Animal and plant‐based proteins have different postprandial effects on energy expenditure, glycemia, insulinemia, and lipemia: A review of controlled clinical trials

Author:

Dehnavi Zahra12ORCID,Barghchi Hanieh12ORCID,Esfehani Ali Jafarzadeh3ORCID,Barati Mehdi4ORCID,Khorasanchi Zahra12ORCID,Farsi Farima25ORCID,Ostad Andisheh Norouzian1ORCID,Ranjbar Golnaz1ORCID,Rezvani Reza1ORCID,Gorgani Mitra Rezaie1ORCID,Safarian Mohammad3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nutrition, School of Medicine Mashhad University of Medical Sciences Mashhad Iran

2. Student Research Committee, Faculty of Medicine Mashhad University of Medical Sciences Mashhad Iran

3. Metabolic Syndrome Research Centre Mashhad University of Medical Sciences Mashhad Iran

4. Department of Pathobiology and Laboratory Sciences North Khorasan University of Medical Sciences Bojnurd Iran

5. School of Medicine Mashhad University of Medical Sciences (MUMS) Mashhad Iran

Abstract

AbstractDietary proteins have been shown to stimulate thermogenesis, increase satiety, and improve insulin sensitivity in the short and long term. Animal‐based proteins (AP) and plant‐based proteins (PP) have different amino acid profiles, bioavailability, and digestibility, so it seems to have various short‐ and long‐term effects on metabolic responses. This review aimed to compare the findings of controlled clinical trials on postprandial effects of dietary Aps versus PPs on energy expenditure (EE), lipemia, glycemia, and insulinemia. Data are inconclusive regarding the postprandial effects of APs and PPs. However, there is some evidence indicating that APs increase postprandial EE, DIT, and SO more than PPs. With lipemia and glycemia, most studies showed that APs reduce or delay postprandial glycemia and lipemia and increase insulinemia more than PPs. The difference in amino acid composition, digestion and absorption rate, and gastric emptying rate between APs and PPs explains this difference.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Food Science

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