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Increased resistance to Alzheimer's, diabetes may result.  Appeared in CNN.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The health benefits of sharply cutting calories may
occur after periodic fasting, even if the fast does not result in eating
less overall, a new report indicates.
Scientists are now planning a study to see if fasting, which seems to
benefit mice, will also be good for people too.
Benefits ranging from longer life to less stress and greater sensitivity
to insulin have been reported in recent studies of severe reductions in
diet.
In the new report, mice that were fed only every other day -- but could
gorge on the days they did eat -- saw similar health benefits to ones that
had their diet reduced by 40 percent, a team of researchers reports in
Tuesday's online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences.
While the cause of health improvements from cutting back on diet isn't
fully understood, many researchers had assumed that a long-term reduction
in calories was involved.
The new study by Mark Mattson and colleagues at the National Institute on
Aging found equal benefits, however, for mice that ate only every other
day, even if they didn't cut total calories, because they ate twice as
much on days they weren't fasting.
Mattson said a study is being planned to test the effect of fasting on
people. The plan is to compare the health of a group of people fed the
normal three meals a day with a similar group, eating the same diet and
amount of food, but consuming it within four hours and then fasting for 20
hours before eating again.
"Overeating is a big problem now in this country. It's particularly
troublesome that a lot of children are overweight. It's still unclear the
best way to somehow get people to eat less," Mattson said.
"One possibility is skipping a meal a day. Our study suggests that
skipping meals is not bad for you."
Cell stress
Dr. Carol Braunschweig of the University of Illinois at Chicago, who was
not part of the study team, said she was intrigued by the suggestion that
a drastic change in eating patterns might have benefits.
"With the current epidemic of obesity and physical inactivity facing the
U.S. today, identification of a beneficial eating pattern that could
address some of the untoward effects of excess weight would be a very
significant finding," she said.
Mattson said an earlier study found that mice that fasted every other day
had extended life spans. The new experiment found the mice also did better
in factors involved in diabetes and nerve damage in the brain similar to
Alzheimer's disease, he said.
"We think what happens is going without food imposes a mild stress on
cells, and cells respond by increasing their ability to cope with more
severe stress," Mattson said. "It's sort of analogous to physical effects
of exercise on muscle cells."
He said the researchers think this stress occurs throughout the body,
which might be the reason fasting seems to increase life span and the
animals become more resistant to the diseases of aging.
The dieting mice consumed 40 percent less food than mice eating normally
and lost nearly half their body weight (49 percent) in the experiment,
while the fasting mice weighed only a little less than mice eating
normally.
In recent years, some nutritionists have recommended eating smaller
amounts more often, but this study did not deal with that type of eating
pattern.
In the new report, the researchers said both the fasting mice and those on
a restricted diet had concentrations of blood sugar and insulin that were
significantly lower than mice allowed to eat whenever they wanted. Indeed,
insulin levels in the fasting mice were even a bit lower than the dieting
ones.
At the end of the experiment all three groups of mice were injected with a
toxin that damages cells in the part of the brain called the hippocampus.
Cell damage there is involved in Alzheimer's in humans.
When the mouse brains were later analyzed the scientists found that the
brains of the fasting mice were more resistant to damage by the toxin than
the brains of either dieting mice or those eating normally.

April 29, 2003.
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