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PERIODICAL
FASTING AND CALORIC RESTRICTION FOR LIFE EXTENSION,
DISEASE TREATMENT AND CREATIVITY.
(clinical and experimental data)
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FASTING AND CALORIC RESTRICTION PREVENT AND CURE DISEASES
(Evidence) |
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FASTING
INHIBITS SEIZURE SUSCEPTIBILITY |
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2004
Biology Department, Boston College,
Chestnut Hill, MA, USA.
BACKGROUND: The high fat, low
carbohydrate ketogenic diet (KD) was developed as
an alternative to fasting for seizure management.
While the mechanisms by which fasting and the KD inhibit
seizures remain speculative, alterations in brain
energy metabolism are likely involved. We previously
showed that caloric restriction (CR) inhibits seizure
susceptibility by reducing blood glucose in the epileptic
EL mouse, a natural model for human multifactorial
idiopathic epilepsy. In this study, we compared the
antiepileptic and anticonvulsant efficacy of the KD
with that of CR in adult EL mice with active epilepsy.
EL mice that experienced at least 15 recurrent complex
partial seizures were fed either a standard diet unrestricted
(SD-UR) or restricted (SD-R), and either a KD unrestricted
(KD-UR) or restricted (KD-R). All mice were fasted
for 14 hrs prior to diet initiation. A new experimental
design was used where each mouse in the diet-restricted
groups served as its own control to achieve a 20-23%
body weight reduction. Seizure susceptibility, body
weights, and the levels of plasma glucose and beta-hydroxybutyrate
were measured once/week over a nine-week treatment
period. RESULTS: Body weights and blood glucose levels
remained high over the testing period in the SD-UR
and the KD-UR groups, but were significantly (p <
0.001) reduced in the SD-R and KD-R groups. Plasma
beta-hydroxybutyrate levels were significantly (p
< 0.001) increased in the SD-R and KD-R groups
compared to their respective UR groups. Seizure susceptibility
remained high in both UR-fed groups throughout the
study, but was significantly reduced after three weeks
in both R-fed groups. CONCLUSIONS: The results indicate
that seizure susceptibility in EL mice is dependent
on plasma glucose levels and that seizure control
is more associated with the amount than with the origin
of dietary calories. Also, CR underlies the antiepileptic
and anticonvulsant action of the KD in EL mice. A
transition from glucose to ketone bodies for energy
is predicted to manage EL epileptic seizures through
multiple integrated changes of inhibitory and excitatory
neural systems.
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2001
Biology Department, Boston College,
Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts 02167, USA.
Caloric restriction (CR) involves
underfeeding and has long been recognized as a dietary
therapy that improves health and increases longevity.
In contrast to severe fasting or starvation, CR reduces
total food intake without causing nutritional deficiencies.
Although fasting has been recognized as an effective
antiseizure therapy since the time of the ancient
Greeks, the mechanism by which fasting inhibits seizures
remains obscure. The influence of CR on seizure susceptibility
was investigated at both juvenile (30 days) and adult
(70 days) ages in the EL mouse, a genetic model of
multifactorial idiopathic epilepsy. METHODS: The juvenile
EL mice were separated into two groups and fed standard
lab chow either ad libitum (control, n=18) or with
a 15% CR diet (treated, n=17). The adult EL mice were
separated into three groups; control (n=15), 15% CR
(n=6), and 30% CR (n=3). Body weights, seizure susceptibility,
and the levels of blood glucose and ketones (beta-hydroxybutyrate)
were measured over a 10-week treatment period. Simple
linear regression and multiple logistic regression
were used to analyze the relations among seizures,
glucose, and ketones. RESULTS: CR delayed the onset
and reduced the incidence of seizures at both juvenile
and adult ages and was devoid of adverse side effects.
Furthermore, mild CR (15%) had a greater antiepileptogenic
effect than the well-established high-fat ketogenic
diet in the juvenile mice. The CR-induced changes
in blood glucose levels were predictive of both blood
ketone levels and seizure susceptibility. CONCLUSIONS:
We propose that CR may reduce seizure susceptibility
in EL mice by reducing brain glycolytic energy. Our
preclinical findings suggest that CR may be an effective
antiseizure dietary therapy for human seizure disorders.
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