
Short-term Effects of the Flavour of Drinks on Ingestive Behaviours in Man.
M.E. Beridot-Therond, Arts and M. Fantino
ABSTRACT
To examine the influence of the oro-sensory properties of
different beverages on spontaneous intake of drinks, and the consequence of the
volume of fluid ingested on subsequent food intake, 24 subjects (12 men, 12
women), slightly dehydrated, had access ad
libitum, during four different experimental sessions in a cross-over
design, to one of four commercial beverages differed in flavour and caloric
content: mineral water; the same mineral
water flavoured with orange and unsweetened; the same mineral water flavoured
with orange and sweetened with 100g/l sucrose; or equally sweetened with 50mg/l
aspartame.Ad libitum: lunch was served
15 min after the subjects had access to the beverages and dinner was served
when they spontaneously requested I, about 6h after the end of lunch.
The nature of the beverage exerted a small
but significant effect on the cumulative fluid intake of the subjects.
They consumed slightly more of the two
sweetened beverages than the mineral water, and slightly less of the
orange-flavoured beverage.
However,
energy intake and macronutrient selection during lunch and dinner on the
experimental days and on the following day did not differ significantly between
the different conditions.
This resulted
in a significantly higher total energy intake when the imposed beverage
contained sucrose.
Moreover, in such
experimental conditions, with only one type of beverage to drink, the flavour
of this beverage had little influence on the amount of fluid consumed, and the
volume consumed did not influence subsequent food intake.
As a consequence, the energy provided by the
sucrose-sweetened beverage was not taken in account in the overall energy
balance by the subjects, at least in the short term.
Appetite, 1998, 31, 67-81