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A Randomized Study of the Effects of Additional Fruit and Nuts Consumption on Hepatic Fat Content, Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Basal Metabolic Rate

BACKGROUND: Fruit has since long been advocated as a healthy source of many nutrients, however, the high content of sugars in fruit might be a concern. OBJECTIVES: To study effects of an increased fruit intake compared with similar amount of extra calories from nuts in humans. METHODS: Thirty health...

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Autores principales: Agebratt, Christian, Ström, Edvin, Romu, Thobias, Dahlqvist-Leinhard, Olof, Borga, Magnus, Leandersson, Per, Nystrom, Fredrik H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4720287/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26788923
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0147149
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author Agebratt, Christian
Ström, Edvin
Romu, Thobias
Dahlqvist-Leinhard, Olof
Borga, Magnus
Leandersson, Per
Nystrom, Fredrik H.
author_facet Agebratt, Christian
Ström, Edvin
Romu, Thobias
Dahlqvist-Leinhard, Olof
Borga, Magnus
Leandersson, Per
Nystrom, Fredrik H.
author_sort Agebratt, Christian
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Fruit has since long been advocated as a healthy source of many nutrients, however, the high content of sugars in fruit might be a concern. OBJECTIVES: To study effects of an increased fruit intake compared with similar amount of extra calories from nuts in humans. METHODS: Thirty healthy non-obese participants were randomized to either supplement the diet with fruits or nuts, each at +7 kcal/kg bodyweight/day for two months. Major endpoints were change of hepatic fat content (HFC, by magnetic resonance imaging, MRI), basal metabolic rate (BMR, with indirect calorimetry) and cardiovascular risk markers. RESULTS: Weight gain was numerically similar in both groups although only statistically significant in the group randomized to nuts (fruit: from 22.15±1.61 kg/m(2) to 22.30±1.7 kg/m(2), p = 0.24 nuts: from 22.54±2.26 kg/m(2) to 22.73±2.28 kg/m(2), p = 0.045). On the other hand BMR increased in the nut group only (p = 0.028). Only the nut group reported a net increase of calories (from 2519±721 kcal/day to 2763±595 kcal/day, p = 0.035) according to 3-day food registrations. Despite an almost three-fold reported increased fructose-intake in the fruit group (from 9.1±6.0 gram/day to 25.6±9.6 gram/day, p<0.0001, nuts: from 12.4±5.7 gram/day to 6.5±5.3 gram/day, p = 0.007) there was no change of HFC. The numerical increase in fasting insulin was statistical significant only in the fruit group (from 7.73±3.1 pmol/l to 8.81±2.9 pmol/l, p = 0.018, nuts: from 7.29±2.9 pmol/l to 8.62±3.0 pmol/l, p = 0.14). Levels of vitamin C increased in both groups while α-tocopherol/cholesterol-ratio increased only in the fruit group. CONCLUSIONS: Although BMR increased in the nut-group only this was not linked with differences in weight gain between groups which potentially could be explained by the lack of reported net caloric increase in the fruit group. In healthy non-obese individuals an increased fruit intake seems safe from cardiovascular risk perspective, including measurement of HFC by MRI. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02227511
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spelling pubmed-47202872016-01-30 A Randomized Study of the Effects of Additional Fruit and Nuts Consumption on Hepatic Fat Content, Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Basal Metabolic Rate Agebratt, Christian Ström, Edvin Romu, Thobias Dahlqvist-Leinhard, Olof Borga, Magnus Leandersson, Per Nystrom, Fredrik H. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Fruit has since long been advocated as a healthy source of many nutrients, however, the high content of sugars in fruit might be a concern. OBJECTIVES: To study effects of an increased fruit intake compared with similar amount of extra calories from nuts in humans. METHODS: Thirty healthy non-obese participants were randomized to either supplement the diet with fruits or nuts, each at +7 kcal/kg bodyweight/day for two months. Major endpoints were change of hepatic fat content (HFC, by magnetic resonance imaging, MRI), basal metabolic rate (BMR, with indirect calorimetry) and cardiovascular risk markers. RESULTS: Weight gain was numerically similar in both groups although only statistically significant in the group randomized to nuts (fruit: from 22.15±1.61 kg/m(2) to 22.30±1.7 kg/m(2), p = 0.24 nuts: from 22.54±2.26 kg/m(2) to 22.73±2.28 kg/m(2), p = 0.045). On the other hand BMR increased in the nut group only (p = 0.028). Only the nut group reported a net increase of calories (from 2519±721 kcal/day to 2763±595 kcal/day, p = 0.035) according to 3-day food registrations. Despite an almost three-fold reported increased fructose-intake in the fruit group (from 9.1±6.0 gram/day to 25.6±9.6 gram/day, p<0.0001, nuts: from 12.4±5.7 gram/day to 6.5±5.3 gram/day, p = 0.007) there was no change of HFC. The numerical increase in fasting insulin was statistical significant only in the fruit group (from 7.73±3.1 pmol/l to 8.81±2.9 pmol/l, p = 0.018, nuts: from 7.29±2.9 pmol/l to 8.62±3.0 pmol/l, p = 0.14). Levels of vitamin C increased in both groups while α-tocopherol/cholesterol-ratio increased only in the fruit group. CONCLUSIONS: Although BMR increased in the nut-group only this was not linked with differences in weight gain between groups which potentially could be explained by the lack of reported net caloric increase in the fruit group. In healthy non-obese individuals an increased fruit intake seems safe from cardiovascular risk perspective, including measurement of HFC by MRI. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02227511 Public Library of Science 2016-01-20 /pmc/articles/PMC4720287/ /pubmed/26788923 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0147149 Text en © 2016 Agebratt et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Agebratt, Christian
Ström, Edvin
Romu, Thobias
Dahlqvist-Leinhard, Olof
Borga, Magnus
Leandersson, Per
Nystrom, Fredrik H.
A Randomized Study of the Effects of Additional Fruit and Nuts Consumption on Hepatic Fat Content, Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Basal Metabolic Rate
title A Randomized Study of the Effects of Additional Fruit and Nuts Consumption on Hepatic Fat Content, Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Basal Metabolic Rate
title_full A Randomized Study of the Effects of Additional Fruit and Nuts Consumption on Hepatic Fat Content, Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Basal Metabolic Rate
title_fullStr A Randomized Study of the Effects of Additional Fruit and Nuts Consumption on Hepatic Fat Content, Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Basal Metabolic Rate
title_full_unstemmed A Randomized Study of the Effects of Additional Fruit and Nuts Consumption on Hepatic Fat Content, Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Basal Metabolic Rate
title_short A Randomized Study of the Effects of Additional Fruit and Nuts Consumption on Hepatic Fat Content, Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Basal Metabolic Rate
title_sort randomized study of the effects of additional fruit and nuts consumption on hepatic fat content, cardiovascular risk factors and basal metabolic rate
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4720287/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26788923
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0147149
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