A: All groups gained weight over three weeks. There was no difference in weight gain between diet groups in the adult animals; juvenile animals on the ketogenic diet gained weight significantly more slowly than those on the control diet. Analysis of juveniles revealed significant effects of time (F = 635.1, p<0.001) and diet (F = 17.6, p<0.001), as well as a significant time x diet interaction (F = 241.8, p<0.001), whereas for adults, there was a significant effect of time (F = 62.7, p<0.001) but not diet (F = 1.2, n.s.) and no significant interaction (F = 1.2, n.s.). Numbers of subjects: 12 for each juvenile group, 14 for adult control diet, 16 for adult ketogenic diet. B: Like body weight, baseline paw size (before CFA injection) was lower with the ketogenic diet in juveniles but not in adults. Numbers of subjects as in Fig. 2. C: Plasma levels of the ketone body β-hydroxybutyrate were similarly elevated in juvenile and adult rats. Analysis revealed a significant effect of diet (F = 49.6, p<0.001) but not age (F = 0.8, n.s.) and no significant interaction (F = 0.8, n.s.). Number of subjects = 7–9. *p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.001 Newman-Keuls (A,C) or t-test (B) comparisons to age-matched controls.