Metabolic correlates of eating behavior in severe obesity
- 1 February 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in International Journal of Obesity
- Vol. 25 (2) , 258-264
- https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ijo.0801469
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The benefit of spreading energy intake over many small meals (‘nibbling’) rather than few large ones (‘gorging’) for control of blood glucose, serum lipids and body fat accretion has been known for 60 y, but the mechanisms are poorly understood. Men exhibit more of a gorging eating pattern than women and are also more prone to the metabolic complications of obesity, as are women with a ‘male’, central distribution of adipose tissue. We have shown correlations between central fat distribution, and other components of the metabolic ‘Syndrome X’ and fatty infiltration of the liver. Here we study relationships between eating rate and fat distribution and test the hypothesis that gorging might be associated with fatty liver. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: In 30 non-alcoholic, non-diabetic, severely obese women (body mass index, BMI=47±1 kg/m2; mean±s.e.m.) with a mean age of 36±1 y and 16 men (BMI: 52±3) age 38±2 y, who were candidates for anti-obesity surgery, we measured eating rate using an eating monitor, and fat distribution by the waist–hip circumference ratio (WHR). In addition in the 17 women and 11 men who had surgery, serum lipids were analyzed and routine liver biopsies were evaluated for steatosis by a pathologist blinded to the conditions of the study. RESULTS: Men ate significantly faster than women (188±28 vs 123±9 g/min; Pvs 1.5±0.3; Pr=0.46; Pn=46), liver fat (r=0.55; Pr=0.42; Pr=0.50; Pr=0.70; Pr=0.50; P<0.05), while there were no significant correlations with BMI or body weight. In multivariate analysis eating rate (32%), meal size (8%) and WHR (6%) contributed 46% of the variance in liver fat. CONCLUSION: We showed increased eating rates in severely obese men and women with central fat distribution. Furthermore, increased eating rates were associated with fatty liver and elevated serum lipids. Eating rate in severely obese women and men may be a determinant of the metabolic syndrome.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Treatment With an Oral Proteinase Inhibitor Slows Gastric Emptying and Acutely Reduces Glucose and Insulin Levels After a Liquid Meal in Type II Diabetic PatientsDiabetes Care, 1994
- Do Obese Eat Faster Than Lean Subjects? Food Intake Studies in Pima Indian MenObesity Research, 1994
- Reduced postprandial blood glucose levels in recently diagnosed non-insulin-dependent diabetics secondary to pharmacologically induced delayed gastric emptyingDigestive Diseases and Sciences, 1993
- Fatty acids in the portal vein of the rat regulate hepatic insulin clearance.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1991
- Is There An Eating Disorder in the Obese?Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1989
- Nibbling versus Gorging: Metabolic Advantages of Increased Meal FrequencyNew England Journal of Medicine, 1989
- Hazards in subgroups of human obesityEuropean Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1984
- Oral Glucose Augmentation of Insulin SecretionJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1978
- EFFECT OF NIBBLING VERSUS GORGING ON GLUCOSE TOLERANCEThe Lancet, 1963
- METABOLIC ADAPTATIONS TO A “STUFF AND STARVE” FEEDING PROGRAM. I. STUDIES OF ADIPOSE TISSUE AND LIVER GLYCOGEN IN RATS LIMITED TO A SHORT DAILY FEEDING PERIOD*Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1962