardiovascular system in laboratory rats. The findings of
this study, which compares the resting blood pressures and heart rates of rats
that were fasted every other day for six months with rats allowed to eat
unlimited amounts of food daily, should be available soon.
###
The NIA leads the Federal effort supporting and conducting biomedical,
clinical, social, and behavioral research on aging. This effort includes
research into the causes and treatment of Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's
disease, stroke and other neurodegenerative disorders associated with age. Press
releases, fact sheets, and other materials about aging and aging research can be
viewed at the NIA's general information Web site,
www.nia.nih.gov.
*RM Anson, Z Guo, R de Cabo, T Iyun, M Rios, A Hagepanos, DK Ingram, MA Lane,
MP Mattson, "Intermittent fasting dissociates beneficial effects of dietary
restriction on glucose metabolism and neuronal resistance to injury from caloric
intake," Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Online Early Edition
the week of April 28, 2003
www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1035720100
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