Ketosis Suppression and Ageing (KetoSAge) Part 2: The Effect of Suppressing Ketosis on Biomarkers Associated with Ageing, HOMA-IR, Leptin, Osteocalcin, and GLP-1, in Healthy Females.
Isabella D CooperYvoni KyriakidouLucy PetagineKurtis EdwardsAdrian Soto-MotaKenneth H BrooklerBradley T ElliottPublished in: Biomedicines (2024)
Metabolic dysfunctions are among the best documented hallmarks of ageing. Cardiovascular disease, Alzheimer's disease, cancer, type 2 diabetes mellitus, metabolic-dysfunction-associated steatosis liver disease, and fragility fractures are diseases of hyperinsulinaemia that reduce life and healthspan. We studied the effect of suppressing ketosis in 10 lean (BMI 20.5 kg/m 2 ± 1.4), metabolically healthy, pre-menopausal women (age 32.3 ± 8.9 years) maintaining nutritional ketosis (NK) for an average of 3.9 years (± 2.3) who underwent three 21-day phases: nutritional ketosis (NK; P1), suppressed ketosis (SuK; P2), and returned to NK (P3). Ketosis suppression significantly increased insulin, 1.83-fold ( p = 0.0006); glucose, 1.17-fold ( p = 0.0088); homeostasis model assessment for insulin resistance (HOMA-IR), 2.13-fold ( p = 0.0008); leptin, 3.35-fold ( p = 0.0010); total osteocalcin, 1.63-fold ( p = 0.0138); and uncarboxylated osteocalcin, 1.98-fold ( p = 0.0417) and significantly decreased beta-hydroxybutyrate, 13.50-fold ( p = 0.0012) and glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), 2.40-fold ( p = 0.0209). Sustained NK showed no adverse health effects and may mitigate hyperinsulinemia. All biomarkers returned to basal P1 levels after removing the intervention for SuK, indicating that metabolic flexibility was maintained with long-term euketonaemia.
Keyphrases
- insulin resistance
- cardiovascular disease
- type diabetes
- randomized controlled trial
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- nk cells
- high fat diet
- signaling pathway
- adipose tissue
- metabolic syndrome
- oxidative stress
- coronary artery disease
- young adults
- papillary thyroid
- blood pressure
- cognitive decline
- skeletal muscle
- weight gain
- cardiovascular risk factors
- lymph node metastasis
- childhood cancer