| Literature DB >> 33920973 |
Ana Napoleão1,2, Lívia Fernandes2, Cátia Miranda2, Ana Paula Marum1,2,3.
Abstract
As the incidence of Chronic Non-Communicable Diseases (CNCDs) increases, preventive approaches become more crucial. In this review, calorie restriction (CR) effects on human beings were evaluated, comparing the benefits and risks of different CR diets: classic CR vs. ketosis-inducing diets, including intermittent fasting (IF), classic ketogenic diet (CKD), fasting mimicking diet (FMD), very-low-calorie ketogenic Diet (VLCKD) and Spanish ketogenic Mediterranean diet (SKMD). Special emphasis on insulin resistance (IR) was placed, as it mediates metabolic syndrome (MS), a known risk factor for CNCD, and is predictive of MS diagnosis. CR is the most robust intervention known to increase lifespan and health span, with high evidence and known biochemical mechanisms. CR improves cardiometabolic risk parameters, boosts exercise insulin sensitivity response, and there may be benefits of implementing moderate CR on healthy young and middle-aged individuals. However, there is insufficient evidence to support long-term CR. CKD is effective for weight and MS management, and may have additional benefits such as prevention of muscle loss and appetite control. SKMD has extreme significance benefits for all the metabolic parameters studied. Studies show inconsistent benefits of IF compared to classic CR. More studies are required to study biochemical parameters, reinforce evidence, identify risks, and seek effective and safe nutritional CR approaches.Entities:
Keywords: calorie restriction; chronic non-communicable diseases; diet; fasting; health span; insulin resistance; ketosis; lifespan; low-calorie; low-carb; metabolic syndrome
Year: 2021 PMID: 33920973 PMCID: PMC8071299 DOI: 10.3390/nu13041302
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Abbreviations used in the review and corresponding meaning.
| Abbreviations | Corresponding Meaning |
|---|---|
| AD | Alzheimer’s Disease |
| ADF | Alternate Day Fasting |
| ADMF | Alternate Day Modified Fasting |
| AL | Ad Libitum |
| ALS | Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis |
| AMPK | AMP-activated protein Kinase |
| ATP | Adenosine Triphosphate |
| AUC | Area Under the Curve |
| BMD | Bone Mass Measurement |
| BMI | Body Mass Index |
| BP | Blood Pressure |
| CCK | Cholecystokinin |
| CCR | Continuous Calorie Restriction |
| CKD | Classic Ketogenic Diets |
| CNCD | Chronic Non-communicable Diseases |
| CNS | Central Nervous System |
| CR | Calorie Restriction |
| CRP | C-Reactive Protein |
| DHA | Docosahexaenoic Acid |
| DR | Dietary Restriction |
| EKS | Exogenous Ketone Supplements |
| eNOS | endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase |
| EPA | Eicosapentaenoic Acid |
| FMD | Fasting Mimicking Diet |
| FMP | Fasting Mimicking Program |
| GSE | General Self-Efficacy Questionnaire |
| HbA1c | Glycated Hemoglobin |
| HDLc | High-density Lipoprotein cholesterol |
| HFD | High Fat Diet |
| HOMA-IR | Homeostatic Model Assessment of IR |
| ICR | Intermittent Calorie Restriction |
| IF | Intermittent Fasting |
| IFG | Impaired Fasting Glucose |
| IGF-1 | Insulin-like Growth Factor 1 |
| IGFBP-1 | Insulin-like Growth Factor Binding Protein 1 |
| IGT | Impaired Glucose Tolerance |
| IR | Insulin Resistance |
| ISS | Insulin/Insulin-like growth factor 1 Signaling |
| KB | Ketone Bodies |
| KD | Ketogenic Diet |
| KDTs | Ketogenic Dietary Therapies |
| LDLc | Low-density Lipoprotein cholesterol |
| LFD | Low-Fat Diets |
| LGIT | Low Glycemic Index Treatment |
| MAD | Modified Atkins Diet |
| MAPK | Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase |
| MCT | Medium-Chain Triglyceride |
| MS | Metabolic Syndrome |
| MSC | Metabolic Syndrome Compliance Questionnaire |
| mTOR | mechanistic Target of Rapamycin |
| NADPH | Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide Phosphate |
| Nrf2 | Nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor |
| PD | Parkinson’s Disease |
| PDGF | Platelet Derived Growth-Factor |
| PF | Periodic Fasting |
| PHQ-9 | Patient Health Questionnaire 9 |
| PI3K | Phosphoinositide 3-Kinase |
| ROS | Reactive Oxygen Species |
| RT | Resistance Training |
| SIRT | Sirtuins |
| SKMD | Spanish Ketogenic Mediterranean Diet |
| T2DM | Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus |
| TG | Triglycerides |
| TGF-α | Transforming Growth Factor α |
| TRS | Time Restricted Feeding |
| VEGF | Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor |
| VLCKD | Very-Low-Calorie Ketogenic Diet |
Blood levels during a normal diet, ketogenic diet and diabetic ketoacidosis [26].
| Blood Levels | Normal Diet | Ketogenic Diet | Diabetic Ketoacidosis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Glucose (mg/dL) | 80–120 | 65–80 | >300 |
| Insulin (U/L) | 6–23 | 6.6–9.4 | ≈0 |
| Ketone bodies (mmol/L) | 0.1 | 7/8 | >25 |
| pH | 7.4 | 7.4 | <7.3 |
Definition of the terms used to describe different types of fasting. Adapted from Anton et al. [51].
| Intermittent Fasting (IF) [ | This eating pattern involves fasting for varying periods of time, typically for 12 h or longer. |
| Time Restricted Feeding (TRF) [ | This eating pattern involves restricting food intake to specific time periods of the day, typically between 8 to 12 h each day. |
| Alternate Day Fasting (ADF) [ | This eating pattern involves consuming no calories on fasting days and alternating fasting days with a day of unrestricted food intake or “feast” day. |
| Alternate Day Modified Fasting (ADMF) [ | This eating pattern involves consuming less than 25% of baseline energy needs on “fasting” days, alternated with a day of unrestricted food intake or “feast” day. |
| Periodic Fasting (PF) [ | This eating pattern consists of fasting only 1 or 2 days/week and consuming food ad libitum on 5 to 6 days per week. |
Figure 1Illustration of the terms used to describe different types of fasting. ADF: Alternate Day Fasting; IF: Intermittent Fasting; ADMF: Alternate Day Modified Fasting; PF: Periodic Fasting; TRF: Time Restricted Feeding.
Figure 2Circadian clock and effects of eating behaviors. CNCD: Chronic Non-communicable Diseases. CR: Calorie Restriction; CVD: Cardiovascular Diseases.
Figure 3Cellular metabolic pathways activated during feeding and calorie restriction and fasting. During feeding, insulin and IGF1 lead to the activation of the insulin-pAKT-mTOR pathway, that drives downstream gene activities that promote anabolic processes, cell growth and cell survival. This pathway, although crucial for the organism, also favor the Warburg effect (aerobic glycolysis in cancer cells). In contrast, CR or a few hours of fasting activate AMPK, which triggers repair and catabolic processes, as well as autophagy. CR and fasting have an anti-Warburg effect by counteracting the insulin and IGF1 pathways. AKT: Protein Kinase B; AMPK: AMP-activated protein Kinase; CR: Calorie Restriction; IGF1: Insulin-like Growth Factor 1; IRS: Insulin Receptor Substrates; MAP: Mitogen-Activated Protein; mTOR: mechanistic Target OF Rapamycin; PI3K: Phosphoinositide 3-Kinase; PIP2: Phosphatidylinositol biphosphate; PIP3: Phosphatidylinositol triphosphate; ULK1: Serine/threonine-protein kinase 1.