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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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CHOLECYSTITIS
- GALLSTONE FORMATION – TAKES CARE - FAST CAUTIOUSLY |
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COLLITIS |
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2003
Department of Internal Medicine,
University of Catania Medical School, Garibaldi Hospital,
Catania, Italy.
The authors recently reported
the occurrence of low fasting serum triglyceride (TG)
and high free fatty acid (FFA) levels in idiopathic
pulmonary fibrosis. TG estimation in diverse groups
of patients with autoimmune disease or hyperactive
immune response confirmed the occurrence of a similar
decrease of TG. In some patients, serum FFA level
was also evaluated. TG value in lean and obese patients
was compared with that in lean (n = 108) and obese
(n = 208) control subjects without autoimmune disease.
In patients affected by autoimmune chronic thyroiditis
with enhanced concentration of antithyroglobulin antibodies
and without thyroidal failure (n = 24), lean and obese
patients had reduced TG (-69/%, P < .01 and -52%,
P < .0001, respectively). Both lean and obese patients
affected by chronic active B or C hepatitis (n = 26),
with autoantibodies and without signs of hepatic insufficiency
or cirrhosis, presented reduced TG (-57%, P < .01
and -61%, P < .001, respectively). A marked TG
decrease (-73%, P < .001) was observed in the lean
patients affected by lupus-like syndrome (n = 7).
The lean and obese patients with systemic lupus erythematosus
or rheumatoid arthritis (n = 11) showed TG decrease
(-66%, P < .01 and -55%, P < .05, respectively).
In patients affected by anamnestic allergy or atopic
dermatitis/asthma (n = 66), both lean and obese, TGs
were reduced (-67%, P < .0001 and -62%, P <
.001, respectively). In isolated cases of diverse
autoimmune diseases (scleroderma, APECED [autoimmune
polyendocrinopathy, candidiasis, and ectodermal dystrophy],
urticaria or urticarial vasculitis, Reiter or Sjogren
syndromes, ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease,
multiple sclerosis or Guillain-Barre syndrome) (n
= 14), decreased TG was also observed both in the
lean and obese subjects (-59%, P < .01 and -57%,
P < .01, respectively). Concerning FFA (n = 69),
value in lean patients (n = 22) vs that in lean controls
(n = 18) was increased (520 +/- 31 vs 299 +/- 30 mcEq/L,
+74%, P < .001), whereas value in obese patients
(n = 18) vs that in obese control subjects (n = 11)
was decreased (542 +/- 34 vs 774 +/- 62, -30%, P <
.01). This opposite behavior of FFA in lean and obese
patients needs to be confirmed. Data in this study
seem to indicate that low TG value may be a precocious
marker of autoimmunity or immune system hyperreactivity.
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1997
Department of Pediatrics, University
of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 27599, USA.
Cytokines and insulin-like growth
factors (IGFs) are involved in the induction and/or
perpetuation of inflammatory bowel disease. The effect
of fasting on inflammatory bowel disease was studied
in a mouse experimental model of acute colitis caused
by adding dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) to drinking
water. Animals were either fed ad libitum or fasted
(water only) for 2 days before death. Inflammation
and tissue damage, measured as a colitis activity
score, were markedly reduced in fasted (2.4 +/- 0.1)
compared to fed (5.3 +/- 0.1) DSS animals (P < 0.0001).
Colon interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), IGF-I, and tumor
necrosis factor-alpha messenger RNAs (mRNAs) were
quantified by Northern blot hybridization and expressed
as a percentage of mRNA abundance in fed controls.
In DSS mice, IL-1 beta mRNA was elevated in the fed
group (954 +/- 155%; P < 0.001), but was suppressed
in fasted animals (71.1 +/- 11%). IGF-I mRNA also
was elevated in fed DSS mice (421 +/- 71%; P < 0.01).
This increase was attenuated in fasted DSS mice (202
+/- 17%; P < 0.01 compared to fed DSS mice). Tumor
necrosis factor-alpha mRNA was increased in fed DSS
mice (162 +/- 15%; P < 0.01), but was not significantly
lower in fasted animals. By in situ hybridization,
IL-1 beta mRNA was localized to the lamina propria
of colonic mucosa in fed DSS animals, but was not
detectable in other groups. We conclude that fasting
has a protective effect on the progression of acute
DSS, induced colitis. This is associated with decreased
_expression of IL-1 beta and IGF-I mRNAs in the colon.
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DIARRHEA |
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2002
Department of Medicine, Division
of Gastroenterology, Orebro University Hospital, Orebro,
Sweden.
BACKGROUND/AIM: Diarrhoea in
collagenous colitis has been considered as secretory
though the pathophysiology has been studied thoroughly
in only a few patients. The result of fasting is one
way to distinguish between secretory and osmotic diarrhoea.
Our aim was to investigate the effect of fasting on
diarrhoea in collagenous colitis. METHODS: Fourteen
patients with collagenous colitis were admitted to
the hospital for investigation. All were female. Five
of these did not have diarrhoea during admission and
were excluded. Stools were examined for weight, electrolytes,
pH, fat and osmolality during a period on a normal
diet and during fasting. RESULTS: During the fasting
period the faecal weight was significantly reduced
from median 757 (440-3,198) to 191 (22- 2,197) g.
The faecal sodium concentration was also reduced,
though not significantly, during fasting from median
65 (29-85) to 45 (19-88) mmol/l. The osmotic gaps
varied according to the method of calculation applied.
CONCLUSIONS: The data indicate that the cause of the
diarrhoea in collagenous colitis could be multifactorial.
In some patients an osmotic factor dominates and in
others a secretory factor, while in some patients
a combination of both seems to exist.
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CHOLECYSTITIS |
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2003
University of Milan, Milan, Italy.
We reviewed data on gallbladder
motility in obesity, diabetes and coeliac disease.
In obesity, a condition characterised by increased
risk of gallstone(s), decreased gallbladder motility
has heterogeneously been reported as a consequence
of the different type of meals used to induce gallbladder
contraction, characteristics of the population studied,
technique used, and proportion of patients with hyperinsulinaemia.
Moreover, recent studies have evaluated the effect
of dietary restriction on gallbladder motility in
obese patients. A two- to three-fold increase in the
risk of cholesterol gallstone(s) has been reported
in diabetic patients, mainly in relation to obesity
and hypertriglyceridaemia. Furthermore, decreased
gallbladder motility has been described and attributed
to other factors, including underlying autonomic neuropathy,
reduced gallbladder sensitivity to cholecystokinin
and/or reduced number of cholecystokinin receptors
on the gallbladder wall. Impaired gallbladder motility
has been reported also in patients with coeliac disease
in relation to reduced secretion of enteric hormones
and/or decreased gallbladder sensitivity to them.
In particular, untreated coeliacs, when compared to
controls, showed low postprandial cholecystokinin
and increased fasting somatostatin levels. Interestingly,
the correlation between fasting somatostatin levels
and gallbladder size has clearly been confirmed in
patients affected by somatostatinoma or treated with
somatostatin or its analogues. Gallbladder motility
can be affected by various clinical conditions, such
as obesity, diabetes mellitus and coeliac disease.
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2000
Department of Medicine and Aging,
University G. d'Annunzio, St Annunziata Hospital,
Chieti, Italy.
Cholelithiasis is the primary
_expression of obesity in the hepatobiliary system.
In obese subjects the risk of developing gallstones
is increased due to a higher cholesterol saturation
of gall-bladder bile. During weight reduction with
very low calorie diets (VLCD) the incidence of gallstones
increases, but the mechanism for gallstone formation
is not completely understood and several pathogenetic
mechanisms have been suggested: increased saturation
of bile, increased gall-bladder secretion of mucin
and calcium, increased presence of prostaglandins
and arachidonic acid. Alterations in gall-bladder
motility may contribute to gallstone formation, but
few studies have addressed the issue of gall-bladder
motility during rapid weight loss and its possible
role in gallstone formation. VLCD have been associated
with a gall-bladder stasis, as a consequence of reduced
gall-bladder stimulation by low fat content of the
diets. A threshold quantity of fat (10 g) has been
documented to obtain efficient gall-bladder emptying.
Ursodeoxycholic acid administered during VLCD seems
to have a protective role in developing a biliary
cholesterol crystals. Gall-bladder emptying was lower
in response to low fat meals with respect to relative
higher fat meals, before as well as during the VLCD.
This may account the possibility of an adaptative
response of the gall-bladder motility to a given diet
regimen. Adequate fat content of the VLCD may prevent
gallstone formation, maintaining adequate gall-bladder
motility and may be more economic and physiologically
acceptable than administration of a pharmacological
agent.
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1998
Department of Medicine and Aging,
University G D'Annunzio Chieti, Italy.
Dieting obese subjects are at
risk of developing gallstones. A gallbladder motor
dysfunction could have a pathogenetic role. The principal
aim of this study was to evaluate the long term effects
of two very low calorie diets differing in fat content
on gallbladder emptying and gallstone formation in
obese subjects. DESIGN AND SUBJECTS: Gallbladder emptying
in response to meals (breakfast, lunch and dinner)
in two different diet regimens (3.0 vs 12.2 g of fat/d)
was evaluated by ultrasonography in 32 gallstone-free
obese patients on different days, before and during
(at 45 d intervals) one or two 6-month weight reduction
diets (for the first three months: 2.24 MJ (535.2
kcal), 3.0 g fat/d vs 2.415 MJ (577.0 kcal), 12.2
g fat/d; for the second three months, the same low
calorie diet of 4.194 MJ (1002 kcal)/d for both groups).
In 10 subjects, bile analysis was also performed.
RESULTS: Twenty-two (69%) subjects concluded the study,
eleven in each group, and a significant weight loss
was achieved by all subjects. Gallstones (asymptomatic)
developed in 6/11 (54.5%) (P < 0.01) of subjects following
the lower fat diet, but in none with the higher fat
regimen. In the dieters during the first three months
(very low calorie phase) the higher fat meals always
induced a significantly greater gallbladder emptying
than the lower fat meals. The cholesterol saturation
index initially increased significantly and then decreased,
without difference between the two groups. CONCLUSION:
In the obese during rapid weight loss from a very
low calorie diet, a relatively high fat intake could
prevent gallstone formation, probably by maintaining
an adequate gallbladder emptying, which could counterbalance
lithogenic mechanisms acting during weight loss.
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1995
State University of New York
Health Science Center (Syracuse, NY), Department of
Radiology, USA.
This study assessed the incidence
of gallstone formation in 47 obese women who consumed
a low-calorie diet (LCD) for the first 16 weeks of
a 26-week weight loss program. The LCD consisted of
four daily servings of a liquid diet combined with
an evening meal of a pre-packaged dinner entree and
provided approximately 925 kcal/d. Six of the 47 patients
(12.8%) displayed gallstones at week 17, as determined
by sonography. Five patients were asymptomatic when
followed for up to 48 weeks. The sixth, however, reported
severe abdominal pain 30 weeks after beginning treatment
and required a cholecystectomy. Patients who developed
gallstones, as compared with those who did not, had
significantly higher baseline triglyceride and total
cholesterol levels and had a significantly greater
rate of weight loss. Results of this study indicate
that an increased risk of gallstones is not limited
to very-low-calorie diets and that the incidence of
this complication should be assessed in persons who
consume popular over-the-counter meal replacement
plans.
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