Fasting: The Real Research, and the Viral Stat That Isn't
Part of NU's "records over spin" health series. The science of fasting is genuinely strong — and genuinely oversold. This separates the two, with the honest evidence level on each. Not medical advice; prolonged fasting carries real risks and isn't for everyone. Talk to your doctor.
The research is real — and there's a lot of it
Fasting, autophagy, and caloric restriction together carry ~6,000 peer-reviewed papers and ~685 registered human trials. This is not a fringe corner of science:
- Autophagy — the cell's self-cleaning and recycling process that fasting upregulates — is the subject of the 2016 Nobel Prize in Medicine (Yoshinori Ohsumi). That fasting triggers it is established cell biology.
- Caloric restriction extends lifespan across a wide range of animal models — one of the most replicated findings in all of aging research.
- Fasting-mimicking diet work (Valter Longo's lab) shows metabolic effects and, in mice, immune-cell and stem-cell regeneration.
- Human trials show real improvements in metabolic markers — insulin sensitivity, inflammation, blood pressure — from intermittent and periodic fasting.
So the direction is legitimate and under-discussed — and, fittingly for this series, fasting is free and unpatentable, which is part of why it gets less promotion than a drug would. No one can sell you not-eating.
The viral stat — handled straight
A claim circulates that "a 7-day fast cuts all-cause mortality by ~70%." Records over spin means saying this plainly: I could not find a solid human trial supporting that specific figure. It looks like an overstatement or a garbling of real-but-different findings — animal lifespan extension, mouse immune regeneration, and observational cardiac data associating routine fasting with better outcomes (e.g., Intermountain Healthcare studies) — none of which is a proven 70% human mortality cut from a single 7-day fast.
The honest version is still strong: real autophagy and metabolic benefits, genuine longevity signals — without a dramatic, unproven number a skeptic could use to wave the whole topic away. The too-good stat is the glass jaw; the real research is the case. Keep the case, drop the jaw.
The safety line (this one matters)
Prolonged fasting — especially multi-day — is not casual. Real risks include refeeding syndrome, electrolyte disturbances, and harm to people with diabetes, a history of eating disorders, who are pregnant, underweight, or on certain medications. Extended fasts are done under medical supervision for a reason. "Promising research" is not "skip a week of food because a post said 70%."
Bottom line
- ✅ Fasting / autophagy science is real, robust, Nobel-backed — and under-promoted partly because it can't be sold.
- ⚠️ The "70% mortality cut from a 7-day fast" stat is not established — strong claim, missing the trial. NU flags it instead of repeating it.
- 🩺 Prolonged fasting carries real risk — supervised, not solo-from-a-headline.
Records over spin — including when the record is more modest than the viral version. Bring this to your doctor as questions, not conclusions.