12 Possible Health Benefits of Intermittent Fasting
12 Possible
Health Benefits of Intermittent Fasting
IF has received a lot of hype for its potential effect on body
weight and other health parameters, but should you believe it?
There are a few different approaches, but the two most
popular are 16:8, which calls for squeezing all the day’s
meals into an eight-hour window and fasting for the remaining 16 hours,
and 5:2, where five days of the week are spent eating normally and two are
spent fasting (usually defined as eating only
500 to 600 calories per day).
Why would someone opt for
this way of eating versus a standard diet, such as going low-carb or low-fat? Some say fasting has
loads of health benefits. “The research so far proves the benefits of IF
to the extent that it is worthwhile as a method to lose weight, manage your blood sugar, and slow down
the aging process,” says Sara Gottfried, MD, of Berkeley,
California, author of The Hormone Cure, The Hormone Reset
Diet, and Brain Body Diet.
But not everyone’s on
board. “From my standpoint and the standpoint of a lot of other people, it does
tend to fall into the next fad diet category,” says Elizabeth Lowden, MD, a bariatric
endocrinologist at the Northwestern Medicine Metabolic Health and Surgical
Weight Loss Center at Delnor Hospital in Geneva, Illinois. A lot of
the data is conflicted, she says, and many studies done on animals have not yet
been repeated in people. “For every study that shows there's no change, there
are some studies that show maybe there is improvement,” she says.
So rather than take the
claims at face value, we decided to dive into them and explore whether 10
touted benefits of IF are legit, or the science doesn’t yet stack up.
1. Weight Loss
Most people start IF to
lose weight. And that claim seems to hold up, at least in the short term.
According to an article published in August 2015 in the Journal of the Academy
of Nutrition and Dietetics, there’s
a chance that any version of IF may contribute to weight loss. The researchers
looked at data from 13 studies and found that average weight loss ranged
from 1.3 percent for a two-week trial to 8 percent for an eight-week
trial.
That’s probably welcome
news if you’re hoping to fast for weight loss, but the fact that those studies
were short term means it’s unclear if IF is sustainable and can help you keep
extra pounds off in the long run.
The other catch: The
amount of weight lost doesn't seem to be any more than what you’d
expect from another calorie-restricted diet, and depending on how many
calories you’re eating each day, you could even end up gaining
weight. After all, the diet doesn’t restrict high-calorie foods.
When the diet is done
properly, IF can be as effective as normal caloric restriction, Dr. Lowden
says. Some people, especially busy people who don’t have time to devote
to meal planning, might even find a time-restricted diet easier to
follow than something like the keto diet or the paleo diet, she says.
2. Reduced Blood Pressure
IF may help lower high blood pressure in the short
term. A study published in June 2018 in Nutrition and Healthy
Aging found 16:8 significantly decreased the systolic
blood pressure among the 23 study participants. The link has been shown in
both animal and human studies, according to a review published in March 2019 in Nutrients. And, an October 2019 study published in the European Journal of
Nutrition found IF led to even
greater reductions in systolic blood pressure than another diet that didn’t
involve defined eating times.
Having a healthy blood
pressure is important — unhealthy levels can increase your risk for heart disease, stroke, and kidney disease.
But so far the research
shows these blood pressure benefits last only while
IF is practiced. Once the diet ended and people returned to
eating as normal, researchers found the blood pressure readings returned
to their initial levels.
3. Reduced Inflammation
Animal studies have shown
that both IF and general calorie restriction can reduce
inflammation levels, though clinical trials are few and far between. The
authors of a study published in Nutrition Research wanted
to know if that link existed among humans, too. The study involved 50
participants who were fasting for Ramadan, the Muslim holiday, which involves
fasting from sunrise to sunset, and eating overnight. The study showed
that during the fasting period, pro-inflammatory markers were lower than
usual, as was blood pressure, body weight, and body fat.
4. Lower Cholesterol
According to a three-week-long study published in Obesity, alternate-day
fasting may help lower total cholesterol as well as LDL cholesterol when done in combination
with endurance exercise. LDL cholesterol is the “bad” cholesterol that can
raise your risk of heart disease or stroke, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The Obesity researchers
also noted that IF reduced the presence of triglycerides, which are fats
found in the blood that can lead to stroke, heart attack, or heart disease, according to the Mayo Clinic. One caveat
here: The study was short, so more research is needed to understand whether the
effects of IF on cholesterol are long lasting.
5. Better Outcomes for Stroke Survivors
Healthier cholesterol
levels and lower blood pressure (two benefits noted above) play a major role in
helping reduce your risk of stroke. But that’s not the only possible
stroke-related benefit of IF. An article in Experimental and Translational Stroke
Medicine found that IF and calorie reduction in general
may provide a protective mechanism for the brain. In cases where stroke occurs,
it seems eating this way prestroke may ward off brain injury. The researchers
say future studies are needed to determine whether following IF post-stroke can
aid recovery.
6. Boosted Brain Function
Dr. Gottfried says IF
may improve mental acuity and concentration. And there’s some early
research to support that idea: A study on rats published in February 2018 in Experimental Biology
and Medicine found it may help
protect against the decline in memory that comes with age. According to Johns Hopkins Health Review, IF can improve
connections in the brain’s hippocampus and also protect against amyloid
plaques, which are found in patients with Alzheimer’s. This study was done only
in animals, though, so it’s still unclear whether the benefit holds true for
humans.
7. Cancer Protection
Some studies have shown
that alternate-day fasting may reduce cancer risk by decreasing the development
of lymphoma, limiting tumor survival, and slowing the spread of cancer cells, according to a review of studies published in The American Journal of
Clinical Nutrition. The studies that
showed the cancer benefit were all animal studies, though, and more studies are
needed to confirm a benefit for humans and understand the mechanism behind
these effects.
8. Increased Cell Turnover
Gottfried says the period
of rest involved in intermittent fasting increases autophagy, which is “an
important detoxification function in the body to clean out damaged cells.” Put
differently, a break from eating and digestion gives the body a chance to heal
and get rid of junk inside the cells that can accelerate aging, she
says.
A study published in May 2019 in Nutrients found
that time-restricted feeding, which the researchers defined as eating between 8
am and 2 pm, increased the expression of the autophagy gene LC3A and
the protein MTOR, which regulates cell
growth. This study was small, involving only 11 participants for four days. Another study, published in August 2019 in Autophagy, also
noted that food restriction is a well-recognized way to
increase autophagy, specifically neuronal autophagy, which may offer
protective benefits for the brain. There were some limitations with this study
as well, though: It was done on mice and not humans.
9. Reduced Insulin Resistance
Gottfried proposes that
intermittent fasting may help stabilize blood sugar levels in people with diabetes because it resets insulin, though more research is needed. The
idea is that restricting calories may improve insulin resistance, which is a marker of type 2 diabetes, according to a study published in April 2019 in Nutrients.
Fasting, such as the kind of fasting associated with IF, encourages insulin
levels to fall, which may play a role in reducing the risk for type 2, the
study notes. “I have colleagues at other facilities who have seen
positive results especially in improvements in insulin needs for
diabetics,” Lowden says.
The aforementioned study
published in Nutrition and Healthy Aging investigated
this effect in humans, and while a 16:8 approach did result in reductions in
insulin resistance, the results were not significantly different from
the control group. And again, this study was small.
Registered dietitians
advise people with diabetes to approach intermittent fasting with caution.
People on certain medications for type 2 diabetes or those
on insulin (whether to manage blood sugar for type 2 or type 1 diabetes) may be at a greater risk for
low blood sugar, which can be life-threatening. Check with your doctor before
trying intermittent fasting if you have any type of diabetes, they advise.
10. Lower Risk of Cardiovascular Issues
Per the aforementioned Nutrients study,
when insulin levels fall, so does the risk of dangerous cardiovascular events,
such as congestive heart failure, which is important for patients with type 2
diabetes because they are two to four times more likely to die from heart
disease than adults without diabetes, according to the American Heart Association.
The Nutrients study noted
that while there aren’t human studies to confirm the benefit, observational
studies have shown IF may deliver both cardiovascular and metabolic
benefits. Lowden suspects that changes to metabolic parameters, such
as lower levels of triglycerides and a decrease in blood sugar
levels, are the result of losing weight and would be achieved no matter
how the weight was lost, whether through IF or a low-carb diet, for example.
11. Increased Longevity
There have been a few
animal and rodent studies that have shown IF may extend life span,
possibly because fasting seems to build resistance to age-related
diseases. A review published in Current Obesity
Reports in June 2019 noted that while these findings
are promising, it’s been hard to replicate them in human studies. Until that
happens, it’s best to be skeptical about this potential benefit.
12. A Better Night's Sleep
If you’ve ever felt like
you slipped into a food coma after a big meal, you know that diet can have an
impact on wakefulness and sleepiness. Some IF followers report being able to sleep better as a result of following
this way of eating. “IF and mealtimes may have an impact on sleep,”
Rose-Francis says. Why?
One theory is that IF
regulates circadian rhythm, which determines sleep patterns. A regulated
circadian rhythm means you’ll fall asleep easily and wake up feeling refreshed,
though research to support this theory is limited, according to an article published in December 2018
in Nature and Science of
Sleep.
The other theory centers
on the fact that having your last meal earlier in the evening means you’ll have
digested the food by the time you hit the pillow. According to the National Sleep Foundation,
digestion is best done when you’re upright, and going to sleep with a full
stomach can lead to bedtime acid reflux or heartburn, which can make it hard to
fall asleep.
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