| Literature DB >> 34836202 |
Elisa Berthelot1,2, Damien Etchecopar-Etchart1,2, Dimitri Thellier3, Christophe Lancon1,2, Laurent Boyer1,2, Guillaume Fond1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fasting interventions have shown effectiveness in alleviating stress, anxiety and depressive symptoms. However, no quantitative analysis has been carried out thus far. The objective was to determine the effectiveness of fasting interventions on stress, anxiety and depression and if these interventions were associated with increased or decreased fatigue/energy.Entities:
Keywords: antidepressant; anxiety; depression; fasting; mental health; obesity; physical health; public health; schizophrenia
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34836202 PMCID: PMC8624477 DOI: 10.3390/nu13113947
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Flow chart.
Figure 2Forests plots of Ramadan studies for stress, anxiety and depression.
Study characteristics.
| Study | Country | N | N F | N C | N(%) Men | Design | Population | Fasting Intervention | Controls | Endpoint * | Scales ** | Authors’ Conclusion | Adverse Events | N Dropout Fasting | N Dropout Controls |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Koushali (2013) | Iran | 313 | 313 | NA | 177(56.5%) | OBS | Hospital nurses | Ramadan | NA | 1 to 2 | Anxiety: DASS21 | Depression and stress were significantly reduced ( | md | NA | NA |
| Mousavi (2014) | Iran | 110 | 110 | NA | 13(11.8%) | OBS | Residents of Kermanshah city | Ramadan | NA | MD | Anxiety: GHQ subscore | Significant reduction in anxiety ( | md | NA | NA |
| Erdem (2018) | Turkey | 73 | 73 | NA | 63(86.3%) | OBS | Muslim healthy volunteers | Ramadan | NA | 0 | Stress: DASS-42 | Significant reduction in depression ( | md | NA | NA |
| Al-Ozairi (2019) [ | Kuwait | 463 | 463 | NA | 251(54.2%) | OBS | Type 2 diabetes Muslim patients ≥21 years | Ramadan | NA | 4–6 | Depression: PHQ-9 | Significant reduction in depressive symptoms after Ramadan ( | md | NA | NA |
| Nugraha (2017) | Germany | 50 | 25 | 25 | 50(100%) | CT | Healthy male volunteers ≥ 18 years (mostly students) | Ramadan | No fasting and no other intervention | 1 | Anxiety: HADS | Significant reduction in depressive symptoms after Ramadan ( | Increased fatigue during first week of Ramadan, then decreased fatigue during week 2 to 4 but decreased sleepiness during whole Ramadan. | 3/28(10.7%) (2 time schedule, 1 other reason) | 2/28(7.6%) (other reason) |
| Teng (2011) [ | Malaysia | 25 | 12 | 13 | 25(100%) | CT | Healthy men aged 50 to 70 years, BMI 23.0 to 29.9 kg/m2 | Reduction in 300 to 500 kcal/day from thei habitual energy intake + two days of Muslim sunnah * fasting per week | No fasting and no other intervention | 0 | Depression: | Non-significant reduction in depressive symptoms after fasting intervention ( | Adverse events were not reported but 2 participants were unable to follow the fasting intervention | 2/14(14.2%) (unable to follow the fasting intervention) | 1/14(7.1%) (personal reasons) |
| Hussin (2013) | Malaysia | 32 | 16 | 16 | 32(100%) | RCT | Healthy men aged 50 to 70 years, BMI 23.0 to 29.9 kg/m2 | Reduction of 300 to 500 kcal/day from thei habitual energy intake + two days of Muslim sunnah * fasting per week | No fasting and no other intervention | 0 | Depression: BDI-II. | Non-significant reduction in depressive symptoms after fasting intervention ( | No reported adverse events. | 0(0%) | 1/16(6.2%) |
| Kahleova (2015) | Czech Rebublic | 54 | 27 | 27 | 29(54 %) | RCT | Patient with type 2 diabetes, mean age 59.4 years, mean BMI 32.6 kg/m2 | Time Restricted feeding (14 h fasting/day) + caloric restriction | 6 meals/day (3 meals + 3 snacks) | 0 | Depression: BDI-II | Significant reduction in depression score was decreased in the fasting group ( | No reported adverse events. | 3/27(11.1%) (1 personal reasons, 2 lack of motivation) | 4/27(14.8%) (2 personal reasons, 2 lack of motivation) |
| Martin(2016) [ | USA | 218 | 143 | 75 | 66(30%) | RCT | Healthy men aged 20 to 50 years and women aged 20 to 47 years, with a BMI between 22.0 and 28.0 | 25% Caloric Restriction | No fasting and no other intervention | 0 | Depression: | Significant improvement in the depression score ( | No reported adverse events but 3/117(2.6%) participants of the fasting group were removed for safety reasons (not detailed). | 26/143(18.2%) (8 withdrew consent, 6 moved away from study site, 6 for personal and other reasons, 3 women became pregnant, 3 withdrawn for safety) | 5/75(6.7%) (3 women became pregnant, 1 withdrew consent) |
| Prehn (2017) [ | Germany | 37 | 19 | 18 | 0(0%) | RCT | Older obese women, mean age 61 years, mean BMI 35 | Low calorie diet (800 kcal/J) | No fasting and no other intervention | 0 | Anxiety: STAI Depression: BDI-II | Reduction in Beck’s depression score ( | No reported adverse events but 6 subjects were excluded for instruction failure without details. | 5/23(21.7%) (personal reasons) | 5/24(20.8%) |
| Kessler (2018) [ | Germany | 36 | 22 | 14 | 14(39)% | CT | Healthy volunteers | Fixed fasting day per week for 8 weeks, a fixed week day | 2 groups counseling sessions for healthy diet + waiting list for fasting intervention | 0 | Anxiety: HADS-A Depression: HADS-D Fatigue: POMS | Significant within- group differences in the fasting group were observed after 6 months for the HADS total score, and the HADS depression and anxiety subscales, the POMS total score (including subscales for positive mood and vigor). | Adverse events: headache, migraine, nausea, ravenousness, circulatory disturbance, hunger, general feeling of weakness, tiredness, stomach ache, meteorism, heartburn, and cold sensations in the body. |
* in weeks after end of fasting intervention. ** all scales were self-reported questionnaires. BDI-II, Beck Depression Inventory. DASS, Depression Anxiety Stress Scale (DASS-42). GHQ, General Health Questionnaire. GHQ-28, General Health Questionnaire-28. HADS, Hospitalization Anxiety and Depression scale. POMS, Profile of Mood states. PHQ, Patient Health Questionnaire. STAI, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory. F, Fasting. C, Controls. MD, missing data. OBS, observational. RCT, randomized controlled trial. SD, standardized deviation. NA: not adapted.
Figure 3Forest plots of fasting intervention controlled studies for anxiety, depression and body mass index.