Ramadan Fasting Model Exerts Hepatoprotective, Anti-obesity, and Anti-Hyperlipidemic Effects in an Experimentally-induced Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver in Rats
Abeer Alasmari, Abdulrahman Al-Khalifah, Ahmed BaHammam, Hesham, Alodah, Ahmad Almnaizel, Noura Alshiban, Maha Alhussain

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that Ramadan fasting model (RFM) has hepatoprotective, anti-obesity, and anti-hyperlipidemic effects in rats with diet-induced nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, suggesting potential therapeutic benefits.
Contribution
The paper provides experimental evidence that RFM improves metabolic parameters and liver health in NAFLD rat models, a novel application of fasting in this context.
Findings
RFM reduces body weight in HFD-fed rats.
RFM improves lipid profile and liver enzyme levels.
RFM decreases hepatic fat accumulation.
Abstract
Background: The epidemic of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and its metabolic effects present a serious public health concern. We hypothesized that the Ramadan fasting model (RFM), which involves fasting from dawn to dusk for a month, could provide potential therapeutic benefits and mitigate NAFLD. Accordingly, we aimed to validate this hypothesis using obese male rats. Methods: Rats were split into two groups (n = 24 per group), and they were given either a standard (S) or high-fat diet (HFD) for 12 weeks. During the last four weeks of the study period, both S- and HFD-fed rats were subdivided into eight groups to assess the effect of RFM with/without training (T) or glucose administration (G) on the lipid profile, liver enzymes, and liver structure (n=6/group). Results: The HFD+RFM groups exhibited a significantly lower final body weight than that the HFDC group. Serum…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDietary Effects on Health · Diet, Metabolism, and Disease · Nutrition, Genetics, and Disease
