Department of Nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2012 Mar;95(3):614-25. doi: 10.3945/ajcn.111.026328. Epub 2012 Jan 18.
Weight loss reduces body fat and lean mass, but whether these changes are influenced by macronutrient composition of the diet is unclear.
We determined whether energy-reduced diets that emphasize fat, protein, or carbohydrate differentially reduce total, visceral, or hepatic fat or preserve lean mass.
In a subset of participants in a randomized trial of 4 weight-loss diets, body fat and lean mass (n = 424; by using dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry) and abdominal and hepatic fat (n = 165; by using computed tomography) were measured after 6 mo and 2 y. Changes from baseline were compared between assigned amounts of protein (25% compared with 15%) and fat (40% compared with 20%) and across 4 carbohydrate amounts (35% through 65%).
At 6 mo, participants lost a mean (±SEM) of 4.2 ± 0.3 kg (12.4%) fat and 2.1 ± 0.3 kg (3.5%) lean mass (both P < 0.0001 compared with baseline values), with no differences between 25% and 15% protein (P ≥ 0.10), 40% and 20% fat (P ≥ 0.34), or 65% and 35% carbohydrate (P ≥ 0.27). Participants lost 2.3 ± 0.2 kg (13.8%) abdominal fat: 1.5 ± 0.2 kg (13.6%) subcutaneous fat and 0.9 ± 0.1 kg (16.1%) visceral fat (all P < 0.0001 compared with baseline values), with no differences between the diets (P ≥ 0.29). Women lost more visceral fat than did men relative to total-body fat loss. Participants regained ~40% of these losses by 2 y, with no differences between diets (P ≥ 0.23). Weight loss reduced hepatic fat, but there were no differences between groups (P ≥ 0.28). Dietary goals were not fully met; self-reported contrasts were closer to 2% protein, 8% fat, and 14% carbohydrate at 6 mo and 1%, 7%, and 10%, respectively, at 2 y.
Participants lost more fat than lean mass after consumption of all diets, with no differences in changes in body composition, abdominal fat, or hepatic fat between assigned macronutrient amounts. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00072995.
减肥会减少体脂和瘦体重,但饮食中宏量营养素的组成是否会影响这些变化尚不清楚。
我们旨在确定强调脂肪、蛋白质或碳水化合物的能量减少饮食是否会对总脂肪、内脏脂肪或肝脂肪产生不同的减少作用,或保留瘦体重。
在一项 4 种减肥饮食的随机试验的参与者亚组中,通过双能 X 射线吸收法(n=424)测量了 6 个月和 2 年后的体脂肪和瘦体重,通过计算机断层扫描(n=165)测量了腹部和肝脂肪。与 25%相比,比较了分配的蛋白质(25%比 15%)和脂肪(40%比 20%)的基线变化,以及 4 种碳水化合物量(35%至 65%)。
在 6 个月时,参与者平均(SEM)减去 4.2±0.3kg(12.4%)的体脂和 2.1±0.3kg(3.5%)的瘦体重(与基线值相比均 P<0.0001),25%和 15%的蛋白质(P≥0.10)、40%和 20%的脂肪(P≥0.34)或 65%和 35%的碳水化合物(P≥0.27)之间无差异。参与者减去 2.3±0.2kg(13.8%)的腹部脂肪:减去 1.5±0.2kg(13.6%)的皮下脂肪和减去 0.9±0.1kg(16.1%)的内脏脂肪(与基线值相比均 P<0.0001),饮食之间无差异(P≥0.29)。女性相对于总体体脂损失,失去了更多的内脏脂肪。参与者在 2 年内恢复了这些损失的约 40%,饮食之间无差异(P≥0.23)。减肥减少了肝脂肪,但各组之间无差异(P≥0.28)。饮食目标未完全达到;自我报告的对比在 6 个月时更接近 2%的蛋白质、8%的脂肪和 14%的碳水化合物,而在 2 年时分别为 1%、7%和 10%。
参与者在食用所有饮食后体脂损失多于瘦体重,在身体成分、腹部脂肪或肝脂肪的变化方面,分配的宏量营养素数量之间没有差异。该试验在 clinicaltrials.gov 上注册为 NCT00072995。