| Literature DB >> 34474513 |
Bo Hye Kim1,2, Yena Joo3, Min-Seon Kim4, Han Kyoung Choe5, Qingchun Tong6, Obin Kwon1,2,7.
Abstract
Intermittent fasting has become an increasingly popular strategy in losing weight and associated reduction in obesity-related medical complications. Overwhelming studies support metabolic improvements from intermittent fasting in blood glucose levels, cardiac and brain function, and other health benefits, in addition to weight loss. However, concerns have also been raised on side effects including muscle loss, ketosis, and electrolyte imbalance. Of particular concern, the effect of intermittent fasting on hormonal circadian rhythms has received little attention. Given the known importance of circadian hormonal changes to normal physiology, potential detrimental effects by dysregulation of hormonal changes deserve careful discussions. In this review, we describe the changes in circadian rhythms of hormones caused by intermittent fasting. We covered major hormones commonly pathophysiologically involved in clinical endocrinology, including insulin, thyroid hormones, and glucocorticoids. Given that intermittent fasting could alter both the level and frequency of hormone secretion, decisions on practicing intermittent fasting should take more considerations on potential detrimental consequences versus beneficial effects pertaining to individual health conditions.Entities:
Keywords: Circadian rhythm; Glucocorticoids; Insulin; Intermittent fasting; Thyroid hormones
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34474513 PMCID: PMC8419605 DOI: 10.3803/EnM.2021.405
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endocrinol Metab (Seoul) ISSN: 2093-596X
Fig. 1Graphs illustrating the relative levels of hormones during acute fasting in human (dashed line). Fasting started at different time points (an arrow head in each graph): (A) insulin, fasting onset at 6:00 PM [42], (B) triiodothyronine, fasting onset at 11:30 PM [61], (C) cortisol, fasting onset at 8:30 AM [78]. For comparison, the hormonal level during regular feeding (solid line; breakfast at 7:00 AM, lunch at 12:00 PM, and dinner at 6:00 PM) was depicted in accordance with the clock time. X axis means duration from fasting (hours).
Fig. 2Estimated changes in hormones after long-term intermittent fasting in human (dashed line). X axis presents daily light cycle: light box means daytime (6:00 AM–6:00 PM) and dark box indicates nighttime (6:00 PM–6:00 AM). Normal circadian rhythms of hormones were presented with solid line. (A) Insulin; postprandial peaks were depicted after breakfast (7:00 AM), lunch (12:00 PM), and dinner (6:00 PM). (B) Triiodothyronine. (C) Cortisol.
Summary on the Changes in Hormonal Circadian Rhythm after Intermittent Fasting in Wildtype Rodents
| Hormone | Study | Strain (sex, | Type (duration) | Changes after intervention | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Mean level | Acrophase shift | ||||
| Insulin | Duan et al. (2003) [ | C57BL/6 mouse (male, 8–10) | ADF (3 months) | ↓ | ND |
| Anson et al. (2003) [ | C57BL/6 mouse (male, 8) | ADF (20 weeks) | ↓ | ND | |
| Rubin et al. (1988) [ | Sprague-Dawley rat (male, 36 or 48) | TRF (3 weeks) | ↑ | 9:30 PM → 12:00–1:00 PM | |
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| |||||
| Corticosterone | Morimoto et al. (1977) [ | Sprague-Dawley rat (female, 4 in each sampling time) | TRF (14 days) | ND | 8:00 PM → 12:00 PM |
| Wilkinson et al. (1979) [ | Sprague-Dawley rat (male, 6–8 in each sampling time) | TRF (20 days) | Unchanged | 9:00 PM → 9:00 AM | |
ADF, alternate-day fasting; ND, not determined; TRF, time-restricted feeding.
Among three types of experiments, this review summarized the result obtained from Experiment III.
Summary on the Changes in Hormonal Circadian Rhythm after Intermittent Fasting in Humans
| Hormone | Study | Subjects (sex, age, | Type (duration) | Changes after intervention | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Mean level | Acrophase shift | ||||
| Insulin | Heilbronn et al. (2005) [ | Healthy, nonobese (men, 8; women, 8) | ADF (22 days) | ↓ | ND |
| Harvie et al. (2011) [ | Overweight or obese (women, 42) | 5:2 diet (6 months) | ↓ | ND | |
| Harvie et al. (2013) [ | Overweight (women, 37) | 5:2 diet (4 months | ↓ | ND | |
| Cienfuegos et al. (2020) [ | Obese (4 hours TRF: 16, 6 hours TRF: 19) | TRF (8 weeks) | ↓ | ND | |
|
| |||||
| Triiodothyronine | Stekovic et al. (2019) [ | Healthy (4 weeks: 29, 6 months: 30) | ADF (4 weeks, 6 months) | ↓ | ND |
| Moro et al. (2016) [ | Resistance-trained (men, 17) | TRF (8 weeks) | ↓ | ND | |
|
| |||||
| Cortisol | Jamshed et al. (2019) [ | Overweight (men, 7; women, 4) | TRF (4 days) | ↑ | ND |
ADF, alternate-day fasting; ND, not determined; TRF, time-restricted feeding.
Weight-loss period for 3 months and weight-stabilizing period for 1 month.