Search Weight Loss Topics: |
Does Fasting Improve Gut Health? What to Know | Time – TIME


If you spend a lot of time online, you may have noticed that parts of the internet have caught fasting fever. Online message boards are awash in posts touting the benefits of time-restricted eating and other intermittent-fasting approaches that involve going without caloric foods or drinks for an extended period of timeanywhere from 12 hours to several days. These online testimonials have helped popularize intermittent fasting, and they often feature two common-sense rationalizations: One, that human beings evolved in environments where food was scarce and meals occurred sporadically; and two, that the relatively recent shift to near round-the-clock eating has been disastrous for our intestinal and metabolic health.
Mining the internet for accurate information, especially when it comes to dieting, can feel like panning for gold. Youve got to sift through a lot of junk to find anything valuable. But this is one case where nuggets may be easy to find. A lot of the published peer-reviewed research on intermittent fasting makes the same claims youll find on those Reddit message boards. Until recently, food availability has been unpredictable for humans, wrote the authors of a 2021 review paper in the American Journal of Physiology. Knowledge of early human evolution and data from recent studies of hunter-gatherer societies suggest humans evolved in environments with intermittent periods of food scarcity. They say that fasting regimens may provide a period of gut rest that could lead to several meaningful health benefits, including improved gut microbe diversity, gut barrier function, and immune function.
The past decade has witnessed an explosion in fasting-relatedid research. (According to Google Scholar, the last five years alone contain almost 150,000 articles that examine or mention fasting.) While that work has helped established links between intermittent fasting and weight loss, as well as other benefits, its not yet clear when (or if) fasting can help fix a sick gut. I would still consider the evidence moderate, says Dr. Emeran Mayer, a professor of medicine and founding director of the Goodman Luskin Microbiome Center at the University of California, Los Angeles. [Fasting] looks like a prudent way to maintain metabolic health or reestablish metabolic health, but its not a miracle cure.
When it comes to gut conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), he says the research is either absent or inconclusive. To his point, researchers have found that Ramadan fastinga month-long religious period when people dont eat or drink between sunrise and sunsetcan substantially remodel the guts bacteria communities in helpful and healthy ways. However, among people with IBD, studies on Ramadan fasting have also found that a persons gut symptoms may grow worse.
While its too early to tout fasting plans as a panacea for gut-related disorders, experts say theres still reason to hope these approaches may emerge as a form of treatment. Its clear that some radical, and perhaps radically beneficial, things happen when you give your body breaks from food.
For a series of recent studies, a team of researchers based in the Netherlands and China examined the effects of Ramadan-style intermittent fasting on the gut microbiomethe billions of bacteria that reside in the human gastrointestinal tract. (Ramadan comes up a lot in published research because it provides a real-world opportunity for experts to examine the effects of 12- or 16-hour fasts, which is what many popular intermittent fasting diets espouse.) We really wanted to know what intermittent fasting does to the body, says Dr. Maikel Peppelenbosch, a member of that research team and a professor of gastroenterology at Erasmus University Medical Center in the Netherlands. Generally, weve seen that intermittent fasting changes the microbiome very clearly, and we view some of the changes as beneficial. If you look at fasting in general, not only Ramadan, you see certain types of bacteria increasing.
For example, he says that intermittent fasting pumps up the guts population of a family of bacteria called Lachnospiraceae. In the intestines, bacteria are constantly battling for ecological space, he explains. Unlike some other gut microorganisms, Lachnospiraceae can survive happily in an empty GI tract. They can live off the slime the gut makes itself, so they can outcompete other bacteria in a fasting state. Lachnospiraceae produces a short-chain fatty acid called butyrate, which seems to be critically important for gut health. Butyrate sends anti-inflammatory signals to the immune system, which could help reduce pain and other symptoms of gut dysfunction. Butyrate also improves the barrier function of the intestines, Peppelenbosch says. This is, potentially, a very big deal. Poor barrier function (sometimes referred to as leaky gut) is a hallmark of common GI conditions, including inflammatory bowel disease. If intermittent fasting can turn down inflammation and also help normalize the walls of the GI tract, those changes may have major therapeutic implications.
Lachnospiraceae is only one of several types of helpful bacteria that research has linked to fasting plans. But at this point, there are still a lot of gaps in the science. Peppelenbosch says the guts of people with bowel disorders dont seem to respond to fasting in exactly the same way as the guts of people without these health issues. In ill people, we see the same changes to the microbiome, but its not as clear cut as in healthy volunteers, he says. So we are now actually trying to figure out whats going on there.
Healthy microbiome shifts arent the only possible benefits that researchers have linked to intermittent fasting. UCLAs Mayer mentions a phenomenon called the migrating motor complex. This is rarely mentioned in fasting articles today, but when I was a junior faculty it was one of the hottest discoveries in gastroenterology research, he says. The migrating motor complex refers to recurrent cycles of powerful contractions that sweep the contents of the gut, including its bacteria, down into the colon. Its this 90-minute recurring contractile wave that swoops down the intestine, and its strength is comparable to a nutcracker, he says. Essentially, this motor complex behaves like a street-cleaning crew tidying up after a parade. It ensures the gut is cleared out and cleaned up in between meals, via 90-minute repeating cycles that fasting allows to be become more frequent. It also helps rebalance the guts microbial populations so that more of them are residing in the colon and lower regions of the GI tract. But its stopped the minute you take a biteit turns off immediately, he says.
Mayer says that modern eating habitsso-called grazing, or eating steadily throughout the dayleave little time for the migrating motor complex to do its thing. This function has been relegated to the time when we sleep, but even this has been disrupted because a lot of people wake up in the middle of the night and snack on something, he says. So those longer periods of time when we re-cleanse and rebalance our gut so that we have normal distributions of bacteria and normal population densitiesthat has been severely disturbed by these lifestyle changes.
Ideally, Mayer says people could (for the most part) adhere to the kind of time-restricted eating program that allows a full 12-to-14 hours each day for the motor complex to work. If you dont snack, this motor complex would happen between meals, and youd also get this 12- to 14-hour window at night where the digestive system was empty, he explains. In other words, sticking to three meals a day and avoiding between-meal bites (or nighttime snacks) could be sufficient. But again, its not clear whether this sort of eating schedule can undo gut damage or treat existing dysfunction.
Read More: The Truth About Fasting and Type 2 Diabetes
Another possible perk of fasting involves a biological process called autophagy. During autophagy, old or damaged cells die and are cleared away by the body. Some researchers have called it a helpful housekeeping mechanism, and it occurs naturally when the body goes without energy (calories) for an extended period of time. Theres been some expert speculation, based mostly on evidence in lab and animal studies, that autophagy could help strengthen the gut or counteract the types of barrier problems seen in people with IBD. But these improvements have not yet been demonstrated in real-world clinical trials involving people.
Meanwhile, some experts have found that fasting may help recalibrate the guts metabolic rhythms in helpful ways. By changing the timing of the diet, this will indeed change activity of themicrobiome, and that may have downstream impacts on health, says Dr. Eran Elinav, principal investigator of the Host-Microbiome Interaction Research Group at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel.
Some of Elinavs work, including an influential 2016 paper in the journal Cell, has shown that the gut microbiome undergoes day-night shifts that are influenced by a persons eating schedule, and that lead to changing patterns of metabolite production, gene expression, and other significant elements of gut health. If you change the timing of diet, you can flip the circadian activity of the microbiome, he says. This is likely to have health implications, though what those are, precisely, remains murky.
Read More: What We Know About Leaky Gut Syndrome
Its clear that when you eat, including how often you eat, matters to the health of your gut. But the devils in the details. At this point, its not clear how intermittent fasting can be used to help people with gut-related disorders or metabolic diseases.
For a condition like IBD, its important to differentiate between what you do during a flare and what you do to prevent the next flare, Mayer points out. The research on people observing Ramadan suggests that, at least during a flare, fasting may make a persons IBD symptoms worse. Figuring out whether fasting could also lead to longer-term improvements is just one of many questions that needs to be answered.
While plenty of unknowns remain, experts say that common approaches to fasting appear to be safe for most people. Time-restricted eating, for example, involves cramming all your days calories into a single six-to-eight-hour eating window. Even among people with metabolic diseases such as Type 2 diabetes, research suggests that this form of fasting is safe, provided a person is not taking blood-glucose medications.
That said, there simply isnt much work on intermittent fasting as a treatment for gut problems. Also, there is very little research on more extreme forms of fasting, such as plans that involve going without calories for several days at a stretch. These diets may turn out to be therapeutic, but they could also turn out to be dangerous. If youre considering any of these approaches, talk with your health care provider first.
We really need much better studies to compare all the different fasting protocols, says Peppelenbosch. But generally speaking, increasing the space between calorie consumption is a good thing for you. The body is not made to be eating all day.
More Must-Read Stories From TIME
Contact us at letters@time.com.
More:
Does Fasting Improve Gut Health? What to Know | Time - TIME
- Macro Diet 101: How to Count Macros for Weight Loss, Per Dietitians - Prevention Magazine - December 6th, 2023 [December 6th, 2023]
- Military Diet Plan: Pros and Cons of the 3-Day Weight Loss Method - Prevention Magazine - December 6th, 2023 [December 6th, 2023]
- What Is the Ayurvedic Diet? Foods, Doshas, and More - Greatist - November 19th, 2023 [November 19th, 2023]
- Hoyt Purvis Award Winners Announced During International ... - University of Arkansas Newswire - November 19th, 2023 [November 19th, 2023]
- Health literacy, transportation infrastructure, and more: Alaska ... - State of Reform - November 19th, 2023 [November 19th, 2023]
- Ted Lasso Star Fleur East Shares Swimsuit Video of "Life" - Celebwell - November 19th, 2023 [November 19th, 2023]
- Meat Substitutes Market is Expected to Grow $4.04 billion by 2027 - GlobeNewswire - November 19th, 2023 [November 19th, 2023]
- 3 Habits You Should Have to Stay Young | BOXROX - BOXROX - November 19th, 2023 [November 19th, 2023]
- Diet culture warped my childhood. I'm not letting it take over my adulthood as well - ABC News - May 11th, 2023 [May 11th, 2023]
- With Hepatitis Month, a Reminder of Accomplishments, but Still Work ... - Contagionlive.com - May 11th, 2023 [May 11th, 2023]
- Why Chewing Helps Boost Your Cognitive Function, According to a ... - EatingWell - May 11th, 2023 [May 11th, 2023]
- What Is the Best IBS-D Diet? Foods to Include or Limit - Healthgrades - May 11th, 2023 [May 11th, 2023]
- Weekly review: Women have a harder time losing weight in midlife ... - The Daily Briefing - May 11th, 2023 [May 11th, 2023]
- A 102-year-old doctor still does consulting work and plans to live at ... - msnNOW - May 11th, 2023 [May 11th, 2023]
- Vegan Strength-Training: Don't Believe These 5 Common Myths - VegNews - May 11th, 2023 [May 11th, 2023]
- Im a dietician here are 4 cheap diet hacks BETTER for weight loss than Wegovy and Ozempic jabs... - The US Sun - May 11th, 2023 [May 11th, 2023]
- Is Tofu Good for You? Here's what the science says - ZME Science - May 11th, 2023 [May 11th, 2023]
- Why nutrition experts say you (probably) dont need that gluten-free diet - The Manual - May 11th, 2023 [May 11th, 2023]
- 5 Essential Tips To Lose Belly Fat From Personal Trainers - Fatherly - May 11th, 2023 [May 11th, 2023]
- VCU to Study Effects of Stress on Heart Health - Public News Service - May 11th, 2023 [May 11th, 2023]
- Intermittent Fasting and the Mediterranean Diet: The Ultimate Guide - Fitness Volt - May 11th, 2023 [May 11th, 2023]
- Food For Thought with Kat | Mind food | Arts And Culture ... - The Manchester Journal - May 3rd, 2023 [May 3rd, 2023]
- Dogs and Vegan Diets: Can It Work? - American Feed Industry Association - May 3rd, 2023 [May 3rd, 2023]
- The never-ending vitamin debate: Do multivitamins work? - Nutritional Outlook - May 3rd, 2023 [May 3rd, 2023]
- The No. 1 diet for heart health is the DASH eating planhere's how it works - CNBC - May 3rd, 2023 [May 3rd, 2023]
- The Champions of Employee Health: Top Corporate Wellness ... - Corporate Wellness Magazine - May 3rd, 2023 [May 3rd, 2023]
- Type 2 diabetes: Endoscopic procedure may reduce the need for ... - Medical News Today - May 3rd, 2023 [May 3rd, 2023]
- Virat Kohli says he uses olive oil only in salads: Can steamed, boiled and pan-fried food work for you too? - The Indian Express - May 3rd, 2023 [May 3rd, 2023]
- Why Is Everyone Talking About Blood Glucose? Ask The Glucose ... - Bustle - May 3rd, 2023 [May 3rd, 2023]
- Jamie Chung in Bathing Suit "Looks Amazing" - Celebwell - May 3rd, 2023 [May 3rd, 2023]
- Letter to the Editor: The panelists at the Longevity Project event did ... - Summit Daily - April 25th, 2023 [April 25th, 2023]
- The Ultimate Glucose Guide: 80 Foods That Lower Blood Sugar - Camille Styles - April 25th, 2023 [April 25th, 2023]
- 9 Celebrities Who Have Tried Out Unconventional Diets - TooFab - April 25th, 2023 [April 25th, 2023]
- New Research Refining How We Feed Horses with EMS, ID The ... - TheHorse.com - April 25th, 2023 [April 25th, 2023]
- Could Certain Foods Help With Hot Flashes? - The New York Times - April 25th, 2023 [April 25th, 2023]
- Body Found In Scottsdale Canal + Road Diets Wont Be On Ballot - Patch - April 25th, 2023 [April 25th, 2023]
- It Felt As If Our Son Was Struck By Lightning - AOL - April 25th, 2023 [April 25th, 2023]
- Activist Reveals How Going Vegan Could Save the Planet - BookTrib - April 25th, 2023 [April 25th, 2023]
- Camila Mendes in Bathing Suit is Photographed By Lili Reinhart - Celebwell - April 25th, 2023 [April 25th, 2023]
- What Are Gut-Health Diets and Do They Really Work? - Men's Health UK - April 25th, 2023 [April 25th, 2023]
- What Is the Harvard Diet? - The Healthy - April 6th, 2023 [April 6th, 2023]
- What is the liver cleanse diet? Does it work? - Sportskeeda - April 6th, 2023 [April 6th, 2023]
- Can the MIND Diet Slow the Progression of Alzheimer's? - DISCOVER Magazine - April 6th, 2023 [April 6th, 2023]
- In Bahamas, a struggle to save conch, and a way of life - The Associated Press - April 6th, 2023 [April 6th, 2023]
- Melting permafrost reveals bodies of ancient Mongolians and their diets, study says - AOL - April 6th, 2023 [April 6th, 2023]
- Jewish Food Rituals in the Age of Diet Culture | New Voices - New Voices - April 6th, 2023 [April 6th, 2023]
- Chris Martin Eats 1 Meal Per Day. Here's Why That's a Bad Idea - Healthline - April 6th, 2023 [April 6th, 2023]
- Can Low-Carb Diets Help Cut the Risk of Diabetes? - Bel Marra Health - April 6th, 2023 [April 6th, 2023]
- Why Everyone's Talking About "Intuitive Eating," the Non-Diet ... - msnNOW - April 6th, 2023 [April 6th, 2023]
- 7 Heart Disease Myths You Can Stop Believing | livestrong - Livestrong - April 6th, 2023 [April 6th, 2023]
- Its about more than just food: Mediterranean diet is part of a whole way of life - The Guardian - March 20th, 2023 [March 20th, 2023]
- Ozempic Is a Weight-Loss Sensation, But These Foods Give The ... - ScienceAlert - March 20th, 2023 [March 20th, 2023]
- This 56-Year-Old Lost 21lbs in 21 Days on the 'McDonald's Diet' - Men's Health UK - March 20th, 2023 [March 20th, 2023]
- Does the Anti-Inflammatory Diet Really Work? - Verywell Health - March 20th, 2023 [March 20th, 2023]
- 3 ways to unlock the power of food to promote heart health - The Conversation - March 20th, 2023 [March 20th, 2023]
- What are the real signs of a healthy gut? A users guide - The Guardian - March 20th, 2023 [March 20th, 2023]
- Ask the Vet: How do I know when it's time to say goodbye? - Decaturish.com - March 20th, 2023 [March 20th, 2023]
- The Easiest Diets To Follow, According To Experts - Forbes - March 20th, 2023 [March 20th, 2023]
- Keto Diet For Women Over 50: Is It Really A Weight Loss Wonder? - CrunchyTales.com - March 12th, 2023 [March 12th, 2023]
- Separating Mainstream Diets From Oncology Nutrition - Curetoday.com - March 12th, 2023 [March 12th, 2023]
- Whole Food Systems: Jessica Fanzo Looks at How Food Connects ... - Columbia University - March 12th, 2023 [March 12th, 2023]
- How the MIND and Mediterranean Diets May Impact Your ... - Prevention Magazine - March 12th, 2023 [March 12th, 2023]
- Heart: Can Keto-Like Diets Lead To Heart Diseases? - NDTV - March 12th, 2023 [March 12th, 2023]
- Are fad diets the way to go? - CanIndia News - March 12th, 2023 [March 12th, 2023]
- Rich Gaspari: Hard Work Is Being Replaced By Drugs | The Mike O ... - Generation Iron Fitness Network - March 12th, 2023 [March 12th, 2023]
- How Jennifer Lopez has reversed the aging process as she stars in new lingerie campaign at 53 - Daily Mail - March 12th, 2023 [March 12th, 2023]
- Food elimination diet is a viable alternative therapy for eosinophilic ... - BMC Gastroenterology - March 12th, 2023 [March 12th, 2023]
- Ice Hack Diet: the viral weight loss trick that has internet captivated - Sportskeeda - March 12th, 2023 [March 12th, 2023]
- Calorie deficit diet: What it is and who should do it - Insider - March 4th, 2023 [March 4th, 2023]
- What is Reverse Dieting - the latest weight loss trend, and does it really work? - Times Now - March 4th, 2023 [March 4th, 2023]
- The Cheese-Loving French Now Want To Put $12 Million Toward ... - VegNews - March 4th, 2023 [March 4th, 2023]
- Latin America, Caribbean have highest costs for nutritious diets-FAO - St Vincent Times - March 4th, 2023 [March 4th, 2023]
- Healthy means more than just eating right - Chicago Sun-Times - March 4th, 2023 [March 4th, 2023]
- Best Weight Loss Programs Of 2023 Reviewed Forbes Health - Forbes - March 4th, 2023 [March 4th, 2023]
- Keto Gummies Singapore Reviews [Aleart] 2023: Lets Keto Gummies Singapore & South Africa Price, Where To Buy - Outlook India - February 15th, 2023 [February 15th, 2023]
- Dealing with disappointing diet results? Food sensitivities may be the culprit, says nutrition coach - KIRO Seattle - February 7th, 2023 [February 7th, 2023]
- I ate from the slow feeder bowl my cat hates for a week I lost weight but almost got kicked out of a re... - The US Sun - February 7th, 2023 [February 7th, 2023]
- Algarve Keto Gummies Reviews (Truth Exposed 2023) Does It Really Work Or Scam? Read It First Before Buy - Outlook India - January 30th, 2023 [January 30th, 2023]
- 10 Best Diets Of 2023, According To Experts Forbes Health - January 22nd, 2023 [January 22nd, 2023]
- Weight loss: Choosing a diet that's right for you - Mayo Clinic - January 22nd, 2023 [January 22nd, 2023]