King Grub
2015-02-13, 12:59
Background
Dietary protein at breakfast has been shown to enhance satiety and reduce subsequent energy intake more so than carbohydrate or fat. However, relatively few studies have assessed substitution of protein for carbohydrate on indicators of appetite and glucose homeostasis simultaneously.
Methods
The acute appetitive and metabolic effects of commercially-prepared sausage and egg-based breakfast meals at two different protein levels (30?g and 39?g/serving), vs. a low-protein pancake breakfast (3?g protein) and no breakfast (water), were examined in premenopausal women (N?=?35; age 32.5???1.6?yr; BMI 24.8???0.5?kg/m2). Test products provided ~280?kcal/serving and similar fat (12?14?g) and fiber contents (0?1?g). Visual Analog Scale ratings for appetite (hunger, fullness, prospective consumption, desire to eat) and repeated blood sampling for plasma glucose and insulin concentrations were assessed throughout each test day. Energy intake was recorded at an ad libitum lunch meal at 240?min.
Results
Results showed increased satiety ratings for both the 30 and 39?g protein meals vs. the low-protein and no breakfast conditions (p?<?0.001 for all). Postprandial glucose and insulin excursions were lower following the 30?g and 39?g protein conditions vs. the low-protein condition, with smaller responses following the 39?g vs. 30?g protein condition (p?<?0.05 for all). Energy intake at lunch was significantly less (p?<?0.001) following the 39?g protein meal (692?kcal) vs. the low-protein and no breakfast conditions (789 and 810?kcal, respectively). Total energy intake from the test condition?+?lunch was higher (p?<?0.01) for the 30 and 39?g meals (982 and 983?kcal, respectively) vs. no breakfast (810?kcal), and less than the low protein breakfast (1064?kcal; p?<?0.01 vs. 39?g condition only).
Conclusions
Results suggest that convenience meals providing 30 or 39?g protein/serving produce greater appetite control, lower postprandial glycemia and insulinemia, and reduced subsequent intake at lunch relative to a low-protein control, or no breakfast
A randomized, controlled, crossover trial to assess the acute appetitive and metabolic effects of sausage and egg-based convenience breakfast meals in overweight premenopausal women. Nutrition Journal, 14:17. 10 February 2015.
Dietary protein at breakfast has been shown to enhance satiety and reduce subsequent energy intake more so than carbohydrate or fat. However, relatively few studies have assessed substitution of protein for carbohydrate on indicators of appetite and glucose homeostasis simultaneously.
Methods
The acute appetitive and metabolic effects of commercially-prepared sausage and egg-based breakfast meals at two different protein levels (30?g and 39?g/serving), vs. a low-protein pancake breakfast (3?g protein) and no breakfast (water), were examined in premenopausal women (N?=?35; age 32.5???1.6?yr; BMI 24.8???0.5?kg/m2). Test products provided ~280?kcal/serving and similar fat (12?14?g) and fiber contents (0?1?g). Visual Analog Scale ratings for appetite (hunger, fullness, prospective consumption, desire to eat) and repeated blood sampling for plasma glucose and insulin concentrations were assessed throughout each test day. Energy intake was recorded at an ad libitum lunch meal at 240?min.
Results
Results showed increased satiety ratings for both the 30 and 39?g protein meals vs. the low-protein and no breakfast conditions (p?<?0.001 for all). Postprandial glucose and insulin excursions were lower following the 30?g and 39?g protein conditions vs. the low-protein condition, with smaller responses following the 39?g vs. 30?g protein condition (p?<?0.05 for all). Energy intake at lunch was significantly less (p?<?0.001) following the 39?g protein meal (692?kcal) vs. the low-protein and no breakfast conditions (789 and 810?kcal, respectively). Total energy intake from the test condition?+?lunch was higher (p?<?0.01) for the 30 and 39?g meals (982 and 983?kcal, respectively) vs. no breakfast (810?kcal), and less than the low protein breakfast (1064?kcal; p?<?0.01 vs. 39?g condition only).
Conclusions
Results suggest that convenience meals providing 30 or 39?g protein/serving produce greater appetite control, lower postprandial glycemia and insulinemia, and reduced subsequent intake at lunch relative to a low-protein control, or no breakfast
A randomized, controlled, crossover trial to assess the acute appetitive and metabolic effects of sausage and egg-based convenience breakfast meals in overweight premenopausal women. Nutrition Journal, 14:17. 10 February 2015.