| Literature DB >> 25422027 |
Sarah P Garnett1,2,3, Megan Gow4,5, Mandy Ho6, Louise A Baur7,8, Manny Noakes9, Helen J Woodhead10,11, Carolyn R Broderick12,13, Kerryn Chisholm14, Julie Briody15, Sukanya De16, Katherine Steinbeck17, Shubha Srinivasan18, Geoffrey R Ambler19,20, Chris T Cowell21,22,23.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A higher protein to carbohydrate ratio in the diet may potentiate weight loss, improve body composition and cardiometabolic risk, including glucose homeostasis in adults. The aim of this randomised control trial was to determine the efficacy of two structured lifestyle interventions, differing in dietary macronutrient content, on insulin sensitivity and body composition in adolescents. We hypothesised that a moderate-carbohydrate (40-45% of energy), increased-protein (25-30%) diet would be more effective than a high-carbohydrate diet (55-60%), moderate-protein (15%) diet in improving outcomes in obese, insulin resistant adolescents.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25422027 PMCID: PMC4252020 DOI: 10.1186/s12887-014-0289-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Figure 1RESIST participant flow.
Baseline characteristics
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| Age years median [range] | 13.0 | [10.1 to 16.5] | 13.2 | [10.2 to 17.4] | 0.959 |
| Girls n (%) | 34 | (60.7) | 32 | (58.2) | 0.786† |
| Pubertal status‡ n (%) | |||||
| Tanner stage 1 | 7 | (12.7) | 7 | (12.7) | |
| 2 | 9 | (16.4) | 11 | (20.0) | |
| 3 | 15 | (27.3) | 9 | (16.4) | |
| 4 | 15 | (27.3) | 16 | (29.1) | |
| 5 | 9 | (16.4) | 12 | (21.8) | |
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| Weight kg | 90.7 | (19.0) | 90.7 | (21.2) | 0.992 |
| Height z-score | 1.27 | (1.29) | 1.30 | (1.11) | 0.894 |
| Weight z-score | 2.73 | (0.53) | 2.68 | (0.57) | 0.646 |
| BMI z-score | 2.39 | (0.25) | 2.33 | (0.32) | 0.253 |
| BMI %95 centile | 133 | (19) | 132 | (23) | 0.770 |
| Obese§ n (%) | 55 | (98.2) | 52 | (94.5) | 0.300† |
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| Total body fat (kg) | 43.5 | (10.0) | 42.6 | (11.7) | 0.683 |
| Total fat % | 49.5 | (5.5) | 48.3 | (5.7) | 0.249 |
| Total fat free mass (kg) | 44.4 | (11.3) | 45.1 | (11.4) | 0.740 |
| Fat free mass index | 1.66 | (0.24) | 1.69 | (0.29) | 0.638 |
*P independent sample t-tests unless otherwise indicated.
†Chi-squared test.
‡One girl in the moderate carbohydrate, increase protein diet group had missing data.
§Obesity defined by International Obesity Taskforce [14].
|DXA: Dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry.
Figure 2Glycemic status and body composition measures by dietary group over the 12 month intervention. Estimated marginal means (SE) are presented from linear mixed models for the moderate-carbohydrate, increased-protein diet group (▼) and the high-carbohydrate diet group (△). a: Insulin sensitivity index. 1Significance between baseline and 3 months and 12 months as indicated. 2Significance between 3 and 12 months. b: Total body fat percent measured by dual energy x-ray absorptiometry (Fat % DXA). 1Significance between baseline and 3 months and 12 months as indicated. 2Significance between 3 and 12 months. c: Fat free mass index. 1Significance between baseline and 3 months and 12 months as indicated. 2Significance between 3 and 12 months. d: BMI%95th centile. 1Significance between baseline and 3 months, 6 months and 12 months as indicated. 3Significance between 3 and 6 months. 4Significance between 6 and 12 months.
Lipids and blood pressure at baseline and 12 months
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| Triglycerides mmol/L† | 1.1 | [1.0-1.2] | 1.0 | [0.9-1.1] | 0.209 |
| HDL-C mmol/L | 1.05 | (0.02) | 1.12 | (0.03) | <0.001 |
| LDL-C mol/L | 2.77 | (0.08) | 2.75 | (0.08) | 0.456 |
| SBP z-score | 0.79 | (0.12) | 0.65 | (0.12) | 0.270 |
| DBP z-score | 0.94 | (0.08) | 0.74 | (0.10) | 0.047 |
*Pairwise comparison with baseline.
†Geometric mean [95% CI].
Estimated marginal means (SE) are presented from linear mixed models, unless otherwise indicated.
Clinical presentation at baseline, 3, 6 and 12 months
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| Acanthosis nigricans present | 94 | (84.7) | 88 | (83.8)* | 79 | (85.9)† | 61 | (76.3)§ |
| Pre-diabetes | 14 | (12.6) | 19 | (17.9) | 10 | (12.1)†,** | ||
| Dyslipidaemia | 61 | (55.0)* | 57 | (54.3)* | 51 | (53.7)| | 32 | (28.8)† |
| (HDL-C <1.03 mmol/L and/or triglycerides ≥1.7 mmol/L) | ||||||||
| SBP and/or DBP ≥90 percentile | 49 | (44.1) | 41 | (38.7) | 30 | (30.6)† | 37 | (43.5) |
| Elevated liver enzymes (ALT and/or GGT ≥1.5 upper limit of 30 U/L) | 22 | (20.0)† | 21 | (20.4)‡ | 17 | (17.3)† | 14 | (12.6)‡ |
| Microalbuminuria | 9 | (8.5)§ | 9 | (8.9)§ | 9 | (9.5)§ | 9§ | (8.1)§ |
| (Urine/albumin/creatinine, Girls: 3.5 to 25 mg/mmol, Boys: 2.5 to 25 mg/mmol) | ||||||||
*1 missing value, †2 missing values, ‡3 missing values, §5 missing values, 8 missing values **including one adolescent diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.
Values are n (%).