Eating
smart, not eating less, may be the key to losing weight.
A
year-long clinical trial by Penn State researchers showed that diets focusing
on foods that are low in calorie density can promote healthy weight loss while
helping people to control hunger.
Foods
that are high in water and low in fat such as fruits, vegetables, soup,
lean meat, and low-fat dairy products are low in calorie density and provide
few calories per bite.
"Eating
a diet that is low in calorie density allows people to eat satisfying portions
of food, and this may decrease feelings of hunger and deprivation while reducing
calories" said Dr. Julia A. Ello-Martin, who conducted the study as part
of her doctoral dissertation in the College of Health and Human Development at
Penn State.
Previously,
little was known about the influence of diets low in calorie density on body weight.
"Such
diets are known to reduce the intake of calories in the short term, but their
role in promoting weight loss over the long term was not clear," said Dr.
Barbara J. Rolls, who directed the study and who holds the Helen A. Guthrie Chair
of Nutritional Sciences at Penn State.
"We
have now shown that choosing foods that are low in calorie density helps in losing
weight, without the restrictive messages of other weight loss diets," explained
Ello-Martin, whose findings appeared in the June 2007 issue of the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
The
researchers compared the effects of two diets one reduced in fat, the other
high in water-rich foods as well as reduced in fat in 71 obese women aged
22 to 60.
The
participants were taught by dietitians to make appropriate food choices for
a diet low in calorie density, but unlike most diets, they were not assigned
daily limits for calories.
At
the end of one year, women in both groups showed significant weight loss
as well as a decrease in the calorie density of their diets.
However,
women who added water-rich foods to their diets lost more weight during
the first six months of the study than those who only reduced fat in their diets
19.6 pounds compared to 14.7 pounds.
Weight
loss was well maintained by subjects in both groups during the second six months
of the study.
Records
kept by the women showed that those who included more water-rich foods ate
25 percent more food by weight and felt less hungry than those who followed
the reduced-fat diet.
"By eating more fruits and vegetables they were able to eat more food, and
this probably helped them to stick to their diet and lose more weight," said
Ello-Martin.
"Choosing
foods that are low in calorie density helps to control hunger and is a healthy
strategy for losing weight over the long term" said Rolls.
The
Penn State researchers added that increasing the consumption of water-rich foods
such as fruits and vegetables is not only in tune with current dietary guidelines,
but may also help reduce the risk of chronic illnesses.
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