Low-Carbohydrate (Ketogenic) Diet in Children with Obesity: Part 1—Diet Impact on Anthropometric Indicators and Indicators of Metabolic Syndrome and Insulin Resistance
Ivanka N. Paskaleva, Nartsis N. Kaleva, Teodora D. Dimcheva, Petya P. Markova, Ivan S. Ivanov

TL;DR
A well-formulated ketogenic diet helped children with obesity lose weight and improve metabolic health markers over four months.
Contribution
This study provides empirical evidence on the effectiveness of a ketogenic diet in children with obesity and metabolic disorders.
Findings
Children lost an average of 6.45 kg and reduced BMI by 3.12 kg/m².
Significant improvements were seen in insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome indicators.
Hepatosteatosis cases decreased twofold and metabolic syndrome cases decreased threefold.
Abstract
Background: The ketogenic diet has been successfully used in the last 100 years in the treatment of epilepsy and other neurological disorders. In recent decades, it gained wider application in the treatment of obesity, metabolic syndrome, and type 2 diabetes. However, there have been only a few studies on its use in children with obesity and associated metabolic disorders. Objectives: To determine the clinical and metabolic effects of a well-formulated low-carbohydrate (ketogenic) diet in children with obesity. Methods: One hundred children with obesity and metabolic disorders underwent initial anthropometric, laboratory, and ultrasound examinations. They were placed on a well-formulated ketogenic diet and monitored for 4 months. The 58 patients who completed the study underwent follow-up examinations to assess the effects of the diet on anthropometric, clinical, and laboratory markers…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiet and metabolism studies · Diet, Metabolism, and Disease · Adipose Tissue and Metabolism
