生酮饮食
血糖性
2型糖尿病
医学
糖尿病
减肥
肥胖
临床试验
疾病
生物信息学
内分泌学
内科学
癫痫
精神科
生物
作者
Thien Luong,Mads Svart,Lars Christian Gormsen,Esben Søndergaard
标识
DOI:10.1097/mco.0000000000001158
摘要
Purpose of review The ketogenic diet has gained renewed attention as a nutritional intervention across a range of chronic diseases. This review evaluates the recent clinical evidence supporting ketogenic diet applications beyond epilepsy, with a focus on cardiometabolic, neurodegenerative, psychiatric, and oncological conditions. Recent findings Ketogenic diet improves insulin sensitivity and glycemic control in obesity and type 2 diabetes, effect that are partly attributable to weight loss, but also include reduced postprandial glucose excursions, lower insulin levels, and altered substrate metabolism. In neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease, ketogenic diet may increase substrate availability, cerebral perfusion and cognition function. Preliminary data from uncontrolled studies suggests potential benefits in severe mental illness. In oncology, ketogenic diet may influence tumor metabolism via glucose restriction, but clinical efficacy as an adjunct therapy remains unproven. Across studies, conclusions are limited by short intervention durations, inconsistent protocols, low dietary adherence, and high interindividual variability in metabolic response. Summary Although emerging data suggest therapeutic potential of ketogenic diet across several conditions, routine clinical implementation is premature. Future trials should employ standardized dietary protocols and assess long-term, clinically relevant outcomes to establish safety and efficacy.
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