| Literature DB >> 34067055 |
Alda Attinà1, Claudia Leggeri1, Rita Paroni2, Francesca Pivari2, Michele Dei Cas2, Alessandra Mingione2, Maria Dri3, Marco Marchetti3, Laura Di Renzo4,5.
Abstract
Fasting potentials are the most interesting topics in the Nutritional Era. Fasting consists of the catabolism of lipids, proteins, and carbohydrates to maintain blood glucose levels in a normal range. The action mechanisms of fasting were firstly understood in minor organisms and later in humans. Nutritional interventions of caloric restriction could attenuate age-associated epigenetic alterations and could have a protective effect against cellular alterations, promoting longevity and health span. While most fasting studies point out the weight and fat mass decreases, it is important to define specific guidelines for fasting and non-fasting days to enhance adherence, minimize the dropout rates of the interventions, and maximize body composition improvement. Although the panorama of evidence on fasting and caloric restriction is wide, there is a lack of a safe fasting protocol to guide physicians in its prescription. The main goal is to identify a how to use guide, a major posology of fasting, inserted within a huge dietetic personalized strategy leading to an optimal and healthy nutritional status.Entities:
Keywords: Mediterranean model; anti-inflammatory diet; body composition; caloric restriction; diet; fasting; longevity; personalized nutrition; starvation
Year: 2021 PMID: 34067055 PMCID: PMC8151159 DOI: 10.3390/nu13051570
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Different types of Fasting.
| Time Restricted Feeding (TRF) | Intermittent Fasting (IF) | Prolonged Fasting (PF) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alternate Day Fasting (ADF) | Modified Alternate Day Fasting (MADF) | |||
| Definition | This is an eating pattern in which the food intake is restricted to a time window of 8–12 h or less every day [ | This form of IF involves fasting every other day or on certain days of the week. Ad libitum caloric intake is followed on non-fasting days [ | This is a form of IF, similar to ADF, with a severe and specific caloric restriction on fasting days. During fasting days, the caloric intake consists of 15–25% of the dietary needs. Ad libitum diet is followed on non-fasting days [ | PF consists in fasting for an extended period, from 4 to 7 days. It has been less commonly studied for longer periods in humans [ |
| Characteristics | Limiting the eating duration may be an effective strategy to reduce the overall caloric intake. It does not necessarily have to involve caloric restriction [ | Starving one day, feasting the next. Only during the fasting days is a caloric restriction expected [ | Restriction days are non-consecutive and include only a small introduction of food. During non-fasting days the intake of food is at leisure [ | During consecutive fasting days usually only water is permitted [ |
| Commonly Practiced | 16/8: feeding window of 8 h/day in which it is allow to consume food and 16 h of fasting [ | 5/2: This is the most common example of ADF. Calories are severely restricted for 2 days (preferably non-consecutive), and then normal eating occurs for the other 5 days in the week [ | 5/2: 15%–25% of Total Daily Energy expenditure (TDEE) is suggested during 2 non-consecutive fasting days a week. Ad libitum food intake for the resting 5 days [ | No commonly practices methods are defined. Periods of deliberate fasting with restrictions on intake of solid food are practiced [ |