Macronutrient Composition and Food Selection
- 1 November 2001
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Obesity Research
- Vol. 9 (S11) , 256S-262S
- https://doi.org/10.1038/oby.2001.128
Abstract
Humans can maintain health on diets differing widely in their macronutrient content, and numerous diet recommendations have been made to maintain health and to help weight control. Net adenosine triphosphate yields during the oxidation of carbohydrate, fat, and protein come to 75%, 90%, and 55%, respectively. However, macronutrient proportions can only be varied within limits, and differences in energy dissipation achievable by macronutrient exchanges are minor. In the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey III data, stature explains 10% to 16% of the variance in fat-free mass in adults (the most significant predictor of resting energy expenditure), but <1% of the variance in the percentage of body fat. Thus, differences in resting energy expenditure cannot be expected to have much effect on adiposity. Recommendations designed to facilitate weight control, therefore, should be based on their potential impact on food consumption and energy intake. They should also reflect the fact that the logic for nutrient selection is not the same during weight maintenance and weight reduction. Glycogen levels, along with inherited traits and exercise habits, influence fat oxidation, and, hence, the size that the adipose tissue mass has to reach for fat oxidation to become commensurate with fat intake. Recent increases in the prevalence of obesity could have been brought about by the effect of changes in the food supply and by further declines in physical activity on habitual glycogen levels. Given that biological evolution led to food intake regulating mechanisms that are more powerful in promoting search for food than in seeking to restrain energy intake, it is not surprising that constant availability of desirable foods would lead to a high prevalence of obesity.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of Alcohol on Energy Metabolism and Body Weight Regulation: Is Alcohol a Risk Factor for Obesity?Nutrition Reviews, 2009
- Physical inactivity, sedentary lifestyle and obesity in the European UnionInternational Journal of Obesity, 1999
- Patterns of long-term weight changes in overweight developing Danish men and women aged between 30 and 60 yearsInternational Journal of Obesity, 1999
- Changes in Energy Expenditure Resulting from Altered Body WeightNew England Journal of Medicine, 1995
- General integration and regulation of metabolism at the organ levelProceedings of the Nutrition Society, 1995
- Comparison of dietary assessment methods in nutritional epidemiology: weighed records v. 24 h recalls, food-frequency questionnaires and estimated-diet recordsBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1994
- Very Low-Calorie DietsJAMA, 1993
- Food preferences in human obesity: Carbohydrates versus fatsAppetite, 1992
- The Effect of Ethanol on Fat Storage in Healthy SubjectsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1992
- THE GLUCOSE FATTY-ACID CYCLE ITS ROLE IN INSULIN SENSITIVITY AND THE METABOLIC DISTURBANCES OF DIABETES MELLITUSPublished by Elsevier ,1963