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Prolonged Fasting and the Fasting-Mimicking Diet: The Science of 5-Day Resets

Time-restricted eating limits the eating window. Intermittent fasting extends the overnight fast. But prolonged fasting triggers a distinct and more profound set of biological changes that shorter protocols cannot reach. The fasting-mimicking diet was designed to capture these benefits with greater safety and adherence than water-only fasting.

Derek Giordano
Derek Giordano
Founder & Editor, IQ Healthspan
Jun 9, 2025
Published
Apr 8, 2026
Updated
2,700 words
Length
✓ Cited Sources
Key Takeaways
  • After 48 to 72 hours of fasting, the body undergoes a metabolic shift that shorter protocols cannot replicate: near-complete glycogen depletion, maximal ketone production, deep autophagy activation, and measurable reductions in IGF-1 and insulin.
  • The fasting-mimicking diet (FMD), developed by Valter Longo at USC, is a 5-day calorie-restricted protocol (roughly 1,100 calories day 1, 700 calories days 2 to 5) with specific macronutrient ratios designed to activate fasting biology while maintaining nutritional safety.
  • Three cycles of the FMD reduced multiple cardiovascular and metabolic risk factors in the PROLON randomized trial, including significant reductions in visceral fat, blood pressure, IGF-1, CRP, and fasting glucose.
  • Autophagy is maximally activated during prolonged fasting and is one of the primary mechanisms by which fasting promotes healthspan. It requires sustained nutrient deprivation that shorter fasting windows cannot adequately provide.
  • Prolonged fasting is contraindicated in underweight individuals, pregnant women, diabetics on insulin or sulfonylureas, and people with a history of disordered eating.

Most fasting research in popular media concerns time-restricted eating and the 16:8 pattern. These protocols have genuine metabolic benefits. But they represent only the entry level of fasting biology. To understand what prolonged fasting uniquely activates, you need to understand the timeline of metabolic adaptation that unfolds over 3 to 5 days without food.1

The Fasting Timeline: What Changes at Each Stage

Hours 0 to 12: Dietary glucose is consumed, glycogen synthesis occurs, insulin gradually falls. Hours 12 to 24: Liver glycogen mobilization begins, ketone production starts modestly, autophagy begins to upregulate. Hours 24 to 48: Liver glycogen substantially depleted, ketone production rises significantly, AMPK activation drives mitochondrial biogenesis. Hours 48 to 72: Liver glycogen nearly exhausted, ketones (BHB) reach 1 to 3 mM, autophagy maximally upregulated, growth hormone rises dramatically to preserve lean mass, IGF-1 falls significantly. Days 3 to 5: A metabolic state is reached that is physiologically distinct from anything achievable with shorter fasting protocols - stem cell regeneration programs activate, immune system autophagy is maximally engaged, and the epigenetic reprogramming associated with prolonged fasting begins.2

Autophagy: The Cellular Renewal Process That Needs Time

Autophagy is the cellular quality control mechanism through which cells degrade and recycle damaged proteins, dysfunctional organelles, and intracellular pathogens. Yoshinori Ohsumi won the 2016 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for elucidating its molecular mechanisms, and much of the current longevity interest in fasting derives directly from his work.3

The key insight for fasting protocols: autophagy is activated by nutrient deprivation (specifically by reduced mTOR activity and increased AMPK activity), but it requires time to reach levels associated with meaningful cellular renewal. Most studies suggest autophagy flux is substantially elevated by 24 hours of fasting but continues to increase through 48 to 72 hours. The 16:8 pattern activates autophagy transiently each day. Prolonged fasting sustains and deepens it. For people carrying a high burden of cellular damage from years of chronic disease, inflammation, or simply aging, the deeper autophagy of prolonged fasting may provide a meaningful advantage.

The Fasting-Mimicking Diet: Capturing the Biology with Greater Safety

Complete water-only fasting is physiologically effective but challenging to adhere to, carries significant risks of muscle loss and electrolyte imbalance, and is poorly suited to people with demanding work schedules. The FMD, developed by Valter Longo at the USC Longevity Institute, was designed to maintain the cellular signaling of fasting while providing sufficient calories and micronutrients to reduce safety concerns and improve adherence.4

Day 1 provides approximately 1,100 calories with 11 percent protein, 46 percent fat, and 43 percent carbohydrate. Days 2 through 5 provide 700 to 800 calories with 9 percent protein, 44 percent fat, and 47 percent carbohydrate. The specific macronutrient ratios were selected to minimize mTOR and IGF-1 activation via low protein while providing sufficient fuel to reduce the discomfort of restriction.

"Five days per month of the fasting-mimicking diet can turn back the biological clock on multiple aging biomarkers in a way that continuous caloric restriction over months cannot match."

Dr. Valter Longo, USC Longevity Institute, developer of the fasting-mimicking diet

The PROLON Trial: Human Evidence

The randomized controlled trial of the FMD, published in Science Translational Medicine in 2017, enrolled 100 participants randomized to 3 monthly cycles of the FMD versus a control diet. After 3 cycles, the FMD group showed significant reductions in body weight, trunk fat, blood pressure, IGF-1, and CRP, with the largest effects in participants with the highest baseline risk for each measure. Lean body mass was preserved. Subsequent epigenetic age analysis found that 3 cycles significantly reduced biological age as measured by epigenetic clocks.5

Important Contraindications

The FMD and prolonged fasting are contraindicated in underweight individuals (BMI below 18.5), pregnant or breastfeeding women, people with type 1 diabetes or type 2 diabetes on insulin or sulfonylureas, people with a history of anorexia nervosa or restrictive eating disorders, and people with active cancer unless under direct oncological supervision. Consult a physician before attempting any form of prolonged fasting.

1

Build a Foundation of Time-Restricted Eating First

Establish consistent 14 to 16 hour overnight fasting for at least 4 to 8 weeks before attempting the FMD. Metabolic flexibility makes prolonged fasting significantly more comfortable and reduces muscle loss risk.

2

Use the Published Macros or Commercial FMD Kit

The Prolon kit follows the validated protocol exactly. Alternatively, replicate the published macros with whole foods: day 1 at 1,100 kcal and 11 percent protein, days 2 to 5 at 700 kcal and 9 percent protein. Avoid high-protein foods - they blunt the IGF-1 and mTOR response that drives the benefit.

3

Target 2 to 4 Cycles Per Year

Monthly FMD cycles are used in clinical trials and are appropriate for people with metabolic disease. For healthy adults optimizing for longevity, 2 to 4 cycles per year captures significant biological benefit without the disruption of monthly restriction.

4

Refeed Gradually on Days 6 and 7

Begin the refeeding phase with easily digestible foods - fruit, soup, lightly cooked vegetables - on day 6, returning to normal eating on day 7. Aggressive refeeding causes GI distress and blunts the benefits of the fast.

References

  1. 1Cahill GF. "Fuel metabolism in starvation." Annual Review of Nutrition. 2006;26:1-22. [PubMed]
  2. 2Longo VD, Mattson MP. "Fasting: molecular mechanisms and clinical applications." Cell Metabolism. 2014;19(2):181-192. [PubMed]
  3. 3Mizushima N, Komatsu M. "Autophagy: renovation of cells and tissues." Cell. 2011;147(4):728-741. [PubMed]
  4. 4Brandhorst S, et al. "A periodic diet that mimics fasting promotes multi-system regeneration, enhanced cognitive performance, and healthspan." Cell Metabolism. 2015;22(1):86-99. [PubMed]
  5. 5Wei M, et al. "Fasting-mimicking diet and markers/risk factors for aging, diabetes, cancer, and cardiovascular disease." Science Translational Medicine. 2017. [PubMed]
Derek Giordano
Derek Giordano
Founder & Editor, IQ Healthspan
Derek Giordano is the founder and editor of IQ Healthspan. Every article is independently researched and sourced to peer-reviewed scientific literature with numbered citations readers can verify. Derek has spent over a decade synthesizing longevity research, translating complex clinical and preclinical findings into accessible, evidence-based guidance. IQ Healthspan maintains no supplement brand partnerships, affiliate relationships, or financial conflicts of interest.

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Medical Disclaimer: This article is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before making decisions about your health. Read full medical disclaimer →