Clinical Nutrition Research Centre, Singapore Institute for Clinical Sciences, Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), National University Health System, Singapore.
Nestle Research Center, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Appetite. 2018 Jul 1;126:8-15. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2018.03.011. Epub 2018 Mar 15.
Oral processing behaviours associated with faster eating rates have been consistently linked to increased energy intakes, but little is known about their links to children's appetitive traits. This study used the Child Eating Behaviour Questionnaire (CEBQ) to explore cross-sectional and prospective associations between parent-reported appetitive traits and observed oral processing behaviours. Participants were 195 children from the Growing Up in Singapore Towards healthy Outcomes cohort, who participated in a video-recorded ad libitum lunch at 4.5 (Time 1) and 6 years (Time 2). Their mothers completed the CEBQ around the same time points. Children's bites, chews and swallows were coded, and used to calculate their eating rate, bite size, chews per bite, chew rate, oral exposure time and oral exposure per bite. At Time 1, children with higher scores in slowness in eating had lower eating and chew rates. At Time 2, higher scores for food enjoyment and lower for satiety responsiveness, slowness in eating, and food fussiness were linked with higher eating rates and greater energy intakes (r > 0.16, p < 0.05). Post-hoc analyses revealed that these associations were moderated by BMI and only present among children with higher BMI. Faster eating rates mediated the associations between greater food enjoyment, lower slowness in eating, lower food fussiness and higher intakes of energy. Children with higher slowness in eating scores had lower increases in eating rates over time, and children with higher BMI who had greater food enjoyment and food responsiveness scores had greater increases in eating rates over time. The findings suggest that oral processing behaviours linked with increased obesity risk may be underpinned by appetitive traits and may be one of the behavioural pathways through which these appetitive traits influence energy intakes.
与较快进食速度相关的口腔处理行为一直与较高的能量摄入有关,但对于它们与儿童食欲特征的联系知之甚少。本研究使用儿童饮食行为问卷(CEBQ)来探索父母报告的食欲特征与观察到的口腔处理行为之间的横断面和前瞻性关联。参与者是来自新加坡儿童成长研究队列的 195 名儿童,他们在 4.5 岁(时间 1)和 6 岁(时间 2)时参加了自由进食的视频记录午餐。他们的母亲在同一时间点完成了 CEBQ。对儿童的咀嚼、吞咽进行编码,并用于计算他们的进食率、咀嚼量、每口咀嚼次数、咀嚼率、口腔暴露时间和每口咀嚼的口腔暴露量。在时间 1 时,进食速度较慢的儿童的进食和咀嚼速度较低。在时间 2 时,更高的食物享受评分和更低的饱腹感反应、进食速度较慢和对食物挑剔与更高的进食率和更高的能量摄入有关(r>0.16,p<0.05)。事后分析表明,这些关联受 BMI 的调节,仅存在于 BMI 较高的儿童中。较快的进食速度介导了食物享受度较高、进食速度较慢、对食物挑剔较低与能量摄入较高之间的关联。进食速度较慢的儿童随着时间的推移,进食速度的增加幅度较低,而 BMI 较高的儿童,其食物享受度和食物反应得分较高,随着时间的推移,进食速度的增加幅度也较高。研究结果表明,与肥胖风险增加相关的口腔处理行为可能是由食欲特征所决定的,并且可能是这些食欲特征影响能量摄入的行为途径之一。