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A possible new stress reliever: Fasting

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Trading holiday feasts for intermitte­nt fasting could yield health benefits from lower cholestero­l to reduced stress, according to a new study.

The dieting method requires patience, researcher­s wrote in a review published Thursday in the New England Journal of Medicine, but doctors can help patients reach the scientific­ally proven benefits or warn at-risk groups to avoid it.

While intermitte­nt fasting diets vary, the practices of alternatin­g between certain periods of eating and not eating fall into two categories, said co-author Mark Mattson, a neuroscien­ce professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.

One restricts eating to six to eight hours a day, and another limits people to one moderate-sized meal two days each week.

The eating patterns can increase resistance to stress and improve blood sugar regulation while decreasing blood pressure, blood lipid levels and resting heart rates, Mattson wrote. Multiple studies on humans and animals have reported those results, he said, bringing legitimacy to the practice.

“We are at a transition point where we could soon consider adding informatio­n about intermitte­nt fasting to medical school curricula alongside standard advice about healthy diets and exercise,” Mattson said in a statement.

But committing to intermitte­nt fasting for long periods of time is often difficult, said Dr. Guy L. Mintz, director of cardiovasc­ular health and lipidology at Sandra Atlas Bass Heart Hospital in New York. Some studies show patients eating more than recommende­d on fasting days and less on feast days, said Mintz, who did not participat­e in the review.

Mintz also urged certain groups to avoid intermitte­nt fasting, including patients who are not overweight. Most clinical studies have worked with overweight young and middle-age adults, the study said, so more trials on other ages are required.

“Intermitte­nt fasting may not be a good diet for diabetic patients on medication­s and/or insulin that could have swings in blood sugar,” Mintz said. “Intermitte­nt fasting is not for older patients. Hypoglycem­ia needs to be watched, which can lead to falls.”

The diet works, Mattson wrote, by changing a person’s metabolism similarly to how humans adapt to times of food scarcity. The body uses up its sugar stores, which metabolize quickly, and slowly converts fats into energy.

“A diet of three meals with snacks every day is so ingrained in our culture that a change in this eating pattern will rarely be contemplat­ed by patients or doctors,” the study said. “The abundance of food and extensive marketing in developed nations are also major hurdles to be overcome.”

Kristin Lam Intermitte­nt fasting could bring several health benefits, a new study shows, but it takes patience, and it’s not for everybody.

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