Abstract
Background: Ad libitum, low-carbohydrate diets decrease caloric intake and cause weight loss. It is unclear whether these effects are
due to the reduced carbohydrate content of such diets or to their associated increase in protein intake.
Objective: We tested the hypothesis that increasing the protein content while maintaining the carbohydrate content of the diet lowers
body weight by decreasing appetite and spontaneous caloric intake.
Design: Appetite, caloric
intake, body weight, and fat mass were measured in 19 subjects placed
sequentially on the following diets:
a weight-maintaining diet (15% protein, 35% fat,
and 50% carbohydrate) for 2 wk, an isocaloric diet (30% protein, 20%
fat,
and 50% carbohydrate) for 2 wk, and an ad libitum
diet (30% protein, 20% fat, and 50% carbohydrate) for 12 wk. Blood was
sampled
frequently at the end of each diet phase to measure
the area under the plasma concentration versus time curve (AUC) for
insulin,
leptin, and ghrelin.
Results: Satiety was
markedly increased with the isocaloric high-protein diet despite an
unchanged leptin AUC. Mean (±SE) spontaneous
energy intake decreased by 441 ± 63 kcal/d, body
weight decreased by 4.9 ± 0.5 kg, and fat mass decreased by 3.7 ± 0.4 kg
with the ad libitum, high-protein diet, despite a
significantly decreased leptin AUC and increased ghrelin AUC.
Conclusions: An increase
in dietary protein from 15% to 30% of energy at a constant carbohydrate
intake produces a sustained decrease
in ad libitum caloric intake that may be mediated
by increased central nervous system leptin sensitivity and results in
significant
weight loss. This anorexic effect of protein may
contribute to the weight loss produced by low-carbohydrate diets.
No comments:
Post a Comment