| Literature DB >> 28706738 |
Abstract
The present work reviewed the connections of changes in consumption of high-fat food with changes in adiposity and lipaemia in adults with overweight or obesity. Hyperlipaemia from higher fat meals and excessive adiposity contributes to atherogenic process. Low-fat diet interventions decrease body fat, lipaemia, and atherosclerosis markers. Inaccuracy of physical estimates of dietary fat intake remains, however, a limit to establishing causal connections. To fill this gap, tracking fat-rich eating episodes at short intervals quantifies the behavioural frequency suggested to measure (by regression of changes in real time) direct effects of this eating pattern on adiposity and atherogenic lipaemia. Such evidence will provide the basis for an approach focused on a sustained decrease in frequency of fatty meals or snacks to reduce obesity, hyperlipaemia, and atherosclerosis.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28706738 PMCID: PMC5494570 DOI: 10.1155/2017/1375342
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Lipids ISSN: 2090-3049
Figure 1Behavioural model of influence of higher fat food consumption on adiposity and atherogenic lipaemia.