Blood glucose patterns and appetite in time-blinded humans: carbohydrate versus fat

Author:

Melanson Kathleen J.1,Westerterp-Plantenga Margriet S.1,Saris Wim H. M.1,Smith Françoise J.2,Campfield L. Arthur2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Human Biology, Maastricht University, 6200 MD Maastricht, The Netherlands; and

2. Center for Human Nutrition, Department of Medicine, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado 80262

Abstract

We assessed the extent to which a possible synchronization between transient blood glucose declines and spontaneous meal initiation would lend support to the interpretation of a preload study with isoenergetic (1 MJ) isovolumetric high-fat or simple carbohydrate (CHO) preload drinks. Ten men (18–30 yr) fasted overnight and then were time blinded and made aware that they could request meals anytime. At first meal requests, volunteers consumed a preload; ad libitum meals were offered at subsequent requests. Postabsorptively, transient declines in blood glucose were associated with meal requests (χ2 = 8.29). Subsequent meal requests occurred during “dynamic declines” in blood glucose after the peak induced by drink consumption (100%). These meal requests took twice as long to occur after high-fat than after CHO preloads (fat = 126 ± 21, CHO = 65 ± 15 min), consistent with differences in interpolated 65-min satiety scores (fat = 38 ± 8.2, CHO = 16 ± 4). Postprandially, transient blood glucose declines were associated with meal requests (χ2 = 4.30). Spontaneous meal initiations were synchronized with transient and dynamic blood glucose declines. Synchronization of intermeal interval and dynamic declines related to higher satiating efficiency from high-fat preloads than from simple CHO preloads.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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