Jan. 28 - Modified Atkins Diet May Cut Epileptic Seizures in
Adults
A modified version of a popular high-protein,
low-carbohydrate diet can significantly cut the number of seizures
in adults with epilepsy, a study led by Johns Hopkins researchers
suggests. The Atkins-like diet, which has shown promise for
seizure control in children, may offer a new lifeline for patients
when drugs and other treatments fail or cause complications.
For almost a century, doctors have prescribed
an eating plan called the ketogenic diet to treat children with
epilepsy. This diet often consists of a short period of fasting,
strictly limits fluids and drastically restricts carbohydrates.
It appears to limit or even eliminate seizures, possibly by
generating the build-up of ketones, compounds the body produces
when it derives calories mostly from fat. Some of the largest
studies to scientifically test this diet’s efficacy took
place at Johns Hopkins in the mid-1990s, led by pediatric neurologists
John Freeman, MD, and Eileen Vining, MD.
Why exactly the ketogenic diet works remains
unknown, and it is notoriously difficult to follow, relying
almost solely on fat and protein for calories. Consequently,
doctors typically recommend it only for children, whose parents
can strictly monitor their eating habits. The ketogenic diet
is almost never prescribed to adults, who generally make their
own food choices and often have difficulty complying with the
diet’s strict guidelines.
In 2002, Johns Hopkins researchers began testing
a modified version of the Atkins diet in children with epilepsy.
The modified diet shares the high-fat focus of the ketogenic
diet, prompting the body to generate ketones. However, it allows
more carbohydrates and protein, doesn’t limit fluids and
calories, and has no fasting period. When studies showed that
the new diet prevented or curtailed seizures in children, the
researchers began testing it for efficacy and ease of use in
adults.
Reporting on the results in the February issue
of Epilepsia, Eric H. Kossoff, MD,
an assistant professor of neurology and pediatrics at the Johns
Hopkins University School of Medicine, said 30 adults with epilepsy,
ages 18 to 53 years, who had tried at least two anticonvulsant
drugs without success and had an average of 10 seizures per
week, were placed on the modified Atkins diet.
The regimen restricted them to 15 grams of carbohydrates
a day. “That’s a few strawberries, some vegetables,
or a bit of bread,” says Kossoff. The diet offers most
of its calories from fat-eggs, meats, oils and heavy cream-with
as much protein and no-carb beverages as patients want.
Each day, patients kept diaries of what they
ate and how many seizures they had. The researchers evaluated
how each patient was doing at one, three and six months after
starting the diet.
Results showed that about half the patients
had experienced a 50% reduction in the frequency of their seizures
by the first clinic visit. About a third of the patients halved
the frequency of seizures by three months. Side effects linked
with the diet, such as a rise in cholesterol or triglycerides,
were mild. A third of the patients dropped out by the third
month, unable to comply with the restrictions.
Fourteen patients who stuck with the diet until
the six-month mark chose to continue, even after the study ended-a
testament to how effective the diet worked to treat their epilepsy,
Kossoff notes.
Though the modified Atkins diet won’t
be a good fit for all patients, says Kossoff, “it opens
up another therapeutic option for adults trying to decide between
medication, surgery and electrical stimulation to treat intractable
seizures.” A second study to examine the diet’s
effects on adults with intractable seizures is under way.
Source: Johns Hopkins Medicine
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