Effects of Intermittent Fasting on Health, Aging, and Disease

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Effects of Intermittent Fasting on Health, Aging, and Disease

Intermittent fasting is a period of food restriction sufficient to clear liver glycogen stores and dramatically suppress glucose, insulin, and amino acid uptake by cells. During fasting, fatty acids are released into circulation and taken up by liver cells, which produce ketone bodies to be used as fuel by other cells. These changes result in a cascade of systemic and cellular responses related to the suppression of insulin and IGF, energy depletion in cells, and the regulatory impact of ketone bodies. Diets that induce this change include complete abstention from food for one or more days (as is done in some forms of alternate-day fasting and 5:2 fasting), as well as time-restricted feeding (where food is only eaten during a limited number of hours each day) and near-fasting regimens (where daily caloric intake is restricted to 500-700 calories.

Intermittent fasting downregulates pathways related to cellular metabolism, IGF-1, insulin, and amino acid signaling. These changes activate cellular repair, maintenance processes, stress resistance, and mitochondrial biogenesis, which in turn support repair of cellular damage and cell survival; subsequent refeeding upregulates biogenesis and growth. After 10 to 14 hours, liver glycogen stores are depleted, and free fatty acids (FFAs) are released into circulation from the adipose tissue. The liver converts these FFAs into ketone bodies, which provide fuel for other tissues. Systemically, this leads to a variety of changes across multiple organ systems related to reduced cellular energy availability and reduced activation of pathways related to glucose and insulin.

These metabolic responses are similar across a variety of organisms, suggesting they are evolutionarily conserved. Note individuals eating a typical American diet, with three daily meals and snacks in between, will rarely, if ever, reach a fasting state. Animal research has consistently shown that caloric restriction, whether chronically or through intermittent fasting, improves lifespan. This same data suggests sex, age of diet initiation, and the composition of the remaining calories can have a significant impact on the degree of benefit from caloric restriction; some regimens show greater benefit than others, but these differences lack sufficient consistency to clearly indicate the determining factors. Human studies including the Okinawans and members of the Caloric Restriction Society suggest long-term compliance with fasting is associated with longevity and low levels of metabolic disease.

Periods of intermittent fasting increase cellular stress resistance and defense. They also repair pathways, thereby improving the resistance of cells to a variety of stressors. Periods of recovery (i.e., post-fast refeeding) increase cellular synthesis and growth. Regular “metabolic switching” between these two states promotes long-term maintenance of a variety of organ systems, disease resistance, and improved performance. Human trials suggest intermittent fasting confers greater improvements with regard to insulin sensitivity and fat mass in overweight and/or diabetic subjects than similar levels of caloric restriction or other diets leading to similar weight loss. Human and animal trials suggest intermittent fasting improves cognitive function, specifically various forms of memory. This means fasting may prevent or slow the progression of cognitive disease - particularly interesting given the lack of viable alternative treatments. These benefits may be related to improvements in neuronal mitochondrial function, antioxidant defenses, and/or DNA repair. Human studies have also shown intermittent fasting improves markers of cardiovascular disease risk, including blood pressure, heart rate, lipid levels, and markers of inflammation and oxidative stress.

Animal studies have shown intermittent fasting reduces spontaneous tumor occurrence. It also suppresses the growth of a variety of tumors while increasing the susceptibility of tumor cells and the resistance of healthy cells to chemo and radiation. Similar human studies are in the early stages, but preliminary case studies and trials suggest the vast majority (~95%) of cancer patients can adhere to a fasting regimen without side effects, and for some types of cancers, fasting may suppress tumor growth and increase survival. Preliminary evidence similarly indicates intermittent fasting may be beneficial in patients with inflammatory and autoimmune conditions, such as asthma, MS, and arthritis; animal and human studies have demonstrated functional improvements in as little as two months when patients with MS begin a fasting regimen.

Finally, intermittent fasting has been found to improve outcomes and reduce tissue damage related to surgery and traumatic injury, including traumatic brain and/or spinal cord injury.

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