Cargando…

Calorie Anticipation Alters Food Intake After Low-Caloric but Not High-Caloric Preloads

OBJECTIVE: Cognitive factors and anticipation are known to influence food intake. The current study examined the effect of anticipation and actual consumption of food on hormone (ghrelin, cortisol, and insulin) and glucose levels, appetite and ad libitum intake, to assess whether changes in hormone...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hogenkamp, PS, Cedernaes, J, Chapman, CD, Vogel, H, Hjorth, OC, Zarei, S, Lundberg, LS, Brooks, SJ, Dickson, SL, Benedict, C, Schiöth, HB
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3817524/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23585292
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/oby.20293
_version_ 1782478087906131968
author Hogenkamp, PS
Cedernaes, J
Chapman, CD
Vogel, H
Hjorth, OC
Zarei, S
Lundberg, LS
Brooks, SJ
Dickson, SL
Benedict, C
Schiöth, HB
author_facet Hogenkamp, PS
Cedernaes, J
Chapman, CD
Vogel, H
Hjorth, OC
Zarei, S
Lundberg, LS
Brooks, SJ
Dickson, SL
Benedict, C
Schiöth, HB
author_sort Hogenkamp, PS
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Cognitive factors and anticipation are known to influence food intake. The current study examined the effect of anticipation and actual consumption of food on hormone (ghrelin, cortisol, and insulin) and glucose levels, appetite and ad libitum intake, to assess whether changes in hormone levels might explain the predicted differences in subsequent food intake. DESIGN AND METHODS: During four breakfast sessions, participants consumed a yogurt preload that was either low caloric (LC: 180 kcal/300 g) or high caloric (HC: 530 kcal/300 g) and was provided with either consistent or inconsistent calorie information (i.e., stating the caloric content of the preload was low or high). Appetite ratings and hormone and glucose levels were measured at baseline (t = 0), after providing the calorie information about the preload (t = 20), after consumption of the preload (t = 40), and just before ad libitum intake (t = 60). RESULTS: Ad libitum intake was lower after HC preloads (as compared to LC preloads; P < 0.01). Intake after LC preloads was higher when provided with (consistent) LC information (467±254 kcal) as compared to (inconsistent) HC information (346±210 kcal), but intake after the HC preloads did not depend on the information provided (LC information: 290±178 kcal, HC information: 333±179 kcal; caloric load*information P = 0.03). Hormone levels did not respond in an anticipatory manner, and the post-prandial responses depended on actual calories consumed. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that both cognitive and physiological information determine food intake. When actual caloric intake was sufficient to produce physiological satiety, cognitive factors played no role; however, when physiological satiety was limited, cognitively induced satiety reduced intake to comparable levels.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3817524
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher Blackwell Publishing Ltd
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-38175242013-11-09 Calorie Anticipation Alters Food Intake After Low-Caloric but Not High-Caloric Preloads Hogenkamp, PS Cedernaes, J Chapman, CD Vogel, H Hjorth, OC Zarei, S Lundberg, LS Brooks, SJ Dickson, SL Benedict, C Schiöth, HB Obesity (Silver Spring) Clinical Trials: Behavior, Pharmacotherapy, Devices, Surgery OBJECTIVE: Cognitive factors and anticipation are known to influence food intake. The current study examined the effect of anticipation and actual consumption of food on hormone (ghrelin, cortisol, and insulin) and glucose levels, appetite and ad libitum intake, to assess whether changes in hormone levels might explain the predicted differences in subsequent food intake. DESIGN AND METHODS: During four breakfast sessions, participants consumed a yogurt preload that was either low caloric (LC: 180 kcal/300 g) or high caloric (HC: 530 kcal/300 g) and was provided with either consistent or inconsistent calorie information (i.e., stating the caloric content of the preload was low or high). Appetite ratings and hormone and glucose levels were measured at baseline (t = 0), after providing the calorie information about the preload (t = 20), after consumption of the preload (t = 40), and just before ad libitum intake (t = 60). RESULTS: Ad libitum intake was lower after HC preloads (as compared to LC preloads; P < 0.01). Intake after LC preloads was higher when provided with (consistent) LC information (467±254 kcal) as compared to (inconsistent) HC information (346±210 kcal), but intake after the HC preloads did not depend on the information provided (LC information: 290±178 kcal, HC information: 333±179 kcal; caloric load*information P = 0.03). Hormone levels did not respond in an anticipatory manner, and the post-prandial responses depended on actual calories consumed. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that both cognitive and physiological information determine food intake. When actual caloric intake was sufficient to produce physiological satiety, cognitive factors played no role; however, when physiological satiety was limited, cognitively induced satiety reduced intake to comparable levels. Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2013-08 2013-01-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3817524/ /pubmed/23585292 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/oby.20293 Text en Copyright © 2012 The Obesity Society http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ Re-use of this article is permitted in accordance with the Creative Commons Deed, Attribution 2.5, which does not permit commercial exploitation.
spellingShingle Clinical Trials: Behavior, Pharmacotherapy, Devices, Surgery
Hogenkamp, PS
Cedernaes, J
Chapman, CD
Vogel, H
Hjorth, OC
Zarei, S
Lundberg, LS
Brooks, SJ
Dickson, SL
Benedict, C
Schiöth, HB
Calorie Anticipation Alters Food Intake After Low-Caloric but Not High-Caloric Preloads
title Calorie Anticipation Alters Food Intake After Low-Caloric but Not High-Caloric Preloads
title_full Calorie Anticipation Alters Food Intake After Low-Caloric but Not High-Caloric Preloads
title_fullStr Calorie Anticipation Alters Food Intake After Low-Caloric but Not High-Caloric Preloads
title_full_unstemmed Calorie Anticipation Alters Food Intake After Low-Caloric but Not High-Caloric Preloads
title_short Calorie Anticipation Alters Food Intake After Low-Caloric but Not High-Caloric Preloads
title_sort calorie anticipation alters food intake after low-caloric but not high-caloric preloads
topic Clinical Trials: Behavior, Pharmacotherapy, Devices, Surgery
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3817524/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23585292
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/oby.20293
work_keys_str_mv AT hogenkampps calorieanticipationaltersfoodintakeafterlowcaloricbutnothighcaloricpreloads
AT cedernaesj calorieanticipationaltersfoodintakeafterlowcaloricbutnothighcaloricpreloads
AT chapmancd calorieanticipationaltersfoodintakeafterlowcaloricbutnothighcaloricpreloads
AT vogelh calorieanticipationaltersfoodintakeafterlowcaloricbutnothighcaloricpreloads
AT hjorthoc calorieanticipationaltersfoodintakeafterlowcaloricbutnothighcaloricpreloads
AT zareis calorieanticipationaltersfoodintakeafterlowcaloricbutnothighcaloricpreloads
AT lundbergls calorieanticipationaltersfoodintakeafterlowcaloricbutnothighcaloricpreloads
AT brookssj calorieanticipationaltersfoodintakeafterlowcaloricbutnothighcaloricpreloads
AT dicksonsl calorieanticipationaltersfoodintakeafterlowcaloricbutnothighcaloricpreloads
AT benedictc calorieanticipationaltersfoodintakeafterlowcaloricbutnothighcaloricpreloads
AT schiothhb calorieanticipationaltersfoodintakeafterlowcaloricbutnothighcaloricpreloads