3-rx.comCustomer Support3-rx.com
Find a product
    HomeAbout UsFAQContactHelp
 
   
 
News Center
Health Centers
Medical Encyclopedia
Drugs & Medications
Diseases & Conditions
Medical Symptoms
Med. Tests & Exams
Surgery & Procedures
Injuries & Wounds
Diet & Nutrition
Special Topics
Online Pharmacy



Presbyopia is an eye condition in which the lens loses the ability to focus over time


Join our Mailing List

Men`s Health sites at Top100biz.com




Syndicate

You are here : 3-RX.com > Home > Brain - Cancer - Dieting -

Low-cal ketogenic diet slows brain cancer in mice

Brain • • Cancer • • DietingMar 29, 07

A calorically restricted ketogenic diet decreases the growth of malignant brain tumors in laboratory mice, according to an online report in the journal Nutrition & Metabolism.

A ketogenic diet is a high-fat, low-carbohydrate diet that induces excess production of ketone bodies, which are incompletely burned fat molecules. This diet has been used to control epileptic seizures that do not respond to drug treatment.

"In contrast to most conventional brain tumor therapies, which are largely ineffective, are excessively costly, and can diminish the length and quality of life, the calorically restricted ketogenic diet is a natural therapeutic approach to brain cancer management that is based on the principles of evolutionary biology and metabolic control theory,” Dr. Thomas N. Seyfried told Reuters Health.

Seyfried and associates at Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts evaluated the efficacy of KetoCal, a ketogenic diet formulated to treat unresponsive epilepsy in children, in mice implanted with a malignant mouse brain tumor and a human malignant glioma, a brain tumor that responds poorly to drug therapy.

The mice were fed a regular, high-carbohydrate diet, unlimited amounts of KetoCal, or restricted amounts of KetoCal.

Growth of the two tumors was reduced from 35 percent to 65 percent in mice given restricted KetoCal, compared with mice receiving normal or KetoCal diets that were unrestricted, the researchers report.

Survival was also significantly longer among mice receiving the restricted KetoCal diet, the results indicate.

Blood sugar levels were significantly lower and circulating ketone bodies significantly higher in mice fed the restricted KetoCal diet, the researchers note.

The restricted KetoCal diet starves the brain cancer cells by removing molecules needed for cell growth and survival. While the normal brain cells are sustained by ketones, the tumor cells can’t metabolize ketones.

This mouse study was motivated in part by the previous work of Linda Nebeling and co-workers who showed that a calorie-restricted ketogenic diet was effective for the long-term treatment of brain cancer in children, Seyfried explained. “Our work in mice strongly supports the original study.”

He concludes that it is important that human trials begin soon to study the effect of the calorically restricted ketogenic diet on brain cancer. “These trials could be conducted at any medical center or clinic currently using the ketogenic diet as a therapy for refractory epileptic seizures.”

SOURCE: Nutrition & Metabolism, February 21, 2007.



Print Version
Tell-a-Friend

RELATED ARTICLES:
  Occasional Memory Loss Tied to Lower Brain Volume
  During exercise, the human brain shifts into high gear on ‘alternative energy’
  Poor mood persists for breast cancer patients
  Study links birth size and breast cancer
  Study finds association between hepatitis B and pancreatic cancer
  Sex bias seen in control of cancer pain
  A Dipstick Test for Breast Cancer?
  Core Needle Breast Biopsies Safe for Patients Taking Blood Thinners
  The Methodist Hospital Is First in Houston to Treat Breast Cancer with the Contura Applicator
  Breast Cancer and Women Under Age 40: A Growing Concern
  October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month
  New approach to gene therapy may shrink brain tumors, prevent their spread

 


Advertisement
















Home | About Us | FAQ | Contact | Advertising Policy | Privacy Policy | Bookmark Site