Food and Behaviour Research

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Low carbohydrate and low-calorie diets reduce liver fat and lower brain glutamate and myo-inositol levels in patients with Metabolic Dysfunction-Associated Steatotic Liver Disease (MASLD)

Haley A P, Knight-Scott J, Caillaud M, Gallagher I, Park J, Li Y, Wang T, Tanaka H, Browning J D (2025) Metab Brain Dis 40(5):199 doi: 10.1007/s11011-025-01624-8 

Web URL: Read this research on PubMed

Abstract:

In a longitudinal cohort study with intervention (NCT05216796), we utilized multiorgan imaging to determine if metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) is associated with elevated cerebral glutamate and myo-inositol and to determine their sensitivity to dietary intervention. Fifty-five adults with self-reported MASLD or high MASLD risk (3 + metabolic risk factors) received liver and brain magnetic resonance spectroscopy scans pre and post two-week low carbohydrate (≤30 g/d) or low-calorie (women ~ 1200 kcal/d; men ~ 1500 kcal/d) diet, both known for their ability to reduce liver fat. Forty-four adults completed the study (36 female, average age 54 years). Thirty out of 44 met clinical criterion for MASLD based on neuroimaging (≥ 5% hepatic triglycerides). Intervention was associated with significant decreases in liver fat fraction (mean difference = 3.101, 95% CI 2.104-4.099, p < 0.0001), glutamate (mean difference = 0.753, 95% CI 0.274-1.233, p = 0.0032) and myo-inositol (mean difference = 0.478, 95% CI 0.180-0.775, p = 0.0027) in patients with confirmed MASLD. Thus, MASLD may be a source of glutamate neurotoxicity and neuroinflammation and diet is an effective strategy for supporting brain as well as liver health.