Wednesday, November 4, 2015
Is Intermittent Fasting "Diabesity Incompatible"? Increase in Glucose Excursions (+20-40%) + Impaired Insulin Response During Lunch and Dinner After Skipping Breakfast in T2DM

On the other hand, intermittent fasting conflicts with everything we've been (falsely?) told about the benefits of frequent meals. Benefits of which waredownloadsoft readers know that they are quasi-non-existent, in most healthy individuals and sometimes even counter-productive in obese and diabetic individuals, where most studies refute that eating more frequently provides significant weight loss benefits in the context of a calorically restricted diet.
Do you have to worry about fasting when your're dieting!?
In this group of subjects, skipping breakfast increases post-prandial hyperglycemia (PPHG) after lunch and dinner. It lowers the important GLP-1 response to the meals (learn more about how GLP-1 is important in "Eat More, Burn More and Lose Fat Like on Crack with GLP-1!?") and impairs the subjects' already messed up insulin response. More specifically,
the lunch AUC0-180 for glucose, FFA, and glucagon were 36.8, 41.1 and 14.8% higher, respectively, and the AUC0-180 for insulin and iGLP-1 17.0% and 19.0% lower, respectively, on the NoB[reakfast] day compared with the YesB[reakfast] day (P < 0.0001),Three meals may be ok, but six meals are actually counterprodutive in T2DM. - the dinner AUC0-180 for glucose, FFA, and glucagon were 26.6, 29.6, and 11.5% higher, respectively, and the the AUC0-180 for insulin and iGLP-1 were 7.9% and 16.5% lower on the NoB day compared with the YesB day (P < 0.0001), on the other hand
In conjunction with the 30% delayed insulin peak after lunch and dinner on the NoB[reakfast] day that's bad news for anyone who has pre-existing problems with managing his blood glucose levels.
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Adjusted linear regression coefficients for 24h EI in T2DM patients according to EI at breakfast in % of total EI (Jarvandi. 2014). |
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Figure 2: Hunger, satiety, plasma glucose and insulin in the Eaters and Skippers in the two conditions in Thomas (2015). |
Practically speaking, the results of the previously discussed study by Thomas et al. (2015) imply that by replacing the habitual breakfast eaters in the study at hand by habitual breakfast skippers, the results could have been very different. Against that background and in view of the fact that Jakubowicz's study with its isocaloric lunch + dinner meals (700kcal) did not allow intermittent fasting to work its true, energy intake reducing magic, I would not overrate the practical significance of the study at hand.
Against that background, I'll simply repeat my previous recommendation: If you feel intermittent fasting works for you, stick to it! Be careful, though and don't tell yourself that it would make you lose weight if it does not help you to cut your energy intake - that's very unlikely | Comment on FB!
References: Against that background, I'll simply repeat my previous recommendation: If you feel intermittent fasting works for you, stick to it! Be careful, though and don't tell yourself that it would make you lose weight if it does not help you to cut your energy intake - that's very unlikely | Comment on FB!
- Jakubowicz, Daniela, et al. "Fasting Until Noon Triggers Increased Postprandial Hyperglycemia and Impaired Insulin Response After Lunch and Dinner in Individuals With Type 2 Diabetes: A Randomized Clinical Trial." Diabetes Care (2015): dc150761.
- Jarvandi, Soghra, Mario Schootman, and Susan B. Racette. "Breakfast intake among adults with type 2 diabetes: influence on daily energy intake." Public health nutrition (2014): 1-7.
- Pereira, Mark A., et al. "Breakfast frequency and quality may affect glycemia and appetite in adults and children." The Journal of nutrition 141.1 (2011): 163-168.
- Schlundt, David G., et al. "The role of breakfast in the treatment of obesity: a randomized clinical trial." The American journal of clinical nutrition 55.3 (1992): 645-651.
- Thomas, E. A., Higgins, J., Bessesen, D. H., McNair, B. and Cornier, M.-A. (2015), Usual breakfast eating habits affect response to breakfast skipping in overweight women. Obesity. doi: 10.1002/oby.21049
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