Tag Archive for: intermittent fasting

How Fasting Impacts Your Mitochondria

The research scientist in the webinar focused on mitochondria and aging in his part of the presentation. He has helped research and develop a nutrient that appears to help with mitophagy, the process of removing and replenishing old mitochondria. The naturally produced chemical is called urolithin A. It’s produced naturally by the microbiome in response to eating foods such as fruit, especially pomegranate, and nuts. The problem is that we may or may not produce enough urolithin A, depending on the state of our microbiome. There has been decent research on the supplement, and I talked about the supplement in Aging with the Vengeance: Reclaiming Your Power.

What caught my attention was that intermittent fasting may also help with renewing and replenishing mitochondria. The problem becomes what kind of fasting are we talking about? Complete fasting? Eating during only a few hours per day? I’ll cover the two most popular forms.

Intermittent Fasting

Intermittent fasting is “in” right now. It is especially popular when combined with the Paleolithic or the ketogenic diet. What it essentially means is that you take in no calories by mouth for up to 20 hours per day, often called the 20:4 approach, and then you eat during that four-hour block of time. Research has shown that people lose weight, get better control of their prediabetes, and may even reduce some of the metrics related to cardiovascular disease such as blood pressure and cholesterol levels. But specific to mitochondria, the data are nowhere near as clear.

Fasting Mimicking Diet

I first encountered the fasting mimicking diet, or FMD for short, when I looked at the research of Valter Longo. He’s a scientist who has used periodic fasting with patients undergoing cancer treatment. For one to five days before treatment, they go on an FMD which drops down to 500 calories per day in some cases, and then they go back to their regular diet and go through their normal chemotherapy protocol. The critical factor is that he’s shown an improved quality of life as well as improved outcomes for people who used the FMD during treatment as opposed to those who ate their normal diet.

In research in mice, using FMD has demonstrated a reduction in symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease and dementia. Parkinson’s disease, obesity, type 2 diabetes, and others have also benefited from the FMD approach. Dr. Longo has created a commercial program that is available.

Why FMD? As near as I can gather, the concept utilizes the body’s protective mechanisms that allow energy to continue to be produced at a high enough rate to continue carrying on with life (such as searching for food in other eras) in the absence of food until food can be found. Research in athletes who’ve used FMD versus a normal diet has demonstrated maintenance of strength and endurance after going through a five-day FMD protocol while continuing to work out.

The Bottom Line

In my opinion, FMD makes sense. Fasting for two days and then going back to your normal diet for a couple of weeks just makes more sense than obsessing about when you can eat every day. But you may feel intermittent fasting’s a better way to go for your life, and that’s fine as well. One thing for sure is that I’m going to continue to follow this research.

The whole point to this is that restricting calories for long blocks of time stimulates the body to take good care of our mitochondria; that’s one battle that we have to win if we expect to age with a vengeance. And the great thing is that you can begin at any age.

What are you prepared to do today?

        Dr. Chet

Summer Body Prep Time

This week culminates with the first outdoor holiday of the summer season, and for many of us, the first family cook-out in over a year. Next week I’m going to review a study on the benefits of intermittent fasting, but I want to challenge you to mimic part of the study before the weekend to see how you do. Here’s the task.

For any two consecutive days, cap your eating at 1,200 calories. If you can get by on 1,000 calories, great, but no more than 1,200 and no fewer than 800. The second part is to make them vegan days as well. Don’t think only salads and carrot sticks: beans, legumes, nuts, root vegetables, and every other vegetable and fruit you can think of as well as whole grains. Two days—that’s all. Then you can resume your normal eating if you want. That will give you at least part of experience of the subjects in the intermittent fasting study I’ll review.

The irises in the photo are from our yard. Two years ago, we dug up entire iris beds and replanted them until we ran out of space. This year, they produced more flowers than ever, and they’re just beginning; the ones pictured are hand-me-down yellow ones we got from Paula’s dad and another called “Red at Night.” There are more colors to come, including an electric blue called “Blue Suede Shoes.”

All those flowers don’t happen by accident; neither does a healthier and fitter body. It takes work and it may take a while to see the benefits, just like the irises. Take the vegan-fast challenge and see how you do. Just remember: no lower than 800 calories and no more than 1,200. It will give you a sense of how the subjects initially felt in the study on fasting, the microbiome, and blood pressure.

Paula and I are going to spend this week putting flowers in containers, so this is the only Memo this week. Enjoy the outdoors and if you’re traveling, be safe. See you next week.

What are you prepared to do today?

        Dr. Chet

Can Fasting Reduce Inflammation?

In this Memo, I’ll review the third paper from the recent journal Cell on fasting and summarize what this all may mean for the use of intermittent fasting.

Researchers used both mice and humans as subjects in a series of studies. The objective was to examine how the immune system responded to a fasting protocol. For the study in humans, the subjects fasted for 19 hours after eating, with blood samples taken before and after the fast. In the mice, a variety of protocols were used. The most common was mice were fed for a short time before food was withheld for the remainder of 24 hours.

In mice and humans, circulating monocytes were reduced. This was important because they were pro-inflammatory in nature; thus inflammation decreased in response to the fasting protocol. In some of the studies, this reduction was maintained even with exposure to pathogens. That means the immune response was not compromised even in animals with induced autoimmune diseases.

Fasting Protocols

Three different studies used at least three different approaches to fasting. In the first study, food was withheld completely for 36 hours. In some phases of the second study, calories were reduced by 50% although the vitamins, minerals, and protein were maintained at normal levels. The final study used a fasting protocol we’re most familiar with: eat within a few hours and liquids only the remainder of the day.

The results were similar in sustaining and perhaps improving the immune system of the animals when placed under pathogenic stress. The only issue is what form of dietary restriction worked best? You can’t ask mice how they felt; you can only check immune system markers. In one of the approaches, the skin of the mice was injured at different times of continued fasting. The healing ability continued until the fast went beyond 48 hours; after that wound-healing was impaired.

The Bottom Line

These studies haven’t changed my approach to fasting. If you’re going to fast to rejuvenate your immune system, don’t play games. Reduce caloric intake to 500 to 800 calories per day for two to three days; those studies show the best benefit. Be sure to select small quantities of the healthiest foods.

Fasting is not abstinence. The current approaches to intermittent fasting are really intermittent abstinence. The idea is to abstain from food completely for 12 to 18 hours while still drinking liquids. That may not be possible for everyone. Some medications have to be taken in relation to food intake. Pre-diabetics and type 2 diabetics should still monitor blood sugar, especially if exercising during the fasting times. The current intermittent fasting approach is more about controlling when you eat than anything else, and that’s something you should do anyway.

I believe in fasting. That’s why I wrote Real-Life Detox—so you could do it right and gain the most benefit. The critical thing is to find a way to eat that you can sustain for the rest of your life, and that includes occasional fasts.

Eat less. Eat better. Move more. That’s always the goal.

What are you prepared to do today?

        Dr. Chet

References:
1. Cell. 2019. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2019.07.047.
2. Cell. 2019. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2019.07.049.
3. Cell. 2019. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2019.07.050

Fasting and Immune Function

Intermittent fasting is the latest health fad. When I say fad, I mean there are as many definitions of what it means as there are experts. In a recent edition of the journal Cell, three papers were published that provided some insight into the effects of three different types of intermittent fasting on three different systems involved in immune function. That’s our topic of the week. I’ll present each study and comment on the implications on Saturday.

In the first paper, researchers used juvenile mice to examine changes in immune function in sections of the intestine called Peyer’s patches (PP). These patches form an important part of the immune system by monitoring intestinal bacteria populations and preventing the growth of pathogenic bacteria in the intestines. The mice were fasted for 36 hours. Results were compared with normally fed mice that served as controls.

During fasting, immune cells were disrupted and thus compromised the typical immune response; specifically, B cells were sent to bone marrow. It’s difficult to say whether this is a protective mechanism or not. The B cells were returned to the PP during re-feeding. There were many more parts of the study, but the bottom line was that the immune system was compromised during fasting and remained impaired for a time after re-feeding.

We’ll take a look at the second study on Thursday.

What are you prepared to do today?

        Dr. Chet

References:
1. Cell. 2019. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2019.07.047.
2. http://bit.ly/2lxYIRa.