| Literature DB >> 32021500 |
Ayoub Saeidi1, Amal Salhi2, Hassane Zouhal3, Huige Li4, M Faadiel Essop5, Ismail Laher6, Fatma Rhibi3, Sadegh Amani-Shalamzari1, Abderraouf Ben Abderrahman7.
Abstract
Fasting is defined as the abstinence from consuming food and/or beverages for different periods of time. Both traditional and modern healthcare systems recommend fasting as a therapeutic intervention for the management of several chronic, non-infectious diseases. Exercising during a fasting state increases lipolysis in adipose tissue while also stimulating peripheral fat oxidation, resulting in increased fat utilization and weight loss. A key focus of this review is to assess whether endurance training performed while fasting induces specific training adaptations, where increased fat oxidation improves long-term endurance levels. Fasting decreases body weight, lean body and fat content in both trained and untrained individuals. Several studies indicate a broader impact of fasting on metabolism, with effects on protein and glucose metabolism in sedentary and untrained subjects. However, there are conflicting data regarding the effects of fasting on glucose metabolism in highly trained athletes. The effects of fasting on physical performance indicators also remain unclear, with some reporting a decreased performance, while others found no significant effects. Differences in experimental design, severity of calorie restriction, duration, and participant characteristics could, at least in part, explain such discordant findings. Our review of the literature suggests that there is little evidence to support the notion of endurance training and fasting-mediated increases in fat oxidation, and we recommend that endurance athletes should avoid high intensity training while fasting.Entities:
Keywords: Ramadan; calorie restriction; endurance performance; fasting state; glucose metabolism; metabolic adaptation fat oxidation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32021500 PMCID: PMC6983467 DOI: 10.2147/OAJSM.S224919
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Access J Sports Med ISSN: 1179-1543
PICOS Criteria
| PICO Title | Description |
|---|---|
| Population | Healthy Sedentary Human, Untrained, Trained |
| Intervention | Fasting, Physical Training |
| Comparison | Control Intervention, No Intervention |
| Outcomes | Health Indices, Physical Performances |
| Study Design | Randomized Controlled Trial |
Intermittent Caloric Restriction and Body Composition
| Author | Study Population | Study Design | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Schübel et al (2018) | 150 overweight and obese (50% Males – 50% Females): - CCR, n=49 Age: 35 to 65 years. BMI: 25 to 40 kg/m2. | →ICR: 5 days without energy restriction and 2days with 75% ↓ in energy needs | Body weight during intervention phase: |
| Fitzgerald et al (2018) | 31 subjects with multiple sclerosis(7 Males - 24 Females): Age: 18 to 50 years. BMI: 23 to 29.9 kg/m2. | For 8 weeks: | NS weight changes in the ICR group |
| Teng et al (2013) | 56 Men: Age: 50 to 70 years. BMI: 23 to 29.9 kg/m2. | For 12 weeks: | A significant interaction effect in |
| Hussin et al (2013) | 32 healthy males: Age: 59.7±6.3 years BMI: 26.7 ± 2.2 kg/m2 | For 12 weeks: | In FCR group: |
| Klempel et al (2012) | 54 obese women: Age: 35 to 65 years BMI: 30 to 39.9 kg/m2 | For 8 weeks: | ↓Body weight(P=0.04): |
| Teng et al (2011) | 25 healthy men: Age: 58.8±5.1 years BMI: 23.0 to 29.9kg/m2 | A three-month clinical trial on CR (↓ of 300 to 500 kcal/day) combined with two non-consecutive days/week of fasting (FCR) | In the FCR |
Abbreviations: BMI, Body Mass Index; CCR, Continuous Caloric Restriction; CG, Control Group; CR, Caloric Restriction; DCR, Daly Caloric Restriction; FCR, Fasting Caloric Restriction; ICR, Intermittent Caloric Restriction; IFCR-F, Intermittent Fasting Caloric Restriction food based; IFCR-l, Intermittent Fasting Caloric Restriction Liquid based; n, number; NS, Non-significant.
Effects of Ramadan Fasting on Body Composition
| Authors | Study Population | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Alsubheen et al (2017) | 17 healthy males: | ↓ Body mass and adiposity (P< 0.05) |
| Nugraha et al (2017) | 50 healthy males: | ↓Body weight (p<0.001) |
| Aliasghari et al (2017) | 83 patients with NAFLD (57 Males – 26 Females): | ↓Body weight, ↓BMI, ↓Waist and hip circumferences, ↓Waist-to-hip ratio (P<0.001) |
| Latiri et al (2016) | 29 healthy males Age: 27 ± 1 years | NS effect on weight ( |
| Sezen et al (2016) | 70 healthy men Age: 37±7 years | ↓BMI, ↓Waist-Hip ratio, ↓Body water rate, ↓Body fat mass, and ↓Visceral fat mass (p<0.05 each) |
| Gnanou et al (2015) | 20 healthy men | ↓ Body weight (2.4%, |
| Hammouda et al (2014) | 12 males, professional soccer players | ↓Body mass (P<0.001) |
| Hammouda et al (2013) | 15 males, professional soccer players | ↓Body mass (P< 0.05) |
| Bouhlel et al (2013) | 20 trained men: | ↓Body weight ( |
| Zarrouk et al (2013) | 8 trained males karate players | NC |
| Mirzaei et al (2012) | 14 males collegiate wrestlers | ↓ Body mass (P=0.001) |
| Racinais et al (2012) | 11 males | NC |
| Kacimi et al (2012) | 50 healthy subjects (21 Males aged: 18–49 years and 29 females aged: 18–51 years) | ↓ Body weight (P<0.01) |
| Trabelsi et al (2011) | 18 active men | ↓Body weight −1.9% ( |
| Güvenç (2011) | 16 male soccer players (Age: 17.4±1.2 years) | NS changes in body mass, percentage of body fat, fat-free mass |
| Asl (2011) | 15 male athletes | ↓Body weight, ↓BMI, ↓Free fat mass and ↓Body fat (P < 0.05). |
| Lotfi et al (2010) | 9 male resistance athletes | NS changes |
| Chennaoui et al (2009) | 8 male middle-distance athletes | NS changes |
| Chaouachi et al (2008) | 15 male elite judo athletes | ↓ Body mass (P<0.001) |
| Meckel et al (2008) | 19 male soccer players | ↓sum of skinfolds (P<0.05). |
| Aksungar et al (2007) | 68 healthy males: | NS changes |
| Al-Hourani & Atoum (2007) | 57 students women | ↓Body mass, ↓Body fat, ↓muscle mass, ↓body water, ↓BMI (P<0.05 each). |
| Karli et al (2007) | 10 male elite power athletes (2 wrestlers, 7 sprinters and 1 thrower) | NS changes |
| Bouhlel et al (2006) | 9 trained men | ↓Body mass, ↓BMI, ↓Fat mass, ↓% Lean mass (P<0.01 each). |
| Lamine et al (2006) | 9 males, 21 females | NC |
| Yucel et al (2007) | 21 males, 17 females | NC |
| Ramadan (2002) | 16 sedentary adult male | NS changes |
| Ramadan et al (1999) | 13 healthy adult men. | NS changes |
Abbreviations: BMI, Body Mass Index; FG, Fasting Group; NFG, Non Fasting Group; RF, Ramadan Fasting; n, Number; NC, No Change; NS, Non Significant.
Effect of Time Restricted Feeding on Body Composition
| Author | Study Population | Study Design | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Moro et al (2016) | 34 resistance-trained males: Age: 29.21 ± 3.8 years Weight: 84.6 ± 6.2 kg | For 8 weeks: | ↓Fat mass (−16.4% TRF versus −2.8% ND) (p=0.0448). |
| Le Cheminant et al (2013) | 29 healthy men
Age: 20.9±2.5 years BMI: 24.4±4.5 kg/m2 | →For 2 weeks: Night eating restriction intervention (elimination of energy intake from 19.00 to 06.00 hrs) | ↓ Body weight −1% (P<0.05). |
| Soeters et al (2009) | 8 lean healthy men: | For 2 weeks 4h TRF every other day | NS changes |
| Stote et al (2007) | 69 healthy (14 Females −7 Males)
Age: 40–50 years BMI: 18 to 25 kg/m2 | Two 8 Weeks treatment periods: all of the calories needed for weight maintenance in either 3 meals/d or 1 meal/d. | After 1 meal/d |
| Halberg et al (2005) | 8 healthy men
Age: 25.0 0.1 years BMI 25.7 0.4 kg/m2 | For 14 day 4h TRF every other day. Each fasting period (22:00 to18:00 h the following day). | NS changes |
Abbreviations: BMI, Body Mass Index; IF, Intermittent Fasting; ND, Normal Diet; TRF, Time Restricted Feeding; n, number; NC, No Change; NS, Non-Significant.
Effect of Fasting on Metabolic Adaptations in Trained and Untrained Subjects
| Author | Study Population | Study Design | Main Findings | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lipid Metabolism | Glucose Metabolism | Protein Metabolism | |||
| Schübel et al (2018) | 150 overweight and obese (50% Male – 50% female) - CCR, n=49 Age: 35 to 65 years. BMI: 25 to 40 kg/m2. | →ICR: 5 days without energy restriction and 2days with 75% ↓ in energy needs→ CCR: 20% daily ↓ in energy needs | NS change | ↓ The glucose for CCR compared with ICR (P< 0.01) (at week 12). | NM |
| Oh et al (2018) | 45 overweight and obese (26 Females- 19 Males): Age: 18 to 64 years. BMI: > 23.0 kg/m2. | For 8 weeks | In ADCR group NS changes | In ADCR group NS changes | NM |
| Trepanowski et al (2017) | 100 obese adults (86 Females- 14 Males): Age: 18 to 64 years BMI: ± 34 | For 1 year (6-month weight-loss + 6-month weight-maintenance): | NS change in TC and TG. | NS changes. | NM |
| Aliasghari et al (2017) | 83 patients with NAFLD (57 Males – 26 Females): | Ramadan fasting | NS changes | ↓ Fasting blood glucose (P<0.01) | NM |
| Alsubheen et al (2017) | 17 healthy males: | Ramadan fasting | NS change in TC | NS changes | NM |
| Bak et al (2016) | 18 healthy males Age: 20 to 35 years | Examination on two occasions separated by a minimum of 21 days: 1) after an overnight fast of 12 h | In obese: ↑ whole body lipolysis | ↓ in glucose for both groups (P < 0.01) | Obese:↓ urea and amino acid fluxes both in the basal and 72-h fasted state. |
| Syam et al (2016) | 43 volunteers (7 Males- 36 Females)
Age: 34.19 ± 11.25 years BMI: 23.71 ± 3.96 kg/m2 | Ramadan fasting | NM | NM | NS change in Protein body mass (−0.049 ± 0.170 kg, P=0.561) |
| Moro et al (2016) | 34 resistance-trained males: Age: 29.21 ± 3.8 years Weight: 84.6 ± 6.2 kg | For 8 weeks: | In TRF: | In TRF: | NM |
| Gnanou et al (2015) | 20 healthy men | Ramadan fasting | NM | ↓ Blood glucose (p< 0.01) | NM |
| Varady et al (2013) | 32 normal-weight and overweight (22 Females- 8 Males): Age: 35 to 65 years BMI between 20 and 29.9 kg/m2 | For 12 weeks | In ADF group: | NM | NM |
| Bhutani et al (2013) | 83 obese (80 Females - 3 Males) Age: 25 to 65 years BMI: 30 to 39.9 kg/m2 | For 12 weeks | ↓ TC (p =0.053). | NS change in blood glucose | NC in C-reactive protein. |
| Eshghinia & Mohammadzadeh (2013) | 15 overweight and obese women.
Age: 33.46 ± 5.9 years. BMI: 33.16 ± 5.02 kg/m2. | For 6 weeks, | NS changes | NM | NM |
| Teng et al (2013) | 56 Men: Age: 50 to 70 years. BMI: 23 to 29.9 kg/m2. | For 12 weeks: | A significant interaction effect in →TC (p<0.001) | NS change | NM |
| Klempel et al (2013) | 32 obese women: Age: 25–65 years. BMI between 30 and 39.9 kg/m. | For 8 weeks | ↓ TC: 13 ± 2 and 16 ± 2% (P<0.0001) in the ADF–HF and ADF–LF. | NM | NM |
| Mirzaei et al (2012) | 14 male collegiate wrestlers | Ramadan fasting | ↓TC (P=0.011) | ↓ Blood glucose (p=0.001). | NM |
| Shehab et al (2012) | 65 subjects Age: 38.7±10.5 years | Ramadan fasting | ↑HDL-C (P<0.001) | NM | NM |
| Nematy et al (2012) | Volunteers including | Ramadan fasting | ↓TC( | NS modification. | NM |
| Varady et al (2011) | 59 overweight and obese (50 Females- 9 Males): Age: 35 to 65 years BMI: 25 to 39.9 kg/m2 | For 12 weeks: | In ADF: | NM | NM |
| Varady et al (2009) | 60 obese (12 Females, 4 Males)
Age: 35–65 years. BMI: 30 to 39.9 kg/m2. | For 8 weeks: | ↓TC −21 ± 4% (P < 0.01) | NM | NM |
| Chaouachi et al (2008) | 15 male elite judo athletes
Age 18 ± 1 years | Ramadan fasting | ↓TC (3.34 ± 0.26 to 3.72 ± 0.31 mmol • l –1) (P< 0.05) | NC | ↓ Protein from 77.1± 4.4 to 70.1 ± 4.3 g.l-1 (P < 0.01) |
| Ziaee et al (2006) | 81 healthy subjects (41 Males - 40 Females).
Age: 20–35 years BMI: 21.2±4.5 kg/m2 | Ramadan fasting | ↓HDL-C (P=0.001) | ↓ Glucose (p=0.000) | NM |
| Bouhlel et al (2006) | 9 trained men
Age: 19±2 years BMI: 25.1±4.1 kg/m2 | Ramadan fasting | NM | NC | ↑ Hemoglobin (P < 0.01) |
| Heilbronn et al (2005) | 16 healthy (8 Males- 8 Females)
Age: 20 and 55 years BMI: 20.0 to 30.0 kg/m2 | ADF: fasting every other day for 22 days | NM | For females: | NM |
| Fakhrzadeh et al (2003) | 91 subjects: | Ramadan fasting | ↓TC (P< 0.001) | ↓Glucose in both men ( | NM |
| Larijani et al (2003) | 67 male, 48 female adults
Age: 15 to 45 years | Ramadan fasting | NM | ↓Glucose (88.4 ± 9.0 mg/dl to 62.9 ± 7.7 mg/dl) (p < 0.001). | NM |
| Beltaifa et al (2002) | 26 athletes and 32 sedentary individuals | Ramadan fasting | NS modifications | NC | No significant change |
| Adlouni et al (1997) | 32 healthy men | Ramadan fasting | ↓TC: −7.9% (P< 0.001), | ↓ Blood glucose: 5.1 to 4.38 mmol/L (P < 0.001) | NM |
Abbreviations: ADCR, Alternate Day Caloric Restriction ADF, Alternate Day Fasting; ADF-HF, Alternate Day Fasting with High Fat ADF-LF, Alternate Day Fasting with Low Fat; BMI, Body Mass Index; CR, Caloric Restriction; CCR, Continuous Caloric Restriction; E-ADF, Exercise With Alternate Day Fasting; EX, Exercise; FCR, Fasting Caloric Restriction; FG, Fasting Group; HDL-C, High Density Lipoprotein; ICR, Intermittent Caloric Restriction; LDL-C, Low Density Lipoprotein; n, number; NC, No Change; ND, Normal Diet; NFG, Non Fasting Group; NM, Not Mentioned; NS, Non Significant; TC, Total Cholesterol; TG, Triglycerides; TRF, Time Restricted Feeding.
Effects of Fasting on Endurance Performances in Endurance Trained Athletes
| Author | Participants | Study Design | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Png et al (2014) | 12 active male runners Age: 27.9 ± 7.2 years | 60 min of continuous run during the Ramadan month after ingesting | NS variations in metabolic and physiological measures. |
| Brisswalter et al (2011) | 18 well trained males, middle-distance runners | →The maximal running test | NC in running efficiency or MAP. |
| Asl (2011) | 15 male endurance runners | In the first week and in the middle of Ramadan | Small significant effect (P< 0.05) |
| Aziz et al (2010) | 10 moderately men trained runners | Comparing the subjects (60 min runs on a treadmill) during the Ramadan month in the fasted state and non-fasted conditions. | ↑in the second 30 min in the control compared to Ramadan condition (5649±715 versus 5448±847 m, P=0.023). |
| Chennaoui et al (2009) | 8 male middle-distance athletes | The MAV test: 5 days before Ramadan and on days 7 and 21 of Ramadan. | ↓MAV values at days 7 and 21 (p < 0.05) |
| Loon et al (2004) | 8 male cyclists | Following an overnight fast, subjects were studied at rest, during 120 min of moderate intensity exercise (60% maximal oxygen uptake) and 120 min of post-exercise recovery. | ↑Free fatty acid oxidation rates increased during exercise. |
| Mehdioui, et al (1996) | 10 male distance runners | The maximal oxygen intake was measured in the beginning and the end of Ramadan | NC in maximal oxygen intake, |
Abbreviations: HR, Heart Rate; MAP, Maximal Aerobic Power; MAV, Maximal Aerobic Velocity; n, number, NC, No Change; NS, Non-Significant; RPE, Rating Perceived Exertion.
Effects of Fasting on Physical Performances in Untrained Subjects and Non-Endurance Athletes
| Author | Participants | Study Design | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hammouda et al (2014) | 12 males, professional soccer players | The Yo-Yo test level 1(07:00 h and 17:00 h): one week before Ramadan, and in the second and fourth week. | ↓Total distance just in the evening (P<0.05). |
| Lotfi et al (2010) | 9 athletes | Running 1000m test took place 3 times: before and in the first and fourth weeks of Ramadan. | NS modifications in physical performance (1000m running). |
| Chaouachi et al (2009) | 15 healthy male elite judo athletes | A multistage fitness test was applied in the beginning and the end of Ramadan | NC of multistage shuttle-run score |
| Meckel et al (2008) | 19 male soccer players | The endurance test “3,000 m run” the week before and during the last week of the Ramadan. | ↓Aerobic capacity: 3,000 m run time: 812.8 ± 73.3s versus 819.9 ± 73.4s (P < 0.001) |
| Kirkendall et al (2008) | 85 soccer male players | 20-m multistage shuttle run test took place 3 weeks: before and in the second and fourth weeks of Ramadan. | ↑Running distance in the 4thweek of Ramadan (P<0.05) and Post Ramadan (P<0.001) |
| Fouad (2008) | 30 male soccer players | To measure the aerobic exercise performance a Leger test was applied in the beginning and the end of Ramadan | NC of Leger-test score or endurance at 85% of maximal oxygen intake during Ramadan |
| Karli et al (2007) | 16 male soccer players | 20- multistage shuttle run test took place 3 times: before, in the beginning and in the end of Ramadan. | During Ramadan: |
| Sweileh (1992) | Sedentary subjects | The maximal oxygen uptake measured in the beginning and the end of Ramadan | The maximal oxygen uptake: |
Abbreviations: HR, Heart Rate; NC, No Change; NS, Non-significant; RPE, Rating Perceived Exertion; RRT, Recognition Reaction Time; TRT, Total Reaction Time.
Figure 1Exercise in fasted compared to fed states. Aerobic exercise performed in the fasted state induces higher fat oxidation than exercise performed in the fed state.
Abbreviations: NEFA, non-esterified fatty acids; ATGL, adipose triglyceride lipase; HSL, hormone-sensitive lipase; CD36, fatty acid translocase; CPT-1, carnitine palmitoyltransferase-1; UCP-3, uncoupling protein 3; AMPK, AMP-activated protein kinase; SIRT1, sirtuin-1.
Effect of Endurance Training on Fast State on Endurance Performance
| Authors | Participants | Study Design | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bouguerra et al (2017) | 24 male middle- and long-distance runners | Maximal aerobic velocity, time to exhaustion, performance in running 3000-m | ↑MAV and maximal oxygen uptake (P< 0.01) in the afternoon and morning groups compared to the evening group. |
| Van Proeyen et al (2011) | 20 healthy males | 6 weeks of endurance training program (1–1.5 h cycling at ∼70% of maximal oxygen uptake 4 days/wk) | ↑ Maximal oxygen uptake (+9%) ( |
| Stannard et al (2010) | 8 females and 6 males untrained, | For4 weeks of 5 days per week endurance cycle ergometer training | In fast, |
Abbreviations: MAV, Maximal Aerobic Velocity; n, number; NS, Non-Significant.
Effect of Alternate Day Fasting on Body Composition
| Author | Study Population | Study Design | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oh et al (2018) | 45 overweight and obese (26 Females −19 Males): Age: 18 to 64 years. BMI: > 23.0 kg/m2. | For 8 weeks | In ADCR group a significant reduction in: |
| Trepanowski et al (2017, 2018) | 100 obese adults (86 Females- 14 Males): Age: 18 to 64 years BMI: ± 34 | For 1 year (6-month weight-loss + 6-month weight-maintenance): | ↓ Fat free mass/total mass in both ADF (0.03 ± 0.00) and CR (0.03 ± 0.01) compared to the control group (P<0.01). |
| Catenacci et al (2016) | 26 adults with obesity (19 Females- 6 Males): Age: 18–55 years. BMI ≥30 kg/m2. | For 8 weeks | NS differences in Weight and Body composition between ADF and CR groups. |
| Varady et al (2013) | 32 normal-weight and overweight (22 Females- 8 Males): Age: 35 to 65 years BMI: 20 to 29.9 kg/m2 | For 12 weeks | ↓ Body weight −5.2 ± 0.9 kg (P<0.001) |
| Klempel et al (2013) | 32 obese women: Age: 25–65 years. BMI: 30 to 39.9 kg/m2 | For 8 weeks | ↓ Body weight (P<0.0001) −4.3±1.0 kg in the ADF–HF and −3.7±0.7 kg in ADF–LF group. |
| Bhutani et al (2013) | 83 obese (80 Females - 3 Males) Age: 25 to 65 years BMI: 30 to 39.9 kg/m2 | For 12 weeks | In ADF: |
| Eshghinia & Mohammadzadeh (2013) | 15 overweight and obese women.
Age: 33.46 ± 5.9 years. BMI: 33.16 ± 5.02 kg/m2. | For 6 weeks, | ↓Body weight: 84.3 ± 11.4 to 78.3 ± 10.2 kg (P<0.001). |
| Varady et al (2011) | 59 overweight and obese (50 Females- 9 Males): Age: 35 to 65 years BMI: 25 to 39.9 kg/m2 | For 12 weeks: | ↓ Body weight (P<0.001) in: |
| Varady et al (2009) | 60 obese (12 Females, 4 Males)
Age: 35–65 years. BMI: 30 to 39.9 kg/m2. | For 8 weeks: | ↓ weight −5.6 ± 1.0 kg (P<0.001) |
Abbreviations: ADCR, Alternate Day Caloric Restriction ADF, Alternate Day Fasting; ADF-HF, Alternate Day Fasting with High Fat ADF-LF, Alternate Day Fasting with Low Fat; BMI, Body Mass Index; CR, Caloric Restriction; E-ADF, Exercise With Alternate Day Fasting; EX, Exercise; n, number; NC, No Change; NS, Non-Significant.