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Am J Clin Nutr. 1977 Oct;30(10):1638-44.
Effect of covert nutritive dilution on the spontaneous food
intake of obese individuals: a pilot study.
Porikos KP, Booth G, Van Itallie TB.
The present study investigated the feasibility of a new experimental
approach for studying the effect of covert nutritive dilution on the
spontaneous food intake of obese individuals. Eight obese subjects were
studied as inpatients on a metabolic unit for 15 days during which time
they were unaware that their food intake was being monitored. A platter
method of food presentation encouraged ad libitum ingestion. Caloric dilution
was achieved by replacing sucrose-containing products with aspartame-sweetened
analogues in an otherwise normal diet. During the base-line period the subjects
spontaneously ate sufficient conventional food to maintain or even slightly
increase body weight. Covert substitution of aspartame-sweetened products
for their sucrose counterparts resulted in an immediate reduction in
spontaneous energy intake of approximately 25%. The aspartame analogues
were as well accepted as their conventional counterparts, as indicated by
the equal quantity of each consumed. These preliminary results demonstrate
that, in a metabolic ward setting, it is possible to maintain the spontaneous
food intake of obese individuals at levels sufficient to preserve body weight
and arbitrarily to decrease those levels of intake by 25% or more through covert
changes in the caloric density of the diet.
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