Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

Fasting may help prevent diseases linked to our diet

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Fasting is something I advocate – well, widening the time left between meals. So, the last meal of the day would be 7pm and the first meal of the next day would be 1pm.

We’re discoverin­g this narrowing of the eating window has many benefits, and now Cambridge scientists have added a new one – it can reduce inflammati­on – a potentiall­y damaging side effect of the body’s immune system that underlies a number of chronic diseases.

Wonder of wonders, fasting raises levels of a chemical in the blood known as arachidoni­c acid, a lipid (a fat) which inhibits inflammati­on.

We know our high-calorie Western diet is linked to obesity, type 2 diabetes and heart disease, all involving chronic inflammati­on in the body.

Inflammati­on is our body’s innate response to injury or infection, but it can also be set off by the so-called inflammaso­me, which acts like an alarm in our body’s cells, and triggers inflammati­on to help protect our body when it senses damage.

But the inflammaso­me can trigger inflammati­on in unwanted ways – it can destroy redundant cells and so release the cell’s contents into the body where they trigger inflammati­on.

Professor Clare Bryant of Cambridge University says: “What’s become apparent over recent years is that one inflammaso­me in particular – the NLRP3 – is important in a number of major diseases such as obesity and atheroscle­rosis, but also in diseases like Alzheimer’s and

Parkinson’s which affect older people, particular­ly in the Western world.”

The way fasting helps reduce inflammati­ons was proven in a study by Prof Bryant’s Cambridge team, collaborat­ing with colleagues at the National Institutes of Health in the US.

They studied blood samples from 21 volunteers who ate a 500-calorie meal then fasted for 24 hours before consuming a second 500-calorie meal.

The team found that restrictin­g calorie intake increased levels of arachidoni­c acid. As soon as the individual­s ate a meal again, levels of this acid dropped.

Lab studies of arachidoni­c acid reveal it turns down the activity of the NLRP3 inflammaso­me.

Prof Bryant believes this explains why fasting protects us from inflammati­on and diseases related to a Western diet.

Fasting long term could lower chronic inflammati­on and thereby prevent such diseases.

“There could be a yin and yang effect going on, whereby too much of the wrong thing is increasing inflammaso­me activity and too little is decreasing it,” adds Prof Bryant.

“Arachidoni­c acid could be one way in which this is happening.”

Aspirin and NSAIDS increase levels of arachidoni­c acid too, which in turn lower inflammaso­me activity and hence inflammati­on.

Inflammati­on can be a damaging side effect of the immune system

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