| Literature DB >> 27792142 |
Angelica Quatela1, Robin Callister2, Amanda Patterson3, Lesley MacDonald-Wicks4.
Abstract
This systematic review investigated the effects of differing energy intakes, macronutrient compositions, and eating patterns of meals consumed after an overnight fast on Diet Induced Thermogenesis (DIT). The initial search identified 2482 records; 26 papers remained once duplicates were removed and inclusion criteria were applied. Studies (n = 27) in the analyses were randomized crossover designs comparing the effects of two or more eating events on DIT. Higher energy intake increased DIT; in a mixed model meta-regression, for every 100 kJ increase in energy intake, DIT increased by 1.1 kJ/h (p < 0.001). Meals with a high protein or carbohydrate content had a higher DIT than high fat, although this effect was not always significant. Meals with medium chain triglycerides had a significantly higher DIT than long chain triglycerides (meta-analysis, p = 0.002). Consuming the same meal as a single bolus eating event compared to multiple small meals or snacks was associated with a significantly higher DIT (meta-analysis, p = 0.02). Unclear or inconsistent findings were found by comparing the consumption of meals quickly or slowly, and palatability was not significantly associated with DIT. These findings indicate that the magnitude of the increase in DIT is influenced by the energy intake, macronutrient composition, and eating pattern of the meal.Entities:
Keywords: breakfast; diet-induced thermogenesis; energy intake; macronutrient; meal; meal-induced thermogenesis; overnight fast; resting metabolic rate; thermic effect of food
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27792142 PMCID: PMC5133058 DOI: 10.3390/nu8110670
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1PRISMA Flow diagram [40] systematic search and review process.
Participant characteristics and study protocols.
| Reference and Location | Sample ( | BMI (kg/m2) | RMR (kJ/h, Measured before Interventions a, b, c, etc.) | Protocol | Gap between Intervention Meals and Types of Meals Provided |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kinabo and Durnin [ | BMI = 20.8 (0.2) †
| (a) 222 † (69.7) †
| Arrival at 8:00 a.m.; fasting from 8:00 p.m. 30 min rest; RMR measured, meal consumed within 10 min. | Gap = each meal provided on different days. | |
| Hill et al. [ | High VO2max | High VO2max subjects 301.7 † (22.5) †
| 12 h fast; rest for 60–90 min; then RMR measured; meals consumed within 10 min. | Gap = NPI | |
| Martin et al. [ | BMI = 22.2 (0.5) | 14 days of intervention meals: meal consumed at research centre daily between 7:00 and 8:00 a.m. | Gap = 28 days | ||
| Bennet et al. [ | BMI = 23 † (3) †
| Meal consumed at 8:30 a.m. | Gap ≥ 24 h | ||
| Segal et al. [ | BMI = 25.5 †
| 343.9 † (31.6) † | 12 h fast; 9:00 a.m. arrival; | Gap = NPI | |
| Nagai et al. [ | BMI = 21.3 (1.4) †
| 375.3 † (39.7) †
| Fast from 10:00 p.m.; arrival at 7:30 a.m.; rest for 30 min; continuous RMR measurement. (NP length); meals consumed at 8:30 a.m. within 15 min. | Gap = NPI | |
| Blundell, Cooling and King [ | High fat consumers | High fat consumers 286.08 † (0.02) †
| Arrival at ~9:00 a.m. after 12 h fast; 30 min of steady RMR were measured; milkshake consumed within 5 min. | Gap = NPI | |
| Bowden and McMurray [ | BMI = 21.7 (1.6) | 208.2 † (12.6) † | Arrival at lab at 6:30 a.m.; 10 h fast; RMR obtained over two 5 min periods; meal consumed within 20 min | Gap = 2 days | |
| Thyfault et al. [ | FM = 21.5 (4.3) † % | 7262 (394.7) kJ †—NP unit of time | Arrival at 5:00 a.m.; 12 h fast; | Gap = 7 days | |
| Raben et al. [ | BMI = 22.1 (1.7) †
| Arrival at 8:00 a.m.; 10 h fast; 30 min supine rest; RMR measured for 45 min; meals consumed within 15 min at 9:45 a.m. | Gap = ≥4 weeks and no more than 8 weeks | ||
| Petzke and Klaus [ | BMI = 20.6 (2.5) | (a) 218 (12) | 12 h fast; RMR measured for 30 min between 8 and 9 a.m.; meal ingested between 9 and 9:30 a.m. and within 10 min. | Gap = 2 days | |
| Riggs et al. [ | Overweight | 12 h fast; 10 min rest; RMR measured between 7 and 8:00 a.m.; meal eaten within 15–20 min. | Gap = 1 week to 2.5 months | ||
| Clegg et al. [ | BMI = 21.9 † | Arrived after an overnight fast; rested for 30 min; RMR measured between 7:30 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. at 1 min intervals for 30 min; meal consumed within 15 min. | Gap = minimum of four days | ||
| Kasai et al.—study 1 [ | BMI = 22.7 (2.1) † | (a) 294.6 † (32.3) †
| Dinner at 9:00 p.m.; overnight fast; meal consumed at 11:00 a.m. | Gap = NP | |
| Kasai et al.—study 2 [ | BMI = 18.8 (1.1) † | (a) 211.1 † (14.9) †
| Dinner at 9:00 p.m.; overnight fast; meal consumed at 11:00 a.m. | Gap = 1 to 2 day interval within the same week for each experimental session (mayonnaise trials and margarine trials) | |
| Casas-Agustench et al. [ | BMI = 24.1 (4.5) | (a) 318.5 (95% CI 298.2—338.8) | Arrived at 8:00 a.m. fast; 10 min rest; RMR measured for 30 min; meal provided at 9:00 a.m. and eaten within 30 min | Gap = 1–11 days | |
| Piers et al. [ | BMI = 27.8 (3.2) | (a) 311 (40) | Arrival at 7:00–8:00 a.m.; 12–14 h of fast; 30 min rest; RMR measured for 35 min. | Gap = 7–14 days | |
| Bendixen et al. [ | BMI = 22.5 (1.9) †
| (a) 290.4 † (28.5) †
| Fast ≥ 12 h; 30 min supine rest; RMR measured for 45 min; | Gap = 14–28 days | |
| Barr and Wright [ | BMI = 22.0 (2.2) † | Fast for 12 h; 2 RMR measurements ~30 min apart before and just before consuming the meal; meals consumed between 9:15 and 11:15 a.m. and at approximately the same time for each measurement sessions. | Gap = on two consecutive days or not longer than a week apart. | ||
| Kinabo and Durnin [ | Group A | Group A: | Arrival at 8:00 a.m., at least 12 h fast; 30 min supine rest; RMR measured; meal consumed either as a large bolus meal within 20 min or as two smaller meals within 10 min every 180 min. | Gap = 1 week | |
| Vaz et al. [ | BMI = 22.9 (1.8) †
| 12–14 h overnight fast; RMR measured after 30 min rest. | Gap = approximately 14 days | ||
| Allirot et al. [ | BMI = 22.0 (1.3) † | Arrival at 7:00 a.m.; fast since 9:00 p.m.; RMR measured for 30 min; meals consumed either as a bolus event within 20 min or as smaller meals every hour within 10 min each. | Gap = at least 7 days | ||
| Tai et al. [ | BMI = 20.8 (2.1) | (a) 233.7 † (9.8) †
| RMR measured after 12–14 h fast and minimum of 30 min rest; meals consumed as one bolus event within 10 min or as smaller meals every 30 min. | Gap = meals provided on different days | |
| Hamada et al. [ | BMI = 19.8 †
| Fast since dinner (>10 h); 20 min semi-supine position rest; RMR measured for 20 min. | Gap = NPI | ||
| Toyama et al. [ | BMI | (a) 196.8 † (17.3) †
| Dinner by 9:00 p.m., fast until morning; arrival at 8:00 a.m., 30 min supine rest; RMR measured; meal consumed at 9:00 a.m. | Gap = at least 7 days | |
| Sawaya et al. [ | Old | (a) young 319.8 † (32.4) †
| Sleep at university by 10:00 p.m., awakened at 6:30 a.m.; 30 min rest; RMR measured for 30 min; meals consumed within 20 min. | Gap = 1 week interval | |
| Weststrate et al. [ | Men | Overnight fast. | Gap = At least 2 days | ||
Data are described in mean (SD) unless otherwise indicated. † These data (mean and/or SD) were calculated or converted for one or more of these possible calculations or conversions (calculated the average and/or SD from individuals’ data; kcal converted to kJ; MJ converted to kJ; RMR kJ converted for unit of time; SE converted to SD, males’ percentage calculated from the total number of males in the sample). †† Kinabo et al. [31]—paper A is also part of results section: “meals varying in macronutrient composition”. a, b, c or d: refers to the different types of interventions provided as explained in the last column (gap between intervention meals and types of meals provided). BMI = Body Mass Index. CHO = Carbohydrate. FM = Fat Mass. FFM = Fat Free Mass. LCT = Long Chain Triglycerides. M = Males. MCT = Medium Chain Triglycerides. MUFA = Mono Unsaturated Fatty Acids. N = Sample. NP = Not Provided. NPI = Not Provided Information. PUFA = Poly Unsaturated Fatty Acids. RMR = Resting Metabolic Rate. SFA = Saturated Fatty Acids. VO2 = Rate of Oxygen consumption.
Consumption of meals after an overnight fast and DIT.
| Reference and DIT Measurement | Energy Ingested (kJ) and % Energy from Macronutrients | DIT (kJ) | DIT % Energy Content of the Meal | DIT % above Baseline | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (a and b) 2520 kJ | (a) 45.6 † (9.3) † kJ/h | (a) 1.8 † (0.4) † %/h | (a) 21 (4.3) †% | No significant difference between meals differing on macronutrient compositions. Significantly higher DIT for meals with higher energy intake compared to lower energy intake. | |
| (a) 2092 kJ †
| (a) high and low VO2 group: less than 10% | An increase in meal size increased DIT. Unclear if effect was significant. | |||
| (a) 418 kJ, 62% CHO, 34.4% fat, 3.6% protein | (a) 4.5 † (1.4) † kJ/h | (a) 1.1 (0.3) %/h | No difference on DIT between low energy, moderate fat meal, and high energy, low fat meal. | ||
| NP kJ | (a) 1.3 † (0.3) † %/h | No significant difference in DIT between high fat meal and normal fat meal for the overall subjects (trained vs. untrained). | |||
| (a) 35% of each man 24 h RMR (2889 *‡ kJ) NP macronutrients | (a) 89.3 † (17.6) † kJ/h | (a) 3.2 † (0.8) † %/h | (a) 11.9% | N.A. | |
| 3255 (306.5) † kJ | (a) 43.1 † (13.7) † kJ/h | (a) 1.3 † (0.4) † %/h | (a) 1.7 (0.7) † % | DIT was significantly higher in low fat meal compared to high fat meal. | |
| 2092 kJ | (a) high fat consumers 27.5 † (28.9) † kJ/h; low fat consumers 25.6 † (14.5) † kJ/h | (a) high fat consumers 1.3 † (1.4) † %/h; low fat consumers 1.2 † (0.7) † %/h | (a) high fat consumers 10.2 † (10.8) † % | The consumption of a high-carbohydrate meal was significantly associated with an increased DIT compared to a high fat meal | |
| (a) 2068 kJ, 76% CHO, 5% protein, 23% fat | (a) 54.6 † kJ/h | (a) 2.6 † %/h | (a) 26.2 † % | No significant difference on total energy expenditure between high CHO and high fat meal. | |
| (a) 3021 (1194.0) † kJ, 79% CHO, 20% protein, 1% fat | (a) 57.8 † (19.1) † kJ/h or 1.0 (0.3) † kJ/FFM/h or 0.7 (0.9) † kJ/BM/h | (a) 1.9 † (0.6) † %/h | N.A. | ||
| 2500 kJ for f, 3000 kJ for m | (a) 45.9 † kJ/h | (a) 1.7%/h | Significant difference in DIT between the different meal types administered. Protein had a higher DIT compared to fat and CHO meals. | ||
| (a) 3114 kJ, 35.4% CHO, 3.9% protein, 60.7% fat | (a) 7.8 † (1.0) † kJ/h | (a) 1.5 † (0.2) † %/h | (a) 3.6 † (0.5) † % | DIT was significantly higher in adequate protein meal compared to low protein meal. | |
| 1841 kJ †
| Overweight | Overweight | Significantly higher DIT for the high protein, high fat meal in normal weight subjects. | ||
| 1863 kJ | (a) 21.9 † (7.9) † kJ/h | (a) 1.2 † (0.4) † %/h | Pepper sunflower oil had a significantly lower DIT than pepper MCT oil intervention. | ||
| (a) 1046 kJ †
| (a) 8.4 † (4.6) † kJ/h or 0.1 † (0.07) † kJ/kg/h | (a) 0.8 † (0.5) † %/h | (a) 2.8 † (1.7) † % | Significant increase in DIT when a liquid meal containing MCT was consumed compared to a meal with LCT. | |
| (a) 1059 kJ †
| (a) 8.2 † (6.4) † kJ/h or 0.2 † (0.1) † kJ/kg/h | (a) 0.8 † (0.6) † %h | (a) 3.9 † (3.0) † % | Significant increase in DIT in meals containing mayonnaise or margarine with MCT compared to LCT. | |
| Mean (95% CI) | Mean (95% CI) | Mean (95% CI): | Mean (95% CI) | DIT was significantly higher in PUFA and MUFA meals compared to SFA meal. | |
| 2500 † kJ | (a) 29.6 † (10) † kJ/h | (a) 1.2 † (0.4) † %/h | (a) 9.5 † (3.2) † % | No significant differences in DIT between SFA and MUFA meals. | |
| 4698 (550.2) † kJ, 34% CHO, 6% protein, 60% fat | (a) 61.8 † (15.2) † kJ/h | (a) 1.3 † (0.3) † %/h | (a) 21.3 † (5.2) † % | DIT was significantly higher in the three modified fat meals compared to the conventional fat meal. | |
| 2520 or 3360 kJ | (a) 99.4 † (40.7) † kJ/h | (a) 3.4 † (1.7) † %/h | Whole food meal showed a significant higher DIT compared to processed meal. | ||
| (a and c) 5040 kJ | Group A: | Group A | Group A | No significant difference on DIT between meals consumed as bolus vs. two smaller frequent meals. | |
| (a) 3150 †
| (a) 71 † (31.5) † kJ/h | (a) 2.3 † (1.0) † %/h | (a) 22.2%/h | DIT was lower in the small frequent feeding regime compared to one bolus meal event – but not significantly different. | |
| (a) 2823.4 kJ †
| (a) 43.8 † (18.4) † kJ/h | (a) 1.6 † (0.7) † %/h | DIT was significantly higher when the meal consumed as one bolus event compared to four smaller isocaloric meals ingested over time in the morning. | ||
| (a) one meal of 3138 kJ | (a) 48.2 † (16.93) † kJ/h | (a) 1.5 † (0.5) † %/h | (a) 20.6 † (7.2) † % | DIT was significantly higher when the meal was consumed as a one bolus event compared to six smaller isocaloric meals ingested over time in the morning. | |
| 1255.2 † kJ, 42% CHO, 8% protein, 50% fat | (a) 19.5 † (142.2) † kJ/kg/h | Slowing eating was associated with a significant increase in DIT compared to rapid eating. | |||
| 1464 kJ, 61.3% CHO, 16.4% protein, 22.3% fat | (a) 31.6 † (15) † kJ/kg/h | (a) 6.8 (4.8)% | There was no significant difference in DIT between fast eating and regular eating. | ||
| 2930 kJ †, 65% CHO, 12% protein, 23% fat | (a) old 37.0 † (15.9) † kJ/h | (a) old 1.3 † (0.5) † %/h | (a) old 26.4 † (11.3) † % | DIT did not significantly differ between palatable and unpalatable meals. | |
| 2000 kJ †, NP % energy from macronutrient | (a) 47.3 † (14.2) † kJ/h | (a) 2.4 † (0.7) † %/h | There was not a significant difference in DIT between palatable and unpalatable meals. | ||
Data are described in mean (SD) unless otherwise described. a, b, c, etc. = these letters describe the types of meal interventions provided as illustrated in Table 1. † These data (mean and/or SD and/or 95% CI) were calculated or converted for one or more of these possible calculations or conversions (DIT % ECM calculated from DIT kJ, DIT % above baseline RMR calculated from DIT kJ, DIT kJ calculated from DIT % ECM, macronutrient % ECM calculated from grams, kcal converted to kJ, MJ converted to kJ, SE converted to SD, DIT % ECM or KJ or % above baseline RMR converted for unit of time, formulas described either in methodology or Supplementary Materials Table S1). †† Kinabo et al. [31]—paper A is also part of results section: “meals varying in macronutrient composition”. ††† calculated % CHO = 100 − (% energy from FAT + % of energy from protein). *‡ calculated 35% 24 h RMR = 35 × 8253.6 kJ (24 h RMR)/100. It is an average value. * p ≤ 0.05. ** p ≤ 0.01. *** p ≤ 0.001. BM = Body Mass. DIT = Diet Induced Thermogenesis. CHO = Carbohydrate. FFM = Fat Free Mass. LCT = Long Chain Triacylglycerol. MCT = Medium Chain Triacylglycerol. MUFA = Mono Unsaturated Fatty Acids. NS = Not Significant. NP = Not Provided. PUFA = Poly Unsaturated Fatty Acids. SFA = Saturated Fatty Acids. VO2 = Rate of Oxygen consumption.
Figure 2Mixed Model Meta Regression: univariate association between energy intake (kJ) and DIT (kJ/h) (Model 1). The Figure is composed of circles and a regression prediction line (in red) representing the outcome (DIT); each circle represents the value of DIT (kJ/h) for an arm of a study, and the size of the circle is inversely proportional to the standard error (SE) of the study. The influence of each study on the model depends on the size of the SE. Specifically, a study arm with a large SE is represented in the figure by a small circle, which means that this study arm had a small influence on the model whereas a study arm with a small SE is represented by a large circle, which means that this study arm had a large influence on the model.
Figure 3(a) Meta-analysis with fixed effect of the mean differences in DIT between MCT and LCT with the margarine trials of Kasai et al. Studies included in this meta-analysis are represented in the figure by symbols (green squares) and they are illustrated in the following order: Clegg et al. [17]-46.0% weight; Kasai et al. [14]-study 1-31.6% weight; Kasai et al. [14]-study 2 margarine trial-22.4% weight [14]; (b) Meta-analysis with fixed effect of the mean differences in DIT between MCT and LCT with the mayonnaise trials of Kasai et al. Studies included in this meta-analysis are represented in the figure by symbols (green squares) and they are illustrated in the following order: Clegg et al. [17]-28.6% weight; Kasai et al. [14]-study 1-19.6% weight; Kasai et al. [14]-study 2-mayonnaise trial-51.8% weight [14]. The % contribution of each study to the outcome is indicated as % weight.
Figure 4Meta-analysis: mean differences in DIT between bolus vs. smaller frequent meals event (such as snacking). Studies included in this meta-analysis are represented in the figure by symbols (green squares) and they are illustrated in the following order: Kinabo and Durbin et al. [32]-Paper B low CHO, high fat meal-37.6% Weight; Kinabo and Durbin et al. [32]-Paper B high CHO, low fat meal-19.0% weight; Vaz et al. [34]-6.0% weight; Allirot et al. [35]-25.5% weight; Tai et al. [27]-11.8% weight. Weight refers to amount of influence that the study exerts on the meta-analyses. The % contribution of each study to the outcome is indicated as % weight.