Fasting-mimicking diet reduces gum disease inflammation

A small clinical trial found that short periods of calorie restriction lowered inflammation markers tied to gum disease. Researchers at King's College London led the study involving patients in Spain. The results suggest dietary changes could complement standard dental treatments.

Twenty-eight patients were split into two groups. One followed a five-day low-calorie diet three times over six months, consuming 1,100 calories daily for the first two days and 750 for the next three. The other group ate normally.

After six months, the fasting group showed lower levels of inflammation-related markers in blood and gum tissue samples. They also had reduced C-reactive protein, a general inflammation indicator.

Dr. Giuseppe Mainas, the study's first author, said lifestyle modifications could be important alongside proper tooth brushing. Senior author Prof Luigi Nibali noted that fasting may cut oxidative stress and affect the body's microbiome.

The trial, published in the Journal of Clinical Periodontology, was the first to link fasting-mimicking diets directly to gum disease markers. Researchers plan larger studies to explore its use in treatment.

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Relieved Crohn's patients in Stanford clinic with fasting-mimicking diet calendar, healthy meals, and positive trial results charts.
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Five-day monthly fasting-mimicking diet eased symptoms and inflammation in Crohn’s trial

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A Stanford Medicine-led randomized trial in the United States found that a five-day-per-month fasting-mimicking diet was linked to improved patient-reported symptoms and lower biological markers of inflammation in adults with mild-to-moderate Crohn’s disease. The results were published in Nature Medicine.

Eliminating sucrose from a low-fat diet worsened glucose tolerance and altered the gut microbiome in mice over 16 weeks, according to results presented on Saturday, June 13, 2026, at ENDO 2026, the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in Chicago.

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A small 2023 study of adults with obesity in China found that an intermittent energy restriction program was associated with weight loss and changes in gut bacteria alongside altered activity in brain regions linked to appetite, cravings and self-control.

A year-long observational study in Japan suggests that people with type 2 diabetes who tend to overeat in response to tempting food cues such as sight and smell may see greater weight loss—and possibly better blood-sugar improvement—after starting GLP-1 receptor agonists, while those with primarily emotional eating patterns show less consistent links to long-term outcomes.

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A randomized controlled trial in 180 adults found that prescribing diets high, regular or low in sweet-tasting foods for six months did not change participants’ liking for sweet taste, body weight, energy intake, or several biomarkers linked to diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The researchers concluded the results do not support public health advice that aims to reduce exposure to sweet-tasting foods regardless of whether sweetness comes from sugar, low-calorie sweeteners, fruit or dairy.

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