Literature DB >> 9843882

Effect of repeated stress on body weight and body composition of rats fed low- and high-fat diets.

R B Harris1, J Zhou, B D Youngblood, I I Rybkin, G N Smagin, D H Ryan.   

Abstract

Exposure to the moderate stressor of 3-h restraint for 3 consecutive days causes a temporary drop in food intake but a permanent reduction in body weight in adult rats. Young rats did not show the same response. Food intake of adult rats exposed to repeated restraint was significantly lower than that of controls for 4 days after the end of stress, and there was no rebound hyperphagia. Body weight remained significantly lower for at least 40 days after stress. When the rats were fed a high-fat diet of 80% chow and 20% vegetable shortening (48% kcal fat, 16% protein), lean body mass accounted for all of the weight loss in stressed rats. When the experiment was repeated with a purified high-fat diet containing corn oil and coconut oil as the source of fat (41% kcal fat, 16% protein), weight loss consisted of both lean and fat tissue. There were no sustained changes in single time point measures of corticosterone, insulin, or leptin that could account for the reduced body weight in these rats.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9843882     DOI: 10.1152/ajpregu.1998.275.6.R1928

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol        ISSN: 0002-9513


  55 in total

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