Alzheimer's disease: Could intermittent fasting help improve memory?

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
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Researchers found in a mouse model that time-restricted eating may help manage symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease. Maskot/Getty Images
  • Intermittent fasting, or time-restricted feeding, involves restricting the energy intake to fixed time periods and fasting outside these times.
  • The practice is associated with several health benefits, such as improved sleep, weight control, blood glucose regulation, cardiac function, and gut health.
  • Studies in mice have found that time-restricted feeding may also have anti-aging and anticancer effects.
  • A new study has found that, in a mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease, time-restricted feeding improved memory and reduced Alzheimer’s pathology in the brain.

A recent study in a mouse model suggests that intermittent fasting, or time-restricted eating, may benefit those experiencing symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease.

Alzheimer’s disease — a progressive and ultimately fatal neurodegenerative condition — is the most common form of dementia.

Current treatments can help to alleviate symptoms, such as memory loss, sleep issues, and behavioral problems.

Newer monoclonal antibody drugs — donanemab, aducanumab, and lecanemab — that clear amyloid plaques perform well in trials. However, these are not yet widely available as research is ongoing.

Another approach to alleviating Alzheimer’s disease symptoms relies on lifestyle modifications.

A laboratory study has found that time-restricted feeding corrects the circadian disruptions of Alzheimer’s disease, improves memory, and reduces the accumulation of amyloid — a protein tied to dementia progression — in the brain.

If these effects in mice can be replicated in people, it could be a simple way to help manage Alzheimer’s disease.

The study, from the University of California San Diego School of Medicine, is published in Cell Metabolism.

Dr. Percy Griffin, Ph.D., Alzheimer’s Association director of scientific engagement, not involved in the research, commented:

“The authors noted that one limitation of the study was the model used. The mouse model only displayed amyloid deposition, which is one of the hallmarks of Alzheimer’s. The model did not display other hallmarks including tau tangle formation [which is another marker of dementia] or brain cell loss. While this is interesting work, we need more research in other models for confirmation.”

In the new study, the researchers used transgenic mice engineered to develop Alzheimer’s disease pathology and wild-type mice.

They divided the mice randomly into two groups, both of which contained some transgenic and some wild-type mice. All the mice were used to 12 hours of light and 12 of darkness.

The transgenic Alzheimer’s disease mice exhibited sleep disruption and altered activity rhythms, being much more active during the dark phase than the wild-type mice.

One group had constant access to food, and the other had food available for only 6 hours during the 12-hour light phase each day. Despite the difference in food availability, both groups consumed equivalent volumes of food and showed no significant differences in body weight.

As well as taking blood samples from the mice for analysis, the researchers tested their cognitive function using two methods — the novel object recognition test (NOR) and an eight-arm radial arm maze (RAM).

At the end of the experimental period, they euthanized the mice and analyzed their brains to assess changes in gene expression and the extent of amyloid deposition.

Unluisler also commented on the potential to translate these findings from mice to humans. She told us:

“Even though the study was done on mice, and findings from animal studies can be difficult to translate to human studies, it provides a good basis for thinking about how intermittent fasting can affect Alzheimer’s disease in humans. Given the possible advantages of intermittent fasting on metabolic Health and neuroprotection, it is logical to speculate that comparable effects would be seen in humans.”

The researchers who conducted the study believe that time-restricted feeding could be an easy way to help alleviate circadian problems in people with Alzheimer’s disease, one of the main causes of them needing residential care.

“Time-restricted feeding is a strategy that people can easily and immediately integrate into their lives,” said senior study author Dr. Paula Desplats, professor in the Department of Neurosciences at UC San Diego School of Medicine. “If we can reproduce our results in humans, this approach could be a simple way to dramatically improve the lives of people living with Alzheimer’s and those who care for them.”

However, Dr. Griffin urged caution: “More work is needed — both in models and in people — before this approach can be recommended broadly as a strategy for reducing the risk of neurodegeneration.”

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