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Contents

   



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1 Context  





2 Origins  





3 Debate on effectiveness  





4 Reception  





5 References  














CRON-diet






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


The CRON-diet (Calorie Restriction with Optimal Nutrition)[1] is a nutrient-rich, reduced calorie diet developed by Roy Walford, Lisa Walford, and Brian M. Delaney.[2] The CRON-diet involves calorie restriction in the hope that the practice will improve health and retard aging, while still attempting to provide the recommended daily amounts of various nutrients.[3] Other names include CR-diet, Longevity diet, and Anti-Aging Plan. The Walfords and Delaney, among others, founded the CR Society International to promote the CRON-diet.[4]

Context[edit]

There is no experimental evidence that calorie restriction can slow biological aging in humans.[5][6] The biological mechanisms for the supposed antiaging effects are not determined, as of 2021.[5]

Origins[edit]

The "Crew Kitchen" inside Biosphere 2

The CRON-diet was developed from data Walford compiled during his participation in Biosphere 2 from 1991 to 1993. The subjects ate a diet low in fat and in calories but "nutrient-dense", derived from the food crops raised inside the Biosphere.[7][8]

Debate on effectiveness[edit]

The writer Christopher TurnerinThe Telegraph reported that Walford claimed that the diet "will retard your rate of ageing, extend lifespan (up to perhaps 150 to 160 years, depending on when you start and how thoroughly you hold to it), and markedly decrease susceptibility to most major diseases."[3] The same article noted however that the diet "failed to dramatically increase Walford's lifespan; he died in 2004 aged 79."[3]

A review of the effects of calorie restriction in humans by Anna Picca and colleagues in 2017 noted that direct evidence was limited to what had been "recorded from the members of the Calorie Restriction Society, who have imposed on themselves a regimen of severe CR with optimal nutrition (CRON), believing to extend in this way their healthy lifespan."[9] The review noted that bone density was reduced but that bone strength was improved and maximal aerobic capacity per unit body mass was maintained or increased, while measures of quality of life including depression and physical function were improved. The review observed that one outcome had been the development of calorie restriction mimetic drugs which would be tested in clinical trials on humans.[9]

Reception[edit]

The journalist Pagan Kennedy wrote an opinion piece for The New York Times, mentioning Walford's book The 120 Year Diet and his hope of living for more than 100 years on the CRON diet, noting that instead he died of Lou Gehrig disease at age 79: her piece was titled "The Secret to a Longer Life? Don't Ask These Dead Longevity Researchers".[10]

The journalist Emily Yoffe tried the CRON-diet for Slate. She wrote that Walford had written a book about the diet called Beyond the 120 Year Diet, in which a "typical dinner" consisted of salad, lentils, brown rice, bulgur, a stalk of broccoli, and a glass of skimmed milk.[11][12] Yoffe reported that after more than 2 months on the diet, she had not experienced the promised results: her "very poor" sleep had not improved much; her "energy" remained low; her "foggy mind" was still foggy. But she was pleased that she once again could experience loose-fitting pants.[11]

References[edit]

  • ^ CRON-diet as a life-extension diet
  • ^ a b c Turner, Christopher (2010). "The Calorie Restriction dieters". The Telegraph.
  • ^ "Jan 1993 - Embryonic CR Society". CR Society International. Retrieved 29 July 2019. Brian M. Delaney, President of the CR Society since its early days, was one of several who created the Society. The Society was born in late 1994 when Steven Mehalek (who had the idea to meet), Rupert Hazle, Terry Savery, Lisa Walford, Roy Walford, and Brian M. Delaney got together at meeting of the Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine in Las Vegas.
  • ^ a b Lee MB, Hill CM, Bitto A, Kaeberlein M (November 2021). "Antiaging diets: Separating fact from fiction". Science. 374 (6570): eabe7365. doi:10.1126/science.abe7365. PMC 8841109. PMID 34793210.
  • ^ Spindler, Stephen R. (2010). "Biological Effects of Calorie Restriction: Implications for Modification of Human Aging". The Future of Aging. pp. 367–438. doi:10.1007/978-90-481-3999-6_12. ISBN 978-90-481-3998-9.
  • ^ Walford, R. L.; Harris, S. B.; Gunion, M. W. (1992). "The calorically restricted low-fat nutrient-dense diet in Biosphere 2 significantly lowers blood glucose, total leukocyte count, cholesterol, and blood pressure in humans". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 89 (23): 11533–11537. Bibcode:1992PNAS...8911533W. doi:10.1073/pnas.89.23.11533. PMC 50586. PMID 1454844.
  • ^ Nagourney, Eric (26 September 2000). "Ups and Downs for Diet Guinea Pigs". The New York Times.
  • ^ a b Picca, Anna; Pesce, Vito; Lezza, Angela Maria Serena (2017). "Does eating less make you live longer and better? An update on calorie restriction". Clinical Interventions in Aging. 12: 1887–1902. doi:10.2147/CIA.S126458. ISSN 1178-1998. PMC 5685139. PMID 29184395.
  • ^ Kennedy, Pagan (9 March 2018). "The Secret to a Longer Life? Don't Ask These Dead Longevity Researchers". The New York Times.
  • ^ a b Yoffe, Emily (8 February 2007). "My Starvation Diet". Slate.
  • ^ Walford, Roy (2000). Beyond the 120-year diet : how to double your vital years. New York: Four Walls Eight Windows. ISBN 978-1-56858-157-6. OCLC 43657044.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=CRON-diet&oldid=1215520592"

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    This page was last edited on 25 March 2024, at 16:54 (UTC).

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