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Department of Surgery, Louisiana State University Medical Center, 2547A Lyon Street, 2nd Floor, San Francisco, CA 94123, USA. jim@jbjmd.comAbstract
Restricting
caloric intake to 60-70% of normal adult weight maintenance requirement
prolongs lifespan 30-50% and confers near perfect health across a broad
range of species. Every other day feeding produces similar effects in
rodents, and profound beneficial physiologic changes have been
demonstrated in the absence of weight loss in ob/ob mice. Since May 2003
we have experimented with alternate day calorie restriction, one day
consuming 20-50% of estimated daily caloric requirement and the next day
ad lib eating, and have observed health benefits starting in as little
as two weeks, in insulin resistance, asthma, seasonal allergies,
infectious diseases of viral, bacterial and fungal origin (viral URI,
recurrent bacterial tonsillitis, chronic sinusitis, periodontal
disease), autoimmune disorder (rheumatoid arthritis), osteoarthritis,
symptoms due to CNS inflammatory lesions (Tourette's, Meniere's) cardiac
arrhythmias (PVCs, atrial fibrillation), menopause related hot flashes.
We hypothesize that other many conditions would be delayed, prevented
or improved, including Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, multiple sclerosis,
brain injury due to thrombotic stroke atherosclerosis, NIDDM, congestive
heart failure. Our hypothesis is supported by an article from 1957 in
the Spanish medical literature which due to a translation error has been
construed by several authors to be the only existing example of calorie
restriction with good nutrition. We contend for reasons cited that
there was no reduction in calories overall, but that the subjects were
eating, on alternate days, either 900 calories or 2300 calories,
averaging 1600, and that body weight was maintained. Thus they consumed
either 56% or 144% of daily caloric requirement. The subjects were in a
residence for old people, and all were in perfect health and over 65.
Over three years, there were 6 deaths among 60 study subjects and 13
deaths among 60 ad lib-fed controls, non-significant difference. Study
subjects were in hospital 123 days, controls 219, highly significant
difference. We believe widespread use of this pattern of eating could
impact influenza epidemics and other communicable diseases by improving
resistance to infection. In addition to the health effects, this pattern
of eating has proven to be a good method of weight control, and we are
continuing to study the process in conjunction with the NIH.
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