Scientists have long known a fairly reliable way to extend life span in rodents and other lab animals: Reduce the amount of calories they eat by 10 percent to 40 percent.
This strategy, known as caloric restriction, has been shown to increase the life span of various organisms and reduce their rate of cancer and other age-related ailments.Whether it can do the same in people has been an open question.But an intriguing new study suggests that in young and middle-aged adults, chronically restricting calorie intake can have an impact on their health.
In the new study, which was funded by the National Institutes of Health and published this month in the Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology, researchers looked at a group of 143 healthy men and women who ranged in age from 21 to 50.They were instructed to practice caloric restriction for two years.They could eat the foods they wanted so long as they cut back on the total amount of food they ate, with the aim of cutting the calories they consumed by 25 percent.
Many did not achieve that goal.On average, the dieters managed to slash about 12 percent of their total calories, or roughly 300 calories a day, the amount in a large bagel, a few chocolate chip cookies or a small Starbucks Mocha Frappuccino.But the group saw many of their cardiovascular and metabolic health markers improve, even though they were already in the normal range.
They lost weight and body fat Their cholesterol levels improved, their blood pressure fell slightly,and they had better blood sugar control and less inflammation.At the same time, a control group of 75 healthy people who did not practice caloric restriction saw no improvements in any of these markers.
Some of the benefits in the calorie restricted group stemmed from the fact that they lost a large amount of weight, on average about 16 pounds over the two years of the study.But the extent to wluch their metabolic health got better was greater than would have been expected from weight loss alone, suggesting that caloric restriction might have some unique biological effects on disease path ways in the body, said William Kraus, the lead author of the studyand a professor of medicine and cardiology at Duke University.
“We weren't surprised that there were changes,” he said.“But the magnitude was rather as-tounding.In a disease population, there aren't five drugs in combination that would cause this ag-gregate of an improvement.”
Calorie restriction may be a useful tool for better health and weight loss, but it's unclear whether the changes in the new study will ultimately translate into longevity and reductions in chronic disease, said Frank Hu, the chairman of the nutrition department at the Harvard T.H.Chan School of Public Health, who was not involved in the research.
What can be inferred from the passage?无参考译文
科学家们早就知道一种可以延长啮齿动物和其他实验动物寿命的可靠方法:将它们摄入的热量减少10%至40%。
这种被称为热量限制的策略已被证实可以延长各种动物的寿命并降低癌症和其他与年龄有关的疾病发病率。它是否同样适用于人类尚不明确。但一项有趣的新研究表明,在青年和中年人群中,长期限制热量摄入会对他们的健康产生影响。
在这项由美国国家卫生研究院资助并于本月发表在《柳叶刀糖尿病与内分泌学》期刊上的新研究中,研究人员对143名健康的男性和女性进行了观察,他们的年龄介于21岁到50岁。他们按照指示,在两年的时间里限制热量摄入。他们可以吃想吃的食物,只要他们减少所吃食物的总量,目标是使摄入的热量减少25%。
许多人没有实现这一目标。平均而言,节食者的总热量摄入大约减少了12%.或大约每天减少300卡的热量,相当于一个大百吉圈,一些巧克力饼干或一小杯星巴克摩卡星冰乐的热量。但这组人中,许多人的心血管和代谢健康指标均有所改善,即使他们的指标原本就在正常范围内。
他们的体重和体脂都下降了,胆固醇水平得到改善,血压略有下降,并且他们的血糖控制得更好,炎症也减少了。同时,一组共75名没有限制热量的健康人在这些指标中并没有任何改善。
热量限制组的人们获得的一些健康益处,部分源于他们在参与研究的两年内,体重大幅下降,大约平均减轻了16磅。但该研究的主要作者、杜克大学医学和心脏病学教授威廉·克劳斯表示,他们的新陈代谢健康状况的改善要远远超过单纯减肥的预期水平,这表明热量限制可能会对身体的疾病通路产生一些独特的生理影响。
“我们并不是因为产生了变化而感到惊讶,”他说,“但变化相当惊人。在疾病人群中,任何五种药物一齐服用都不会带来这么大的改善。”
未参与该研究的哈佛大学陈曾熙公共卫生学院营养学系主任胡炳长称,热量限制可能是改善健康和减轻体重的有用方法,但尚不清楚这项新研究证实的变化最终是否能延长寿命,减少慢性病。