Litcius/Paper detail

Normal diet ameliorates obesity more safely and effectively than ketogenic diet does in high-fat diet-induced obesity mouse based on gut microbiota and lipid metabolism

Yunlong Dong, Hongjie Song, Andrew Holmes, Jia‐Bao Yan, Cuiru Ren, Ying Zhang, Wei Zhao, Jianhui Yuan, Yuyang Cheng, David Raubenheimer, Zhenwei Cui

2023International Journal of Food Sciences and Nutrition11 citationsDOI

Abstract

Growing evidence supports the efficacy of ketogenic diets for inducing weight loss, but there are also potential health risks due to their unbalanced nutrient composition. We aim at assessing relative effectiveness of a balanced diet and ketogenic diet for reversing metabolic syndrome in a diet-induced C57BL/6J mouse model. Mice were fed high-fat diet to induce obesity. Obese individuals were then fed either ketogenic or balanced diets as an obesity intervention. Serum, liver, fat and faecal samples were analysed. We observed that both diet interventions led to significant decrease in body weight. The ketogenic intervention was less effective in reducing adipocyte cell size and led to dyslipidaemia. The composition of the gut microbiome in the balanced diet intervention was more similar to the non-obese control group and had improved functional attributes. Our results indicate intervention with balanced diets ameliorates obesity more safely and effectively than ketogenic diets in diet-induced obesity mouse model.

Topics & Concepts

Ketogenic dietObesityEndocrinologyInternal medicineGut floraWeight lossMedicineBiologyDiet-induced obeseMicrobiomeBioinformaticsInsulin resistanceEpilepsyImmunologyPsychiatryDiet and metabolism studiesAdipose Tissue and MetabolismGut microbiota and health