酮发生
医学
酮体
生酮饮食
随机对照试验
危重病
临床试验
重症监护医学
酮症
间歇性禁食
内科学
生理学
病危
内分泌学
癫痫
糖尿病
新陈代谢
精神科
作者
Jan Gunst,Michaël P. Casaer,Lies Langouche,Greet Van den Berghe
标识
DOI:10.1097/mcc.0000000000000841
摘要
Purpose of review To summarize the clinical evidence for beneficial effects of ketones, ketogenic diets and intermittent fasting in critical illness, and to review potential mechanisms behind such effects. Recent findings Recent evidence demonstrates that activation of a metabolic fasting response may be beneficial to recover from critical insults. Potential protective mechanisms are, among others, activation of ketogenesis and of damage removal by autophagy. Novel feeding strategies, including ketone supplements, ketogenic diets and intermittent fasting regimens, can activate these pathways – at least partially – in critically ill patients. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) studying these novel feeding strategies as compared with standard care, are scarce and have not shown consistent benefit. Yet, all RCTs were small and underpowered for clinical endpoints. Moreover, in intermittent fasting studies, the duration of the fasting interval may have been too short to develop a sustained metabolic fasting response. Summary These findings open perspectives for the further development of fasting-mimicking diets. Ultimately, clinical benefit should be confirmed by RCTs that are adequately powered for clinically relevant, patient-centered endpoints.
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