Intermittent fasting may protect intestinal health, mouse study says

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
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Intermittent fasting may preserve gut health as an individual ages, according to a new study in mice. Image credit: NICK VEASEY/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY/Getty Images.
  • Intermittent fasting is one of the most popular diets or eating patterns in the United States.
  • Recent studies show intermittent fasting may offer other health benefits than just weight loss such as protection against type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and cancer.
  • A new study found intermittent fasting may also help protect the small intestine as it ages, via a mouse model.

In a new study recently presented at the annual meeting of the American Physiology Summit in Long Beach, CA, researchers from the Arizona College of Osteopathic Medicine at Midwestern University in Downers Grove, IL, reported that intermittent fasting may also help protect the gastrointestinal system — mainly the small intestine — as it ages.

Researchers used a mouse model that they had genetically modified to accelerate aging. One group of mice had food available at all times, while the other group only had access to food during alternating 24-hour cycles.

After 8 months, scientists found that the mice on the fasting plan gained less weight and had structural changes in their small intestines associated with better glucose control and decreased inflammation.

“Our study suggests that intermittent fasting is a beneficial dietary practice to control weight gain, improve blood glucose levels, and promote positive intestinal effects by reducing inflammation and oxidative stress while altering intestinal structure,” Spencer Vroegop, a second-year student at the Arizona College of Osteopathic Medicine at Midwestern University and first author of this study, told Medical News Today.

For this study, researchers focused on a specific part of the small intestine called the Health">jejunum.

The jejunum is the second of the small intestine’s three regions responsible for continuing food digestion and absorbing nutrients and water from food so it can be used in other areas of the body.

“As mammals age, there are inherent damaging changes to the morphology of the small intestine that impact the ability to absorb nutrients and maintain its structure,” Vroegop explained.

“Our study suggests that an intermittent fasting diet may help prevent these age-related changes by returning the jejunum to a ‘younger’ version of itself,” he told us.

Rudolph Bedford, MD, a board-certified gastroenterologist at Providence Saint John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, CA, not involved in the recent study, told MNT that while intermittent fasting may help gastrointestinal Health in some ways, it could also potentially cause issues.

“Essentially, the body needs to be able to work through calories over periods of time and not on an intermittent basis, so to speak,” Bedford explained. “Therefore, one does need to eat.”

“I think what some people will do is that they’ll […] eat over several days, and then they’ll fast for a couple of days, limiting their calorie intake to maybe 500 calories for the whole day,” he continued. “That I have no issues with. I think that longer periods of fasting may be somewhat deleterious to your system and your body.”

Where intermittent fasting may be helpful, Bedford said, is in protecting against the development of conditions such as diabetes and irritable bowel syndrome (IBS).

And, he added, by engaging in intermittent fasting, “[y]ou can essentially give the body a break, so to speak, in terms of having to work and burn through calories or absorb nutrients in many ways.”

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