Poststarvation hyperphagia and body fat overshooting in humans: a role for feedback signals from lean and fat tissues
- 1 March 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Elsevier in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
- Vol. 65 (3) , 717-723
- https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/65.3.717
Abstract
An increase in the sensation of hunger and overeating after a period of chronic energy deprivation can be part of an autoregulatory phenomenon attempting to restore body weight. To gain insights into the role of fat and lean tissue depletion as determinants of such a hyperphagic response in humans, we reanalyzed the individual data on food intake and body composition available for the 12 starved and refed men in the classical Minnesota Experiment after a shift from a 12-wk period of restricted refeeding to an ad libitum refeeding period of 8 wk. For each individual, the following were determined: 1) the total hyperphagic response during the ad libitum refeeding period, calculated as the energy intake in excess of that during the prestarvation (control) period; 2) the degree of fat recovery and that of fat-free-mass (FFM) recovery before ad libitum refeeding, calculated as the deviation in fat and FFM from their respective prestarvation values (ie, the amount of fat or FFM before ad libitum refeeding as a percentage of fat or FFM during the control period); and 3) the deficit in energy intake before ad libitum refeeding, calculated as the difference between the energy intake during the period of restricted refeeding and that during the control period. The results indicate that 1) the total hyperphagic response is inversely correlated with the degree of fat recovery (r = -0.6) as well as with that of FFM recovery (r = -0.5), 2) the correlation between hyperphagia and FFM recovery persists after adjustment for fat recovery, and 3) the correlations between hyperphagia and fat recovery or FFM recovery persist after adjustment for the variance in the energy deficit during the preceding period of restricted refeeding. Taken together, these results in humans suggest that poststarvation hyperphagia is determined to a large extent by autoregulatory feedback mechanisms from both fat and lean tissues. These findings, which have implications for both the treatment of obesity and for nutritional rehabilitation after malnutrition and cachexia, have been integrated into a compartmental model of autoregulation of body composition, and can be used to explain the phenomenon of poststarvation overshoot in body fat.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Lean Body Mass-Body Fat Interrelationships in HumansNutrition Reviews, 2009
- Changes in Energy Expenditure Resulting from Altered Body WeightNew England Journal of Medicine, 1995
- The adipocyte: Storage depot or node on the energy information superhighway?Cell, 1995
- Basal metabolic rate, fat-free mass, and body cell mass during energy restrictionMetabolism, 1992
- Effect of Home Total Parenteral Nutrition on Body Composition in Patients with Acquired Immunodeficiency SyndromeJournal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, 1990
- Aggressive Nutritional Support Does Not Prevent Protein Loss Despite Fat Gain in Septic Intensive Care PatientsPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1987
- Nutrition and Cancer: Physiological InterrelationshipsAnnual Review of Nutrition, 1985
- MECHANISMS FOR THE CONTROL OF BODY-WEIGHTThe Lancet, 1977
- Pattern of lean and fat deposition in adultsNature, 1977
- Growth rates in children recovering from protein-calorie malnutritionBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1969