Low-calorie diet boosts mortality risk in bowel disease patients, shows study
Low-calorie diet boosts mortality risk in bowel disease patients, shows study. Looking at the effects of diet on bowel disease, Michigan State University researchers found that mice on a calorie-restricted diet were more likely to die after being infected with an inflammation-causing bacterial pathogen in the colon.
While research suggests inflammation associated with obesity may contribute to inflammatory bowel diseases such as colitis, the study results revealed a low-calorie diet may actually impair the immune system's ability to respond to infection, said Jenifer Fenton, assistant professor in the Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition.
Additionally, the study found no connection that moderate obesity increased the severity of colitis in the mouse model.
"The results are similar to the research from our department that shows consuming fewer calories make it harder to fight off the flu virus," said Fenton, referring to recent work by colleague Elizabeth Gardner.
"Since this is a totally different pathogen, it amplifies the need to find out why caloric intake has such an impact on the body's ability to respond to infection.
"It is possible that the same mechanism that happens with the flu is occurring with gastro-intestinal diseases; future research will ask this very question," she added.
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As part of their study, Fenton and colleagues evaluated the influence of obesity and calorie-restricted diets on mice with induced colitis.
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Unexpectedly, study results suggest increased body fat induced by a high-fat diet did not influence the severity of colitis, despite changes in hormones that are known to increase with obesity and influence inflammation. In fact, researchers found calorie-restricted mice had a higher mortality rate in response to infection with H. hepaticus, dying before tumors even developed.
"Future studies should examine the association between body fat percentage and immune responses to infections leading to inflammatory bowel diseases," Fenton said.
"Understanding how a low-calorie diet increases mortality in this model may lead to new treatments for the disease in humans," she added.
The research is published in the current edition of the World Journal of Gastroenterology.
Source-ANI