tan-increasedintakeof-2011.pdf (116.3 kB)
Increased intake of dietary polyunsaturated fat does not promote whole body or preferential abdominal fat mass loss in overweight adults
journal contribution
posted on 2011-10-01, 00:00 authored by Sze Yen TanSze Yen Tan, M Batterham, L TapsellOBJECTIVE: There is evidence that increasing the proportion of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) in a diet can enhance the rate of fat oxidation acutely. Higher PUFA in a diet has also been associated with greater abdominal fat loss in longer term studies. This study aimed to investigate if higher PUFA intake would result in greater fat mass loss over a 12-week period, mainly from the abdominal region.
METHODS: Data at the 12-week time point from two weight loss studies, both comparing high PUFA versus low PUFA diets was, accessed for 141 overweight subjects from the same area. Specifically, data on anthropometric measurements (weight, height, BMI, body composition, waist and hip circumference, SAT, VAT) and dietary intake were analyzed. The relationship between fat mass and VAT changes was examined using a differential equation.
RESULTS: Energy consumption decreased significantly in both study groups. The low fat groups decreased total dietary fat while the HPUFA groups increased PUFA intake significantly. All anthropometric measurements reduced significantly over time but there was no difference between the two dietary groups. The relationship between fat mass and visceral adipose tissue (VAT) loss was allometric. CONCLUSION: A higher PUFA intake did not lead to greater fat mass loss and there was no additional preferential loss of VAT following higher PUFA consumption.
METHODS: Data at the 12-week time point from two weight loss studies, both comparing high PUFA versus low PUFA diets was, accessed for 141 overweight subjects from the same area. Specifically, data on anthropometric measurements (weight, height, BMI, body composition, waist and hip circumference, SAT, VAT) and dietary intake were analyzed. The relationship between fat mass and VAT changes was examined using a differential equation.
RESULTS: Energy consumption decreased significantly in both study groups. The low fat groups decreased total dietary fat while the HPUFA groups increased PUFA intake significantly. All anthropometric measurements reduced significantly over time but there was no difference between the two dietary groups. The relationship between fat mass and visceral adipose tissue (VAT) loss was allometric. CONCLUSION: A higher PUFA intake did not lead to greater fat mass loss and there was no additional preferential loss of VAT following higher PUFA consumption.
History
Journal
Obesity FactsVolume
4Issue
5Pagination
352 - 357Publisher
S. Karger AGLocation
Basel, SwitzerlandPublisher DOI
Link to full text
ISSN
1662-4025eISSN
1662-4033Language
engPublication classification
C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal articleCopyright notice
2011, S. Karger GmbHUsage metrics
Categories
No categories selectedKeywords
Adipose TissueAdultDietDiet, Fat-RestrictedDietary FatsEnergy IntakeFatty Acids, UnsaturatedFemaleHumansIntra-Abdominal FatMaleMiddle AgedObesitypolysaturated fatty acidsweight lossfat massvisceral adipose tissueScience & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicineEndocrinology & MetabolismNutrition & DieteticsPolyunsaturated fatty acidsVISCERAL ADIPOSE-TISSUEENERGY SUBSTRATE UTILIZATIONDIFFERENTIAL OXIDATIONINSULIN-RESISTANCESKELETAL-MUSCLELIPID OXIDATIONSATURATED RATIOFISH-OILACIDS