Dieta ketogeniczna nie zmniejsza napadów padaczki i zapalnych zmian w mózgu u myszy zainfekowanych wirusem

PubMed➕ 04.06.2026bioRxiv

The Ketogenic Diet Fails to Mitigate Seizures and Neuroinflammatory Responses in a Mouse Model of Virus-Induced Epilepsy

W skrócie

Badacze sprawdzili, czy dieta ketogeniczna (bogata w tłuszcze, niska w węglowodany) może pomóc w zmniejszeniu napadów padaczki u myszy zarażonych specjalnym wirusem. Okazało się, że choć dieta wprowadziła organizm myszy w stan ketozy i zmieniła skład bakterii jelitowych, nie zapobiegła napadom ani nie zmniejszyła stanu zapalnego w mózgu. Wyniki pokazują, że dieta ketogeniczna działa inaczej w przypadku padaczki spowodowanej infekcją wirusową niż w innych typach padaczki, dlatego pacjenci z takim rodzajem epilepsji mogą potrzebować innych rodzajów leczenia.

Oryginalny abstract (angielski)

OBJECTIVE: The ketogenic diet (KD) is a high-fat, low-carbohydrate intervention widely used to treat drug-resistant epilepsy, thought to reduce seizures through a combination of metabolic, neuronal, and microbiota-dependent mechanisms. Additionally, recent studies suggest that the anticonvulsant effects of KD require the gut microbiota, with taxa such as and contributing to seizure protection by modulating host neurotransmitter balance and neural excitability. While KD has been shown to be effective in reducing seizure burden across different epilepsies, its antiseizure effect on infection-driven seizures, which are often driven by acute neuroinflammation, has not been evaluated. Here, we evaluated the effects of KD on seizure burden, neuroimmune responses, and gut microbiota composition in the Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV) model of virus-induced epilepsy. METHODS: Mice were maintained on either a KD or a normal diet prior to intracerebral TMEV infection. Seizures were induced by handling and scored twice daily from day 3 to 7 post-infection. Neuroimmune responses were assessed by flow cytometry, and fecal microbial composition was analyzed using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. RESULTS: Despite achieving ketosis, KD did not reduce seizure incidence, seizure burden, or seizure severity during acute TMEV infection. KD also did not significantly alter overall immune cell infiltration into the central nervous system, indicating limited effects on global neuroinflammation. However, KD significantly reshaped the gut microbiota, reducing alpha diversity (richness, Shannon diversity, and evenness) and strongly altering community structure with clear separation between diet groups, including enrichment of taxa such as , and , and depletion of fiber-associated taxa including and . However, these microbial shifts were insufficient to mitigate inflammation-driven seizures. SIGNIFICANCE: These results demonstrate that KD's anticonvulsant efficacy is highly context-dependent, and that KD-driven changes in microbiota- and metabolite-mediated mechanisms may be ineffective against infection-associated epilepsy, suggesting that inflammation-driven seizures require distinct therapeutic approaches. KEY POINTS: The ketogenic diet (KD) does not reduce acute seizure incidence and severity during TMEV infection despite achieving ketosisKD does not induce neuroinflammatory changes associated with seizure outcomesKD strongly reshapes gut microbiota, reducing diversity and altering community structure.Microbiota changes are insufficient to protect against inflammation-driven seizuresKD anticonvulsant effects are context-dependent and ineffective in infection-driven epilepsy.

Metadane publikacji

Journal
bioRxiv
Data publikacji
21.05.2026
PMID
42239152
DOI
10.64898/2026.05.19.726056
Autorzy
Meili CH, Allen K, Doty DJ, Del Fiol S, DePaula-Silva AB
Źródło
PubMed