Effects of a 3-Week Hospital-Controlled Very-Low-Calorie Diet in Severely Obese Patients.
Ivan OžvaldDragan BožičevićLidija DuhIvana Vinković VrčekIvan PavičićAna-Marija DomijanMirta MilicPublished in: Nutrients (2021)
Although a very-low-calorie diet (VLCD) is considered safe and has demonstrated benefits among other types of diets, data are scarce concerning its effects on improving health and weight loss in severely obese patients. As part of the personalized weight loss program developed at the Duga Resa Special Hospital for Extended Treatment, Croatia, we evaluated anthropometric, biochemical, and permanent DNA damage parameters (assessed with the cytochalasin B-blocked micronucleus cytome assay-CBMN) in severely obese patients (BMI ≥ 35 kg m -2 ) after 3-weeks on a 567 kcal, hospital-controlled VLCD. This is the first study on the permanent genomic (in)stability in such VLCD patients. VLCDs caused significant decreases in weight (loss), parameters of the lipid profile, urea, insulin resistance, and reduced glutathione (GSH). Genomic instability parameters were lowered by half, reaching reference values usually found in the healthy population. A correlation was found between GSH decrease and reduced DNA damage. VLCDs revealed susceptible individuals with remaining higher DNA damage for further monitoring. In a highly heterogeneous group (class II and III in obesity, differences in weight, BMI, and other categories) consisting of 26 obese patients, the approach demonstrated its usefulness and benefits in health improvement, enabling an individual approach to further monitoring, diagnosis, treatment, and risk assessment based on changing anthropometric/biochemical VLCD parameters, and CBMN results.
Keyphrases
- weight loss
- obese patients
- bariatric surgery
- dna damage
- roux en y gastric bypass
- gastric bypass
- healthcare
- weight gain
- oxidative stress
- risk assessment
- insulin resistance
- public health
- dna repair
- glycemic control
- body mass index
- end stage renal disease
- body composition
- adverse drug
- mental health
- copy number
- metabolic syndrome
- type diabetes
- adipose tissue
- acute care
- ejection fraction
- human health
- health information
- emergency department
- combination therapy
- peritoneal dialysis
- big data
- high fat diet
- fluorescent probe
- electronic health record
- machine learning
- patient reported outcomes
- genome wide
- gene expression
- health promotion