Could the keto diet help treat anorexia, schizophrenia and depression?
Could the keto diet help treat anorexia, schizophrenia and depression? Early research suggests that some mental health conditions could stem from metabolic disorders. If so, the findings could change how we treat mental illness By Allison Parshall edited by Tanya Lewis The bra
Could the keto diet help treat anorexia, schizophrenia and depression?
Early research suggests that some mental health conditions could stem from metabolic disorders. If so, the findings could change how we treat mental illness
The brain is the bodyโs most energy-intensive organ . Despite making up just 2 percent of the bodyโs mass, it consumes about 20 percent of its energy. Typically, the brain is mostly fueled by glucose that is produced by the breakdown of carbohydrates. But when there isnโt enough glucose to go around, the brain starts consuming fat-derived compounds called ketone bodies for fuel.
This shift, ketosis, is what happens when you follow a ketogenic diet, or keto diet, an eating regimen that is high in fat and low in carbs. Scientists have been studying how ketosis changes the brain since the early 1920s, when the diet was introduced as a therapy for treatment-resistant epilepsy in children. Some studies have also suggested it could help treat symptoms of Alzheimerโs disease .
And now results from several small trials bolster the case that the keto diet can help treat mental health conditions that include depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and anorexia nervosa . The results are preliminaryโrandomized controlled trials are underway to better evaluate who might be helped by the diet and how much it might benefit them. But together, the findings support a theory of some mental illnesses as metabolic disorders, in which the brainโs ability to derive energy from its preferred sources becomes compromised.
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This understanding of the keto diet has โreally forced me to rethink how I understand mental illness,โ says Chris Palmer, a psychiatrist who studies metabolism at Harvard Medical School.
The idea that mental illnesses and metabolism are connected makes sense, regardless of the potential effects of the keto diet. โMetabolism is basically the backbone of physiology,โ says Isaac Marin-Valencia, a neurologist studying metabolic diseases at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. โWithout metabolism, life wouldnโt be possible. So itโs not surprising that pretty much any human disease [has] some metabolic component.โ
