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Changes in laboratory variables in rheumatoid arthritis patients during a trial of fasting and one-year vegetarian diet.

Scandinavian journal of rheumatology
May 5, 1995
J Kjeldsen-Kragh et al. (7 authors)
Clinical TrialComparative StudyJournal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to examine biochemical and immunological changes in rheumatoid arthritis patients following a fasting and vegetarian diet intervention.

Results Summary

The vegetarian diet group showed significant decreases in inflammatory markers (e.g., leukocyte count, IgM RF, complement components) compared to omnivores, suggesting reduced disease activity. Clinical improvement correlated with declines in most laboratory variables, though leukocyte reduction occurred independently of clinical outcomes.

Population

Rheumatoid arthritis patients

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

1 month (with follow-up to 1 year in prior study)

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (20)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
fasting followed by a vegetarian diet
decrease
rheumatoid arthritis
rheumatoid arthritis patients
-
significant improvement may be obtained
#1
vegetarian diet
decrease
platelet count
rheumatoid arthritis patients
-
significant decrease
#2
vegetarian diet
decrease
leukocyte count
rheumatoid arthritis patients
-
significant decrease
#3
vegetarian diet
decrease
calprotectin
rheumatoid arthritis patients
-
significant decrease
#4
vegetarian diet
decrease
total IgG
rheumatoid arthritis patients
-
significant decrease
#5
vegetarian diet
decrease
IgM rheumatoid factor (RF)
rheumatoid arthritis patients
-
significant decrease
#6
vegetarian diet
decrease
C3-activation products
rheumatoid arthritis patients
-
significant decrease
#7
vegetarian diet
decrease
complement component C3
rheumatoid arthritis patients
-
significant decrease
#8
vegetarian diet
decrease
complement component C4
rheumatoid arthritis patients
-
significant decrease
#9
omnivore diet
no change
measured parameters
omnivores
-
none of the measured parameters changed significantly
#10
vegetarian diet
decrease
14 of 15 measured variables
rheumatoid arthritis patients
-
course favored the vegetarians
#11
vegetarian diet
decrease
leukocyte count
rheumatoid arthritis patients
-
difference was only significant
#12
vegetarian diet
decrease
IgM RF
rheumatoid arthritis patients
-
difference was only significant
#13
vegetarian diet
decrease
complement component C3
rheumatoid arthritis patients
-
difference was only significant
#14
vegetarian diet
decrease
complement component C4
rheumatoid arthritis patients
-
difference was only significant
#15
vegetarian diet
decrease
most of the laboratory variables
vegetarians who improved according to clinical variables
-
declined considerably
#16
vegetarian diet
decrease
inflammatory activity
vegetarians who improved according to clinical variables
-
substantial reduction
#17
vegetarian diet
decrease
leukocyte count
vegetarians
-
decreased
#18
vegetarian diet
decrease
leukocyte count
vegetarians
-
decline may be attributed to vegetarian diet per se
#19
dietary treatment
decrease
disease activity
some patients with rheumatoid arthritis
-
can reduce
#20
Abstract

We have previously reported that significant improvement may be obtained in rheumatoid arthritis patients by fasting followed by a vegetarian diet for one year. The present study was carried out to examine to what extent biochemical and immunological variables changed during the clinical trial of fasting and vegetarian diet. For the patients who were randomised to the vegetarian diet there was a significant decrease in platelet count, leukocyte count, calprotectin, total IgG, IgM rheumatoid factor (RF), C3-activation products, and the complement components C3 and C4 after one month of treatment. None of the measured parameters changed significantly during this period in the group of omnivores. The course of 14 of 15 measured variables favored the vegetarians compared with the omnivores, but the difference was only significant for leukocyte count, IgM RF, and the complement components C3 and C4. Most of the laboratory variables declined considerably in the vegetarians who improved according to clinical variables, indicating a substantial reduction in inflammatory activity. The leukocyte count, however, decreased in the vegetarians irrespective of the clinical results. Thus, the decline in leukocyte count may be attributed to vegetarian diet per se and not to the reduction in disease activity. The results of the present study are in accordance with the findings from the clinical trial, namely that dietary treatment can reduce the disease activity in some patients with rheumatoid arthritis.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdultAgedArthritis, RheumatoidCell Adhesion Molecules, NeuronalComplement C3Complement C4Diet, VegetarianFastingFemaleHumansLeukocyte CountLeukocyte L1 Antigen ComplexMaleMiddle AgedRheumatoid FactorTime FactorsTumor Necrosis Factor-alpha
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety85
Efficacy75/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations36
Citations/Year1.2
Relative Citation Ratio1.14
NIH Percentile55.1%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.50
Weight Score0.48
Normalized Score0.80
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