Mohamed H Emara, Hanan Soliman, Ebada M Said, Hassan Elbatae, Mostafa Elazab, Shady Elhefnawy, Tarik I Zaher, Ahmed Abdel-Razik, Mohamed Elnadry
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It is a dry IF as no water is allowed during the fasting hours, also there are no calorie restrictions during feeding hours, and the mealtime is exclusively nighttime. These three variables of the RF model are believed to have a variable impact on different liver diseases. RF was evaluated by different observational and interventional studies among patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and it was associated with improvements in anthropometric measures, metabolic profile, and liver biochemistry regardless of the calorie restriction among lean and obese patients. The situation is rather different for patients with liver cirrhosis. RF was associated with adverse events among patients with liver cirrhosis irrespective of the underlying etiology of cirrhosis. Cirrhotic patients developed new ascites, ascites were increased, had higher serum bilirubin levels after Ramadan, and frequently developed hepatic encephalopathy and acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding. These complications were higher among patients with Child class B and C cirrhosis, and some fatalities occurred due to fasting. Liver transplant recipients as a special group of patients, are vulnerable to dehydration, fluctuation in blood immunosuppressive levels, likelihood of deterioration and hence observing RF without special precautions could represent a real danger for them. Patients with Gilbert syndrome can safely observe RF despite the minor elevations in serum bilirubin reported during the early days of fasting.</p>","PeriodicalId":23687,"journal":{"name":"World Journal of Hepatology","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":2.5000,"publicationDate":"2024-08-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11362902/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Intermittent fasting and the liver: Focus on the Ramadan model.\",\"authors\":\"Mohamed H Emara, Hanan Soliman, Ebada M Said, Hassan Elbatae, Mostafa Elazab, Shady Elhefnawy, Tarik I Zaher, Ahmed Abdel-Razik, Mohamed Elnadry\",\"doi\":\"10.4254/wjh.v16.i8.1070\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Intermittent fasting (IF) is an intervention that involves not only dietary modifications but also behavioral changes with the main core being a period of fasting alternating with a period of controlled feeding. The duration of fasting differs from one regimen to another. Ramadan fasting (RF) is a religious fasting for Muslims, it lasts for only one month every one lunar year. In this model of fasting, observers abstain from food and water for a period that extends from dawn to sunset. The period of daily fasting is variable (12-18 hours) as Ramadan rotates in all seasons of the year. Consequently, longer duration of daily fasting is observed during the summer. In fact, RF is a peculiar type of IF. It is a dry IF as no water is allowed during the fasting hours, also there are no calorie restrictions during feeding hours, and the mealtime is exclusively nighttime. These three variables of the RF model are believed to have a variable impact on different liver diseases. RF was evaluated by different observational and interventional studies among patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and it was associated with improvements in anthropometric measures, metabolic profile, and liver biochemistry regardless of the calorie restriction among lean and obese patients. The situation is rather different for patients with liver cirrhosis. RF was associated with adverse events among patients with liver cirrhosis irrespective of the underlying etiology of cirrhosis. Cirrhotic patients developed new ascites, ascites were increased, had higher serum bilirubin levels after Ramadan, and frequently developed hepatic encephalopathy and acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding. These complications were higher among patients with Child class B and C cirrhosis, and some fatalities occurred due to fasting. Liver transplant recipients as a special group of patients, are vulnerable to dehydration, fluctuation in blood immunosuppressive levels, likelihood of deterioration and hence observing RF without special precautions could represent a real danger for them. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
间歇性禁食(IF)是一种不仅涉及饮食调整,还涉及行为改变的干预措施,其主要核心是一段时间的禁食与一段时间的控制进食交替进行。禁食时间的长短因方案而异。斋月斋戒(RF)是穆斯林的宗教斋戒,每农历年只持续一个月。在这种斋戒模式中,斋戒者在从黎明到日落的一段时间内禁食禁水。由于斋月在一年四季中轮流进行,因此每天斋戒的时间长短不一(12-18 小时)。因此,夏季的每日斋戒时间较长。事实上,斋戒是一种特殊的斋戒。它是一种干式斋戒,因为斋戒期间不允许喝水,进食期间也没有卡路里限制,而且进餐时间完全在夜间。RF模式的这三个变量被认为对不同的肝病有不同的影响。不同的观察性和干预性研究对非酒精性脂肪肝患者的 RF 进行了评估,结果显示,无论对瘦人还是肥人,RF 都能改善人体测量指标、新陈代谢状况和肝脏生化指标。肝硬化患者的情况则有所不同。无论肝硬化的病因如何,RF 都与肝硬化患者的不良事件有关。肝硬化患者在斋月后会出现新的腹水、腹水增多、血清胆红素水平升高,并经常出现肝性脑病和急性上消化道出血。这些并发症在 Child B 级和 C 级肝硬化患者中发生率较高,部分患者因禁食而死亡。肝移植受者作为一个特殊的患者群体,容易脱水、血液中免疫抑制水平波动、病情恶化的可能性大,因此在没有特殊预防措施的情况下进行射频治疗对他们来说是一种真正的危险。吉尔伯特综合征患者尽管在禁食初期血清胆红素会有轻微升高,但仍可安全地接受射频治疗。
Intermittent fasting and the liver: Focus on the Ramadan model.
Intermittent fasting (IF) is an intervention that involves not only dietary modifications but also behavioral changes with the main core being a period of fasting alternating with a period of controlled feeding. The duration of fasting differs from one regimen to another. Ramadan fasting (RF) is a religious fasting for Muslims, it lasts for only one month every one lunar year. In this model of fasting, observers abstain from food and water for a period that extends from dawn to sunset. The period of daily fasting is variable (12-18 hours) as Ramadan rotates in all seasons of the year. Consequently, longer duration of daily fasting is observed during the summer. In fact, RF is a peculiar type of IF. It is a dry IF as no water is allowed during the fasting hours, also there are no calorie restrictions during feeding hours, and the mealtime is exclusively nighttime. These three variables of the RF model are believed to have a variable impact on different liver diseases. RF was evaluated by different observational and interventional studies among patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and it was associated with improvements in anthropometric measures, metabolic profile, and liver biochemistry regardless of the calorie restriction among lean and obese patients. The situation is rather different for patients with liver cirrhosis. RF was associated with adverse events among patients with liver cirrhosis irrespective of the underlying etiology of cirrhosis. Cirrhotic patients developed new ascites, ascites were increased, had higher serum bilirubin levels after Ramadan, and frequently developed hepatic encephalopathy and acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding. These complications were higher among patients with Child class B and C cirrhosis, and some fatalities occurred due to fasting. Liver transplant recipients as a special group of patients, are vulnerable to dehydration, fluctuation in blood immunosuppressive levels, likelihood of deterioration and hence observing RF without special precautions could represent a real danger for them. Patients with Gilbert syndrome can safely observe RF despite the minor elevations in serum bilirubin reported during the early days of fasting.