Literature DB >> 24041722

Beverages contribute extra calories to meals and daily energy intake in overweight and obese women.

Bradley M Appelhans1, Maria E Bleil, Molly E Waring, Kristin L Schneider, Lisa M Nackers, Andrew M Busch, Matthew C Whited, Sherry L Pagoto.   

Abstract

Caloric beverages may promote obesity by yielding energy without producing satiety, but prior laboratory and intervention studies are inconclusive. This study examined whether the diets of free-living overweight and obese women show evidence that calories from beverages are offset by reductions in solid food within individual eating occasions and across entire days. Eighty-two women weighed and recorded all consumed foods and beverages for seven days. Beverages were coded as high-calorie (≥ 0.165 kcal/g) or low-calorie (<0.165 kcal/g), and total energy intake and energy intake from solid food were calculated for each eating occasion and day. In covariate-adjusted models, energy intake from solid food did not differ between eating occasions that included high-calorie or low-calorie beverages and those with no reported beverage. Energy intake from solid food was also unrelated to the number of high-calorie or low-calorie beverages consumed per day. On average, eating occasions that included a high-calorie beverage were 169 kcal higher in total energy than those with no reported beverage, and 195 kcal higher in total energy than those that included a low-calorie beverage. Each high-calorie beverage consumed per day contributed an additional 147 kcal to women's daily energy intake, whereas low-calorie beverage intake was unrelated to daily energy intake. Beverages contributed to total energy intake in a near-additive fashion among free-living overweight and obese women, suggesting a need to develop more effective interventions to reduce caloric beverage intake in the context of weight management, and to potentially reexamine dietary guidelines.
© 2013.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Beverages; Dietary compensation; Food form; Obesity; Satiety

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24041722      PMCID: PMC3840121          DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2013.09.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Physiol Behav        ISSN: 0031-9384


  31 in total

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  8 in total

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