Litcius/Paper detail

Effect of Very-Low-Calorie Ketogenic Diet on Psoriasis Patients: A Nuclear Magnetic Resonance-Based Metabolomic Study

Giuseppe Castaldo, Imma Pagano, Manuela Grimaldi, Carmen Marino, Paola Molettieri, Angelo Santoro, Ilaria Stillitano, R. Romano, Paola Montoro, Anna Maria D’Ursi, Luca Rastrelli

2020Journal of Proteome Research97 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Psoriasis is an inflammatory disease of the epidermis based on an immunological mechanism involving Langerhans cells and T lymphocytes that produce pro-inflammatory cytokines. Genetic factors, environmental factors, and improper nutrition are considered triggers of the disease. Numerous studies have reported that in a high number of patients, psoriasis is associated with obesity. Excess adipose tissue, typical of obesity, causes a systemic inflammatory status coming from the inflammatory active adipose tissue; therefore, weight reduction is a strategy to fight this pro-inflammatory state. This study aimed to evaluate how a nutritional regimen based on a ketogenic diet influenced the clinical parameters, metabolic profile, and inflammatory state of psoriasis patients. To this end, 30 psoriasis patients were subjected to a ketogenic nutritional regimen and monitored for 4 weeks by evaluating the clinical data, biochemical and clinical parameters, NMR metabolomic profile, and IL-2, IL-1β, TNF-α, IFN-γ, and IL-4 concentrations before and after the nutritional regimen. Our data show that a low-calorie ketogenic diet can be considered a successful strategy and therapeutic option to gain an improvement in psoriasis-related dysmetabolism, with significant correction of the full metabolic and inflammatory status.

Topics & Concepts

PsoriasisMedicineKetogenic dietRegimenAdipose tissueObesityInternal medicineInflammationPsoriasis Area and Severity IndexEndocrinologyImmunologyPsychiatryEpilepsyDiet and metabolism studiesMetabolomics and Mass Spectrometry StudiesNutrition, Genetics, and Disease