| Literature DB >> 24627806 |
Suvasini Sharma1, Puneet Jain1.
Abstract
The modified Atkins diet is a less restrictive variation of the ketogenic diet. This diet is started on an outpatient basis without a fast, allows unlimited protein and fat, and does not restrict calories or fluids. Recent studies have shown good efficacy and tolerability of this diet in refractory epilepsy. In this review, we discuss the use of the modified Atkins diet in refractory epilepsy.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24627806 PMCID: PMC3929267 DOI: 10.1155/2014/404202
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epilepsy Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1348
Figure 1Composition of the ketogenic diets and their variants.
Summary of studies involving children treated with MAD.
| Authors | Study type | Sample size | Age range | Epilepsy | At 3 months | Adverse effects | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| >50% | >90% | ||||||
| Kossoff et al. 2003 [ | Open trial | 6 | 7–52 yrs | Mixed | 3 | — | Not reported |
| Kossoff et al. 2006 [ | Prospective | 20 | 3–18 yrs | ≥3 Sz/week on at least 2 AEDs | 50% | 11% | Constipation |
| Kossoff et al. 2007 [ | Randomized cross-over (10 g versus 20 g) | 20 | 3–18 yrs | At least daily countable seizures | 10 g—60% | 10 g—30% | Improved tolerability with 20 g |
| Kang et al. 2007 [ | Prospective | 14 | Mean 7.4 yrs | ≥4 Sz/month; ≥3 AEDs | 50% | 29% | Gastrointestinal disturbances |
| Porta et al. 2009 [ | Retrospective | 27 | 4–182 months | ≥2 Sz/week, | KD—64% | — | Mild digestive disorders |
| Weber et al. 2009 [ | Prospective | 15 | 2–17 yrs | ≥1 Sz/week, | 40% | 13% | Not significant |
| Tonekaboni et al. 2010 [ | Prospective | 27 | 1–16 yrs | ≥3 AEDs tried | 67% | 25% | Minor |
| Miranda et al. 2010 [ | Prospective | 33 | 1–16 yrs | Medically intractable epilepsy | 52% | 42% | Subtle |
| Kossoff et al. 2011 [ | Prospective | 30 | 3–18 yrs | At least daily countable seizures; | At 1 month, 80% | 37% | Constipation |
| Groomes, et al. 2011 [ | Retrospective + prospective | 21 | Median age at diet onset—6 yrs | Intractable childhood and juvenile absence epilepsy | 82% | 38% | Not mentioned |
| Kumada et al. 2012 [ | Prospective | 10 | 1.5–17 yrs | ≥3 Sz/week, | At 3 weeks, 3 | 2 | |
| Sharma et al. 2012 [ | Prospective | 15 | 6 m–3 yrs | Daily infantile spasms | 40% spasm free | Constipation | |
| Kim et al. 2012 [ | Retrospective | 20 | 21 m–17 yrs | Mixed | 55%* | 35%* | Constipation, hypercalciuria, hyperuricemia, transient lipase elevation |
| Sharma et al. 2013 [ | Randomized controlled trial | Total 102, 50 randomized to diet group | 2–14 yrs | Daily seizures, or at least 7/week | 52% in diet group versus 11.5% in control group | 30% in diet group versus 7.7% in control group | Constipation, anorexia, vomiting, lethargy |
*Efficacy during the recent or final 3 months of the diet therapy.
AEDs: antiepileptic drugs; Sz: seizures; MAD: modified Atkins diet; KD: ketogenic diet.
A summary of studies that include data specifically on individuals aged >12 years on MAD [29].
| Study | Study design | Sample size | Age | Seizure types | Endpoint | Number of adolescent (12–18 yrs) | Number of | Adverse effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kang et al. 2007 [ | Prospective | 1 (1/0) | 14.4 | DS with ATS | 7 | 0 (0%) | NA | Vomiting |
| Kossoff et al. 2008 [ | Prospective | 30 (0/30) | 18–53 | CPS, MST, AS | 6 | NA | 9 (30%) | Lethargy, weight loss, |
| Carrette et al. 2008 [ | Prospective | 8 (0/8) | 31–55 | CPS, CPS with occasional SG, LGS | 6 | NA | 1 (13%) | Vomiting, headache, nausea, |
| Weber et al. 2009 [ | Prospective | 7 (7/0) | 12–17 | SFE, LGS, MAE, JME | 3 | 3 (43%) | NA | Unknown |
| Kossoff et al. 2010 [ | Prospective | 2 (2/0) | 13–18 | SWS with CPS | 6 | 1 (50%) | NA | Weight loss, high peak total |
| Smith et al. 2011 [ | Prospective | 18 (0/18) | 18–55 | PS with SG, MS, CPS, SPS | 12 | NA | 3 (17%) | Weight loss |
AS: absence seizures; ATS: atonic seizures; CPS: complex partial seizures; DS: Doose syndrome; JME: juvenile myoclonic epilepsy; LGS: Lennox-Gastaut syndrome; MAE: myoclonic astatic epilepsy; MS: myoclonic seizures; MST: multiple seizure types; NA: not available; PS: partial seizures; SFE: symptomatic focal epilepsy; SG: secondary generalization; SPS: simple partial seizures; SWS: Sturge-Weber syndrome.