Intermittent Moderate Energy Restriction Improves Weight Loss Efficiency in Diet-Induced Obese Mice

Jan 20, 2016PloS one

Intermittent Moderate Calorie Cutting Improves Weight Loss in Obese Mice

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Abstract

was significantly greater with intermittent dieting, showing 0.042±0.007 g/kJ compared to continuous dieting.

  • Mice on intermittent diets ate significantly more overall than those on continuous diets, consuming 91.1±1.0% of control intake compared to 82.2±0.5%.
  • There were no significant differences in body weight, fat mass, or insulin levels between the intermittent and continuous diet groups at the end of the study.
  • Intermittent dieting resulted in transient increases in food intake during ad libitum feeding periods.
  • Increased weight loss efficiency with intermittent dieting suggests a potential benefit for weight management strategies.
  • Mice on continuous diets showed higher hypothalamic expression of proopiomelanocortin compared to those on intermittent diets.

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Key numbers

2.3×
Increase in
for intermittent diet vs. continuous diet.
11.5%
Overall energy intake increase
Energy intake comparison between intermittent and continuous diets.

Full Text

What this is

  • Intermittent moderate energy restriction improves in diet-induced obese mice.
  • Mice on an intermittent diet showed greater compared to those on a continuous diet.
  • This research suggests that intermittent energy restriction may be a more effective strategy for weight management.

Essence

  • Intermittent moderate energy restriction leads to greater in obese mice compared to continuous moderate energy restriction. Despite higher overall energy intake, mice on the intermittent diet lost more weight per unit of energy deficit.

Key takeaways

  • was 2.3× greater in mice on the intermittent diet compared to the continuous diet. This means that for every kJ of energy deficit, intermittent dieters lost more weight than continuous dieters.
  • Mice on the intermittent diet consumed 11.5% more energy overall than those on the continuous diet. Despite this higher intake, they achieved similar reductions in body weight and fat mass.
  • No significant differences were found in body weight or fat mass between the two diet groups at the end of the study, indicating that both diets were similarly effective in reducing weight.

Caveats

  • The study was conducted in mice, which may not fully translate to human weight loss dynamics. Further research is needed to assess the applicability of these findings in humans.
  • Both diet groups showed similar weight regain during the weight regain phase, suggesting that long-term maintenance of weight loss would require continued energy restriction.

Definitions

  • Weight loss efficiency: The amount of weight lost per unit of energy restriction, expressed in g/kJ.

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