Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews (Jul 2020)

Do Adults Utilizing Intermittent Fasting Improve Lipids More Than Those Following a Restricted-Calorie Diet? A Clin-IQ

  • Mitchell A. Sanford,
  • Tracy S. Sanford,
  • K. F. Campbell,
  • Dustin Davis,
  • Tammy Tandberg,
  • L. N. Eagle Road

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17294/2330-0698.1743
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 3
pp. 282 – 285

Abstract

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With approximately 95 million Americans diagnosed with high cholesterol, and many searching for a nonmedicinal treatment, intermittent fasting as a method to improve health has become increasingly popular in the lay public. We conducted a clinical inquiry to determine whether intermittent fasting is superior to a low-calorie diet in improving lipids, searching the Cochrane, EBSCOhost, Embase, MEDLINE, and Scopus databases using the terms intermittent fasting, lipids, and calorie-restricted diet. Studies that included surgical weight loss or medicine-assisted weight loss were excluded. We identified 6 published studies, 5 of which were randomized controlled trials. In reviewing the selected studies, there did not appear to be a consistent difference in lipid change between restricted-calorie diet and intermittent fasting. Because of differences in study methods and in how intermittent fasting was defined, additional studies are needed.

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