Intermittent fasting
reduces Multiple Sclerosis (MS)-like symptoms, a study
on mice by U.S. researchers
shows.
MS is a potentially
disabling disease of the brain and spinal cord (central nervous system)
In the study, mice were
either allowed to eat freely or fed every other day for four weeks before receiving
an immunization to trigger
MS-like symptoms.
Both groups of mice then
continued on their same diets for another seven weeks.
The mice that fasted every
other day were less likely to develop signs of neurological damage such as
difficulty
walking, limb weakness and
paralysis.
Some of the fasting mice
did develop MS-like symptoms, but they appeared later and were less severe than
in the
mice that ate their fill
every day.
In addition, the fasting
mice’s immune systems seemed to be dialed down.
As compared with mice that
took daily meals, those that ate every other day had fewer pro-inflammatory
immune
cells and more of a kind of
immune cell that keeps the immune response in check.
“There are several possible
ways fasting can affect inflammation and the immune response,” said Laura
Piccio,
an associate professor of
neurology at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
“One is by changing hormone
levels. We found that levels of the anti-inflammatory hormone corticosterone
were
nearly twice as high in the
fasting mice.”
The researchers said
fasting also could act through the gut microbiome. A change in the makeup of
the gut community could
alter whether the immune system has a pro- or anti-inflammatory bent.
After four weeks, the mice
that fasted sheltered a more diverse ecosystem in their guts than mice that ate
every day.
In particular, the fasting
mice had more of the soothing probiotic bacteria Lactobacillus, which
other studies in mice have
linked to milder MS-like symptoms.
Moreover, transferring gut
bacteria from fasting mice to non-fasting mice made the recipients less
susceptible
to developing MS-like
symptoms, suggesting that something in the microbial community was protecting
the mice.
Based on this mice study
that was published earlier June in the journal Cell Metabolism, the researchers
at the university are now
recruiting human patients with relapsing-remitting MS for a 12-week study.
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