Agus M S, Swain J F, Larson C L, Eckert E A, Ludwig D S
Division of Endocrinology, Department of Medicine, Children's Hospital, Boston, and the General Clinical Research Center, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2000 Apr;71(4):901-7. doi: 10.1093/ajcn/71.4.901.
The concept of a body weight set point, determined predominantly by genetic mechanisms, has been proposed to explain the poor long-term results of conventional energy-restricted diets in the treatment of obesity.
The objective of this study was to examine whether dietary composition affects hormonal and metabolic adaptations to energy restriction.
A randomized, crossover design was used to compare the effects of a high-glycemic-index (high-GI) and a low-glycemic-index (low-GI) energy-restricted diet. The macronutrient composition of the high-GI diet was (as percent of energy) 67% carbohydrate, 15% protein, and 18% fat and that of the low-GI diet was 43% carbohydrate, 27% protein, and 30% fat; the diets had similar total energy, energy density, and fiber contents. The subjects, 10 moderately overweight young men, were studied for 9 d on 2 separate occasions. On days -1 to 0, they consumed self-selected foods ad libitum. On days 1-6, they received an energy-restricted high- or low-GI diet. On days 7-8, the high- or low-GI diets were consumed ad libitum.
Serum leptin decreased to a lesser extent from day 0 to day 6 with the high-GI diet than with the low-GI diet. Resting energy expenditure declined by 10.5% during the high-GI diet but by only 4.6% during the low-GI diet (7.38 +/- 0.39 and 7.78 +/- 0.36 MJ/d, respectively, on days 5-6; P = 0.04). Nitrogen balance tended to be more negative, and energy intake from snacks on days 7-8 was greater, with the high-GI than the low-GI diet.
Diets with identical energy contents can have different effects on leptin concentrations, energy expenditure, voluntary food intake, and nitrogen balance, suggesting that the physiologic adaptations to energy restriction can be modified by dietary composition.
体重设定点的概念主要由遗传机制决定,已被提出用于解释传统能量限制饮食在治疗肥胖症方面长期效果不佳的原因。
本研究的目的是检验饮食组成是否会影响对能量限制的激素和代谢适应性。
采用随机交叉设计来比较高血糖指数(高GI)和低血糖指数(低GI)能量限制饮食的效果。高GI饮食的宏量营养素组成(按能量百分比)为碳水化合物67%、蛋白质15%、脂肪18%,低GI饮食的宏量营养素组成为碳水化合物43%、蛋白质27%、脂肪30%;两种饮食的总能量、能量密度和纤维含量相似。10名中度超重的年轻男性受试者在两个不同时间段接受了为期9天的研究。在第-1至0天,他们随意食用自选食物。在第1至6天,他们接受能量限制的高GI或低GI饮食。在第7至8天,随意食用高GI或低GI饮食。
从第0天到第6天,高GI饮食组血清瘦素的下降幅度小于低GI饮食组。高GI饮食期间静息能量消耗下降了10.5%,而低GI饮食期间仅下降了4.6%(第5至6天分别为7.38±0.39和7.78±0.36兆焦/天;P = 0.04)。高GI饮食组的氮平衡倾向于更负,且在第7至8天来自零食的能量摄入比低GI饮食组更多。
能量含量相同的饮食对瘦素浓度、能量消耗、食物自愿摄入量和氮平衡可能有不同影响,这表明饮食组成可以改变对能量限制的生理适应性。