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Intermittent fasting has gained relevance in recent years because it allows for significant weight loss with improvement in cardiovascular risk factors similar to calorie-restricted diets without people having to track calories every day, or prohibiting people from eating certain food groups. However, there is no data about its usefulness in patients with weight gain after bariatric surgery, or its long-term effects(9).
Research question: In patients with weight gain, being followed up in the obesity clinic, is intermittent fasting for 12 weeks, compared to calorie restriction, effective in terms of weight reduction?
H0: Change in weight from baseline to 12 weeks less than 5% H1: Change in weight from baseline to 12 weeks greater than or equal to 5%
Patients meeting the inclusion criteria will be identified. Once identified, they will be asked to participate in the study and, if they accept, they will be asked to complete and sign the informed consent form. The study will consist of three phases: a selection phase, an adaptation phase (1 to 2 weeks), a weight loss phase (12 weeks) and a maintenance phase (12 weeks).
At the first visit, patients will be randomized to two types of nutritional interventions: intermittent fasting or caloric restriction. During the weight loss phase, biweekly follow-up will be performed to ensure adherence to the assigned dietary intervention. At the end of the 12 weeks, patients can decide whether to continue the assigned dietary intervention or move to a maintenance plan. Anthropometric measurements and body composition will be measured at baseline, 12 and 24 weeks.
Full description
Patients meeting the inclusion criteria will be identified. Once identified, they will be asked to participate in the study and, if they accept, they will be asked to complete and sign the informed consent form. The study will consist of three phases: a selection phase, an adaptation phase (1 to 2 weeks), a weight loss phase (12 weeks) and a maintenance phase (12 weeks).
Selection Period (Visit 0)
The bariatric surgery, nutrition, and endocrinology consultation of the bariatric clinic will identify possible candidates. In addition, the use of dietary supplements will be reviewed according to the Obesity Clinic's Clinical Practice Guide and the labs necessary to complete the baseline cardiometabolic profile will be obtained. A 7-day food recall and a record of usual physical activity and signing of informed consent will be required. In addition, an application will be downloaded to assess the number of steps per day taken by the individual to control for the physical activity variable.
Adjustment period (visit 1)
A visit with an obesity clinic dietitian will be scheduled 7 to 14 days after selection. During this visit, the 7-day recall will be reviewed to calculate basal weekly caloric intake. Baseline clinical and anthropometric data (weight, height, body mass index, abdominal circumference, and body composition) will be collected. Randomization will then be performed using a simple computer-generated randomization code, which will be managed centrally by a person who is unaware of the clinical characteristics of each patient outside the research group. The allocation made by this mechanism cannot be changed by the treating physicians. Subjects who do not attend the second visit or who do not properly complete the 7-day food and exercise diaries will be excluded. The order for the new metabolic profile will be generated to be performed at the end of the weight loss period.
Weight Loss Period
At the end of the 12-week follow-up, visit 2 (V2) will be scheduled to obtain anthropometric data, body composition, and to review the cardiometabolic profile.
Maintenance period
At visit 2, patients who wish to discontinue intermittent fasting or continuous caloric restriction will be transitioned to a weight maintenance regimen which will be prescribed by a nutritionist from the obesity clinic. In addition, they will be recommended to continue physical activity, verify adherence to dietary supplements, and a follow-up will be scheduled in 12 weeks (visit 3) for anthropometric and cardiovascular profile monitoring.
Alternatively, patients in the intervention group who wish to continue will be prescribed a modified version of fasting. Energy intake on fasting days will be increased from 1000 to 1200 kcal. Similarly, in the continuous caloric restriction group, dietary caloric intake will be increased in a similar proportion. They will be recommended to continue physical activity, verify adherence to dietary supplements, and a follow-up will be scheduled in 12 weeks (visit 3) for anthropometric and cardiovascular profile monitoring.
Final measurements will be taken at week 24, after the two follow-up periods, so that all patients have the measurement at the same intervention time.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Patients between 18 and 69 years of age treated with primary and/or secondary bariatric surgery with more than 1 year of postoperative.
2.3.3 INCLUSION CRITERIA
2.3.4 EXCLUSION CRITERIA.
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16 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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