OBESITY AS AN ADAPTATION TO A HIGH-FAT DIET - EVIDENCE FROM A CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY

被引:190
作者
ASTRUP, A
BUEMANN, B
WESTERN, P
TOUBRO, S
RABEN, A
CHRISTENSEN, NJ
机构
[1] ROYAL VET & AGR UNIV,DEPT HUMAN NUTR,COPENHAGEN,DENMARK
[2] ROYAL VET & AGR UNIV,CTR FOOD RES,KVL,COPENHAGEN,DENMARK
[3] UNIV COPENHAGEN,HERLEV HOSP,DEPT INTERNAL MED & ENDOCRINOL,COPENHAGEN,DENMARK
关键词
ADAPTATION TO A HIGH-FAT DIET; OBESITY; DIETARY COMPOSITION; FAT OXIDATION; WEIGHT GAIN; FATNESS; SUBSTRATE UTILIZATION; INDIRECT CALORIMETRY; BODY COMPOSITION;
D O I
10.1093/ajcn/59.2.350
中图分类号
R15 [营养卫生、食品卫生]; TS201 [基础科学];
学科分类号
100403 ;
摘要
Expansion of the fat stores has been proposed as a prerequisite for increasing fat oxidation in response to a high-fat diet in individuals with a predisposition to obesity. In a cross-sectional design we measured 24-h substrate oxidations on a standardized diet in 38 overweight or obese and 35 nonobese women. Fat oxidation (g/d) was mainly a function of total energy requirements (r = 0.71, P < 0.0001). To account for this we used for further analysis oxidative fat energy (%), a counterpart to dietary fat energy (%). After differences in fat energy of consumed food (%), age, and 24-h energy balance were adjusted for, obese women had higher oxidative fat energy than did nonobese women [40.2% (37.8-42.6) vs 36.0% (33.6-38.5), P < 0.02]. Adjusted oxidative fat energy (%) increased with increasing size of fat mass (r = 0.31, P < 0.01). This relation suggests that a 10-kg change in fat mass may be caused by a change in dietary fat energy of greater than or equal to 1.6% (0.4-2.7%). The study supports the concept that in susceptible individuals the expansion of fat stores is a prerequisite to increase the oxidative fat energy to an amount commensurate with a high percentage of dietary fat energy.
引用
收藏
页码:350 / 355
页数:6
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