What is intermittent fasting?
Intermittent fasting is a type of diet in which people cycle between
periods of eating and fasting. It does not specify the foods that are
allowed during the eating window.
The most common type of fasting is known as the 16:8 method, which
involves fasting for 16 hours and reducing the eating window to just 8
hours. For example, a person can have dinner at approximately 7 p.m.,
skip breakfast the day after, and eat lunch at around 11 a.m.
Other forms involve fasting for 2 days per week, 24-hour fasting once or twice each week, and fasting every other day.
Researchers used intermittent fasting as a method to reduce the
symptoms of type 2 diabetes in a new observational study conducted in
Canada and published in the journal BMJ Case Reports.
The study included three men, aged 40–67, who were taking both drugs
and daily doses of insulin to manage the disease. They all had high blood pressure and high cholesterol.
"The use of a therapeutic fasting regimen for treatment of
[type 2 diabetes] is virtually unheard of," the authors of the study
write.
Researchers used intermittent fasting as a method to reduce the
symptoms of type 2 diabetes in a new observational study conducted in
Canada and published in the journal BMJ Case Reports.
The study included three men, aged 40–67, who were taking both drugs
and daily doses of insulin to manage the disease. They all had high blood pressure and high cholesterol.
"The use of a therapeutic fasting regimen for treatment of
[type 2 diabetes] is virtually unheard of," the authors of the study
write.
"Intermittent fasting''s effects on diabetes
Before the study, the men attended nutrition
seminars, which gave them information regarding the development of the
condition, its effects on the body, and how to use diet to manage
diabetes.
Then, scientists asked two of them to fast for 24 hours every other
day, while the third fasted for 3 days each week. During fasting days,
the men could drink low-calorie beverages such as water, tea, or coffee. In addition, they could eat a low-calorie meal in the evening.
The trial lasted 10 months in total, and the three men stuck to their
schedule without encountering any difficulties. After the fasting
period, the team measured their weight and blood glucose.
The results revealed significant improvement: all three lost weight,
blood glucose was lower, and they were able to stop using insulin after a
month from the beginning of the trial. In one case, the person stopped
after only 5 days.
Two of the men also discontinued all diabetic drugs, while the third participant stopped 3 out of 4 drugs.
The authors concluded that intermittent fasting may help people with
diabetes, but the study was limited to three participants. More research
is needed to confirm these findings, but they are encouraging.
"This present case series showed that 24-hour fasting
regimens can significantly reverse or eliminate the need for diabetic
medication," conclude the authors.
Published Saturday 13 October 2018
By Chiara Townley Fact checked by Jasmin Collier
1 comment:
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