A new study on monkeys did not bring the vindication calorie-restricted
enthusiasts anticpated
FOR MORE than 20 years, the rhesus monkeys were kept semi-starved, lean
and hungry. The males’ weights were so low they were the equivalent of a
6ft-tall man who tipped the scales at just 120-133 pounds. The hope was that if
the monkeys lived longer, healthier lives by eating a lot less, then maybe
people, their evolutionary cousins, would too.
Some scientists, anticipating such benefits, began severely restricting
their own diets. The results of this major, long-awaited study, which began in
1987, are finally in. But it did not bring the vindication calorie-restriction
enthusiasts had anticipated. It turns out the skinny monkeys did not live any
longer than those kept at more normal weights. Some lab test results improved,
but only in monkeys that were put on the diet when they were old. The causes of
death – cancer, heart disease – were the same in both the underfed and the
normally fed monkeys.
Lab test results showed lower levels of cholesterol and blood sugar in
the male monkeys that started eating 30 per cent fewer calories in old age, but
not in the females. Males and females who started dieting when they were old
had lower levels of triglycerides, which are linked to heart disease risk.
Monkeys put on the diet when they were young or middle-aged did not get
the same benefits, although they had less cancer. But the bottom line was that
the monkeys that ate less did not live any longer than those that ate normally.
Rafael de Cabo, lead author of the diet study, published last week in
the journal Nature, says he is surprised and disappointed that the underfed
monkeys did not live longer. Like many other researchers on ageing, he had
expected an outcome similar to that of a 2009 study from the University of
Wisconsin that concluded that calorific restriction did extend monkeys’
lifespans.
But even that study had a question mark hanging over it. Its authors had
disregarded about half of the deaths among the monkeys they studied, saying
they were not related to ageing. If they had included all of the deaths, there
was no extension of life span in the Wisconsin study, either.
“This shows the importance of replication in science,” says Steven
Austad, interim director of the Barshop Institute for Longevity and Aging
Studies at the University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio.
Austad, who was not involved with either study, says the University of
Wisconsin study “was not nearly as conclusive as it was made out to be” and
that the new study casts further doubt on the belief that caloric restriction
extends life.
But other researchers still think that it does, and one of the authors
of the new study, Julie A Mattison, says there is still a bit of hope. The
study is continuing until the youngest monkeys are 22 years old. While the data
almost certainly rule out any notion that the low-calorie diet will increase
average lifespans, there still is a chance that the study might find that the
diet increases the animals’ maximum lifespan, she says.
Meanwhile, some others say that the Wisconsin study makes them reluctant
to dismiss the idea that low-calorie diets result in longer life. “I wouldn’t
discard the whole thing on the basis of one study when another study in the
same species showed an increase in life span,” says Eric Ravussin, director of
the nutritional obesity research centre at the Pennington Biomedical Research
Center in Louisiana. “I would still bet on an extension of life.”
The idea that a low-calorie diet would extend life originated in the
1930s with a study of lab rats. But it was not until the 1980s that the theory
took off. Scientists reported that in species ranging from yeast to flies to
worms to mice, eating less meant living longer. And, in mice at least, a
low-calorie diet also meant less cancer. It was not known whether the same
thing would hold true in humans, and no one expected such a study would ever be
done. It would take decades to get an answer, to say nothing of the expense and
difficulty of getting people to be randomly assigned to starve themselves or
not.
Researchers concluded the best way to test the hypothesis would be
through the monkey studies at the University of Wisconsin and the National
Institute on Aging, although the animals would have to be followed for decades.
It was a major endeavour. The National Institute on Aging study involved 121
monkeys, 49 of which are still alive, housed at a facility in Poolesville,
Maryland.
Those that got the low-calorie diet did not act famished, de Cabo says.
They did not gobble their food, for example, but ate at the same speed as the
control animals, even though their calories had been cut by 30 per cent.
As the studies were under way, some human enthusiasts decided to start
eating a lot less, too. In those same years, though, studies in mice began
indicating there might not be a predictable response to a low-calorie diet.
Mice that came from the wild, instead of being born and raised in the lab, did
not live longer on low-calorie diets. And in 2009, a study of 41 inbred strains
of laboratory mice found that about a third had no response to the diets. Of
those that responded, more strains had shorter life spans than had longer ones
when they were given less food.
The response to that study was “absolute disbelief,” Austad says. “Even
though the authors are well-respected calorie restrictors, people said the
result was not interesting, that there was something weird about the mice.”
Now, with the new study, researchers are asking why the University of
Wisconsin study found an effect on lifespan and the National Institute on Aging
study did not.
There were several differences between the studies that some have
pointed to as possible explanations.
The composition of the food given to the monkeys in the Wisconsin study
was different from that in the ageing institute’s study.
The university’s control monkeys were allowed to eat as much as they
wanted and were fatter than those in the ageing institute’s study, which were
fed in amounts that were considered enough to maintain a healthy weight but
were not unlimited.
The animals in the Wisconsin study were from India.
Those in the ageing institute’s study were from India and China, and so
were more genetically diverse.
De Cabo, who says he is overweight, advises people that if they want to
try a reduced-calorie diet, they should consult a doctor first. If they can
handle such a diet, he says, he believes they would be healthier but, he says,
he does not know if they would live longer.
Some scientists still have faith in the low-calorie diets. Richard
Weindruch, a director of the Wisconsin study, says he is “a hopeless
caloric-restriction romantic”, but adds that he was not very good at
restricting his own calories. He says he might start trying harder. “I’m only
62,” he says. “It isn’t too late.”
Then there is Mark Mattson, chief of the laboratory of neurosciences at
the National Institute on Aging, who was not part of the monkey study.
He believes there is merit to caloric restriction, but his routine is to
do it intermittently, eating much less, but not every day. It can help the
brain, he says, as well as make people healthier and probably make them live
longer.
Mattson, who is 5ft 9in and weighs 130lbs (59kg), skips breakfast and
lunch on weekdays and skips breakfast on weekends. “I get a little hungry,” he
admits. “But we think being hungry is actually good.” – New York Times
No comments:
Post a Comment