Rodopaios Nikolaos E, Poulios Efthymios, Papadopoulou Sousana K, Alexatou Olga, Koulouri Alexandra-Aikaterini, Kafatos Anthony G, Papaliagkas Vasileios, Psara Evmorfia, Giannakoula Anastasia, Tsourouflis Gerasimos, Antasouras Georgios, Giaginis Constantinos
Department of Social Medicine, Preventive Medicine and Nutrition, Medical School, University of Crete, 70013 Heraklion, Crete, Greece.
Department of Food Science and Nutrition, School of the Environment, University of the Aegean, 81400 Myrina, Lemnos, Greece.
Metabolites. 2024 Jan 19;14(1):67. doi: 10.3390/metabo14010067.
Christian Orthodox fasting, a type of time-restricted diet, which presents some similarities to the Mediterranean Diet, also including certain similarities with periodic vegetarianism or other time-restricted diets (e.g., intermittent diet and Ramadan fasting), may cumulatively be related to the same or even better beneficial healthy effects as these well-recognized dietary patterns. The present study aimed to explore the potential beneficial impact of Christian Orthodox fasting in patients with metabolic disorders, such as diabetes mellitus type 2, excessive obesity, hypothyroidism and osteoporosis. This was a cross-sectional study, including 135 patients with metabolic disorders (67 fasters and 68 non-fasters). The enrolled fasters had adapted Christian Orthodox fasting recommendations for at least twelve consecutive years or even from childhood. Relevant questionnaires were used to record sociodemographic, anthropometric and lifestyle data of the study population through face-to-face interviews between the enrolled individuals and qualified personnel during a non-fasting period. Christian Orthodox fasting patients showed a significantly and independently lower prevalence of overweight/obesity and abdominal obesity, which is highly associated with cardiometabolic disease risks, as well as a significantly and independently lower incidence of hypertension, including separately lower systolic and diastolic pressure, than non-fasting patients. Fasters also had a significantly and independently increased prevalence of an advanced educational level and no smoking history, as well as a lower incidence of sedentary behavior, and a trend of a correlation with reduced c-reactive protein (CRP), an indicator of inflammation, compared to non-fasters. Fasters also exhibited higher serum albumin and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) levels, as well as lower glucose levels, than non-fasters. This is one of the few cross-sectional studies demonstrating that Christian Orthodox fasting may promote metabolic health by improving several aspects of metabolic disorders, being associated with specific sociodemographic, anthropometric and lifestyle factors. Further studies conducted on larger sample sizes from different countries and different ethnicities that include Christian Orthodox fasters are recommended to evaluate the impact of long-term religious fasting effects on human health, either as a preventative factor reducing the risk of chronic diseases and especially cardiometabolic disorders or as a nutritional intervention to ameliorate symptom severity.
东正教禁食是一种限时饮食,与地中海饮食有一些相似之处,也与周期性素食或其他限时饮食(如间歇性饮食和斋月禁食)有某些相似之处,可能与这些公认的饮食模式产生相同甚至更好的有益健康效果。本研究旨在探讨东正教禁食对代谢紊乱患者(如2型糖尿病、过度肥胖、甲状腺功能减退和骨质疏松症)的潜在有益影响。这是一项横断面研究,包括135名代谢紊乱患者(67名禁食者和68名非禁食者)。入选的禁食者至少连续十二年或甚至从小就遵循东正教禁食建议。通过在非禁食期间对入选个体与合格人员进行面对面访谈,使用相关问卷记录研究人群的社会人口统计学、人体测量学和生活方式数据。与非禁食患者相比,东正教禁食患者超重/肥胖和腹部肥胖的患病率显著且独立降低,而超重/肥胖和腹部肥胖与心脏代谢疾病风险高度相关,高血压的发病率也显著且独立降低,包括收缩压和舒张压分别较低。与非禁食者相比,禁食者具有高等教育水平和无吸烟史的患病率也显著且独立增加,久坐行为的发生率较低,并且与炎症指标C反应蛋白(CRP)降低存在相关性趋势。与非禁食者相比,禁食者还表现出更高的血清白蛋白和高密度脂蛋白(HDL)水平,以及更低的血糖水平。这是少数横断面研究之一,表明东正教禁食可能通过改善代谢紊乱的几个方面来促进代谢健康,这与特定的社会人口统计学、人体测量学和生活方式因素有关。建议对来自不同国家和不同种族的包括东正教禁食者在内的更大样本量进行进一步研究,以评估长期宗教禁食对人类健康的影响,无论是作为降低慢性病尤其是心脏代谢紊乱风险的预防因素,还是作为改善症状严重程度的营养干预措施。