Intermittent Fasting in Youth: A Scoping Review
Jomanah A. Bakhsh, Alaina P. Vidmar, Sarah-Jeanne Salvy

TL;DR
This review explores intermittent fasting in youth, finding it may help with weight loss but needs more standardized research.
Contribution
The study provides a comprehensive overview of IF in adolescents and young adults, highlighting gaps in methodology and outcomes.
Findings
Most studies reported significant weight loss in participants aged 15 to 25.
Primary outcomes included cardiometabolic risk factors and body composition.
Methodologies varied, with a need for standardized frameworks to improve comparability.
Abstract
Intermittent fasting (IF) focuses on the timing of eating rather than diet quality or energy intake, with evidence supporting its effects on weight loss and cardiometabolic outcomes in adults. However, there is limited evidence for its efficacy in adolescents and emerging adults. To address this, a scoping review examined IF regimens in individuals aged 10 to 25, focusing on methodology, intervention parameters, outcomes, adherence, feasibility, and efficacy. The review included 39 studies with 731 participants aged 15 to 25. Methodologies varied, with 18 studies on time-restricted eating and others requiring caloric restriction. Primary outcomes included cardiometabolic risk factors (11/29), body composition (9/29), anthropometric measurements (8/29), and feasibility (2/29). Most studies reported significant weight loss. This review underscores IF's potential in treating obesity in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDietary Effects on Health · Diet and metabolism studies · Circadian rhythm and melatonin
