Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
Overweight
and obesity have been attributed to increased eating frequency and the
size of eating events. This study explored the influence of the timing
of eating events and food form on appetite and daily energy intake.
DESIGN:
Crossover,
clinical intervention where participants consumed 300-kcal loads of a
solid (apple), semisolid (apple sauce), and beverage (apple juice) at a
meal or 2 hours later (snack).
SUBJECTS:
Twenty
normal-weight (body mass index 22.6+/-1.8) and 20 obese (body mass
index 32.3+/-1.5) adults. There were 10 men and 10 women within each
body mass index group.
MEASUREMENTS:
On
six occasions, participants reported to the laboratory at their
customary midday mealtime. Appetite questionnaires and motor skills
tests were completed upon arrival and at 30-minute intervals for the 2
hours participants were in the laboratory and at 30-minute intervals for
4 hours after leaving the laboratory. Diet recalls were collected the
next day. Data were collected between January 2006 and March 2007.
RESULTS:
Whether
consumed with a meal or alone as a snack, the beverage elicited the
weakest appetitive response, the solid food form elicited the strongest
appetitive response and the semisolid response was intermediate. The
appetite shift was greatest for the solid food when consumed as a snack.
The interval between test food consumption and the first spontaneous
eating event >100 kcal was shortest for the beverage. No significant
treatment effects were observed for test day energy intake or between
lean individuals and individuals with obesity.
CONCLUSIONS:
Based
on the appetitive findings, consumption of an energy-yielding beverage
either with a meal or as a snack poses a greater risk for promoting
positive energy than macronutrient-matched semisolid or solid foods
consumed at these times.
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