| Literature DB >> 25978321 |
Vicky A Solah1, Xingqiong Meng2, Simon Wood3, Roland J Gahler4, Deborah A Kerr1, Anthony P James1, Sebely Pal1, Haelee K Fenton1, Stuart K Johnson1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The assessment of satiety effects on foods is commonly performed by untrained volunteers marking their perceived hunger or fullness on line scales, marked with pre-set descriptors. The lack of reproducibility of satiety measurement using this approach however results in the tool being unable to distinguish between foods that have small, but possibly important, differences in their satiety effects. An alternate approach is used in sensory evaluation; panellists can be trained in the correct use of the assessment line-scale and brought to consensus on the meanings of descriptors used for food quality attributes to improve the panel reliability. The effect of training on the reliability of a satiety panel has not previously been reported.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25978321 PMCID: PMC4433124 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0126202
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Experimental design: Training and No-training (control), and Fibre satiety study.
Subject (panellists) characteristics.
| No-training (n = 11) | Training (n = 12) | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | 8 F, 3 M | 8 F, 4 M |
| Age (y) | 28.8 ± 14 | 26.5 ± 9 |
| Weight (kg) | 63.5 ± 12.3 | 66.8 ± 12.5 |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 23.1 ± 4.3 | 23.8 ± 5.7 |
aNo significant difference between no-training and training (p < 0.05)
Training LMS descriptors with definitions.
| GIH | MH | SH | NHNF | SF | MF | VF | EF | GIF |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Too weak to move | Need food | Planning to eat | No desire to eat | Starting to feel full | Feeling full | Do not want to eat more | Cannot eat another thing | Cannot move (food coma) |
| Grumpy | Stomach grumbles | Snack would fix | Not thinking about food | Could eat more | Do not need to eat more just now | Full as you can get and remain comfortable | Should not eat anymore | Pain/feel sick |
| Hunger pain | Not physically full | Physical feeling of fullness- no more room for food | Christmas-lunch full | |||||
| Light headed / dizzy | About to explode/ burst/ vomit | |||||||
| Desperate need to eat | Disgust for over-eating | |||||||
| Constantly thinking of food | ||||||||
| Headache |
GIH = Greatest Imaginable Hunger; MH = Moderately Hungry; SH = Slightly Hungry; NHNF = Neither Hungry Nor Full; SL = Slightly Full; MF = Moderately Full; VF = Very Full; EF = Extremely Full; GIF = Greatest Imaginable Fullness.The scale was anchored with words to describe the feeling of hunger from “Greatest Imaginable Hunger” to “Greatest Imaginable Fullness”. The left 95mm (9.5cm) of the LMS had descriptors relating to hunger and right 95mm (9.5cm) of the LMS related to fullness (Fig 2). The line scale marks were enumerated by measuring their distance (mm) from the centre point; therefore a maximum score of 95mm (9.5cm) equated to “Greatest Imaginable Fullness” and minus 95mm (-9.5cm) to “Greatest Imaginable Hunger”.
Fig 2Labelled magnitude satiety scale (LMS).
Fig 3Post-prandial satiety responses (satiety score in cm over time) for each test and retest occasion (See Fig 1): A, training group (n = 12); B, no-training group (n = 11).
The area under the curve (AUC) of the satiety response at each test-retest occasion segregated by treatment (training or no-training).
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| Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | Mean difference (SE) | |
| t1 | 364.5 (319.8) | 457.4 (269.3) | 92.9 (122.1) |
| rt1 | 263.4 (274.7) | 527.7 (244.2) | 264.2 (107.0) |
| t2 | 243.7 (317.1) | 257.3 (295.7) | 13.6 (126.0) |
| rt2 | 164.4 (317.9) | 301.6 (292.3) | 137.1 (125.6) |
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| Change | Mean (SE), p value | Mean (SE), p value | Mean difference (SE), p value |
| (t1− rt1) | -101.1 (89.6), p = 0.26 | 70.2 (57.6), | 171.3 (110.9), p = 0.12 |
| (t2− rt2) | -79.3 (59.7), p = 0.19 | 44.3 (26.5), p = 0.10 | 123.5 (69.4), p = 0.08 |
| Difference (rt2 − t2) − (rt1 − t1) | 21.8 (100.9), p = 0.83 | -26.0 (59.1), p = 0.66 | -47.8 (122.4), p = 0.70 |
A. Mean difference between treatments at each test or re-test occasion. B. Differences in test minus retest AUC by treatment (training vs no-training) and by test-retest occasion (pre-training = 1, post-training = 2).
Fig 4Post-prandial satiety response (satiety score in cm over time) (mean and 95% confidence interval) of the “satiety expert panel” (n = 9).
t1 SEP and t2SEP = control (inulin) breakfast; t3SEP = PGX breakfast.
Area under curve (AUC) of postprandial satiety response of “satiety expert panel” (n = 9).
| Treatment | Mean AUC (SD/SE) |
|---|---|
| (cm.min) | |
| t1SEP | 291.8 (331.2) |
| t2SEP | 334.4 (324.6) |
| t3SEP | 478.2 (253.8) |
| Difference | Mean (SE), |
| (t2SEP—t1SEP) |
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| (t3SEP—t1SEP) |
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| (t3SEP—t2SEP) |
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t1SEP and t2SEP = control (inulin) breakfast; t3SEP = PGX breakfast.