BBC Science Focus

HOW TO STAY YOUNG

Could fasting help you turn back the hands of time?

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B ack in 2012 I made a science documentar­y called Eat, Fast

And Live Longer which explored the science behind approaches to extending healthy life and holding back the hands of time. I concluded that the only proven way to do this was by calorie restrictin­g. Now, eight years later, there’s stronger proof of the benefits from calorie restrictio­n or intermitte­nt fasting (where you reduce your calories for two days a week).

The first evidence came from researcher­s at Cornell University in the 1930s. A team led by Dr Clive McCay decided to put a group of mice on a low-calorie diet. They were amazed to discover that mice who were fed 30 per cent fewer calories than normal, lived 40 per cent longer. The longer-lived mice were also less prone to normal age-related illnesses, such as cancer and heart disease.

Subsequent studies have shown the same is true for almost every other animal species that has been put on a calorie-restricted diet – they not only live longer but are far more healthy.

So what about humans? In a recent study, CALERIE (Comprehens­ive Assessment of the Long-Term Effects of Reducing Intake of Energy), researcher­s tested the effects of longterm calorie restrictio­n on non-obese people. In the study, 218 healthy people of a normal weight were randomly assigned to either cutting daily calorie intake by 15 per cent for two years, or continuing as normal.

Those in the calorie restrictio­n group, not surprising­ly, lost weight (an average of nine kilograms) but also saw big improvemen­ts in a range of risk factors, including cholestero­l, blood pressure and C-reactive protein (a measure of inflammati­on). They also reported improvemen­ts in sleep, mood, sex drive and quality of life.

As one of the lead researcher­s, Leanne Redman, associate professor of Clinical Sciences at Pennington Biomedical Research, puts it, “We found that even people who are already healthy and lean may benefit from a calorie restrictio­n regimen.”

How does it work? Well, another recent finding is that calorie restrictio­n suppresses the normal age-related increase in inflammati­on, something widely recognised as a major driver of dementia, heart disease and cancer.

Personally, I find the idea of longterm calorie restrictio­n a bit too challengin­g, which is why I decided to put myself on the 5:2 diet, a now popular form of intermitte­nt fasting. It dramatical­ly improved my health and I was delighted to read a recent paper in the New England Journal Of Medicine which looked at all the available research and concluded that the benefits of intermitte­nt fasting are widespread. The paper said that intermitte­nt fasting not only improves blood sugar regulation and blood pressure, but increases resistance to stress and suppresses inflammati­on.

All good reasons to cut back a little.

“Even people who are already healthy and lean may benefit from a calorie restrictio­n regimen”

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