Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The benefits of nutritional interventions with dietary restrictions are associated with improvement and preservation of mitochondrial function. Evidence suggests that dietary restrictions, including modifications in caloric intake (caloric restriction), or in the timing of food intake (e.g., intermittent fasting), play an important role in stimulating cell and mitochondrial autophagy, favoring the elimination of old and dysfunctional mitochondria. In addition to the observed effects on mitochondrial function, there is evidence that intermittent fasting, caloric restriction, and the ketogenic diet also generate changes in gut microbiota and microbial metabolite composition. The main aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of intermittent fasting, caloric restriction and ketogenic diet on mitochondrial function determined by respirometry in monocytes, modulated by the gut microbiota in subjects with obesity. An open randomized controlled clinical trial will be conducted with 80 participants divided by a draw in 4 nutritional interventions groups for 1 month, each for 20 participants, then participants will receive 550 mg of rifaximin and will finish the study with the assigned nutritional intervention for another month of follow-up. Knowledge of these dynamics will allow us to explore and understand the relationship between metabolites from the gut microbiota and their effect on mitochondrial function associated with the dietary interventions mentioned above.
Full description
The study consists of an open-label randomized controlled clinical trial. Selected subjects will be randomized to one of 4 dietary intervention groups for 1 month with energy intake according to the resting energy expenditure obtained by indirect calorimetry.
The intervention groups will be as follows; a) ketogenic diet, b) caloric restriction diet, c) intermittent fasting diet and, d) usual diet.
After one month of the assigned intervention, the antibiotic rifaximin will be prescribed to the participants in doses of 550mg, twice a day for 7 days. After the 7 days with the antibiotic, participants will complete another month with the dietary intervention according to the group that the participants were initially randomized.
Participants will be required to complete food logs (2 on weekdays and 1 for weekends) during each week in order to monitor adherence to the dietary plan. For this, a nutritionist will teach them how to complete the food log, where participants must record the type, quantity and place where the food was consumed at each feeding time. Also, 2 phone calls will be made each week to evaluate adherence to treatment. The adherence will be determined with the % of adherence to the dietary treatment as obtained in the analysis of the food logs. Similarly, urine ketone concentration will be determined to measure adherence to the ketogenic diet. A logbook will be provided by the investigator to the participants to record the consumption of the medication, which should be filled out daily by the participant.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Patients with any type of diabetes.
Patients with high blood pressure.
Patients with acquired diseases secondarily producing obesity and diabetes.
Patients who have suffered a cardiovascular event.
Patients with gastrointestinal diseases.
Weight loss > 3 kg in the last 3 months.
Catabolic diseases such as cancer and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.
Pregnancy status.
Positive smoking.
Drug treatment:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
63 participants in 4 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Martha Guevara Cruz, PhD; Laura A Velazquez Villegas, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal