Snacking, satiety, and weight: A randomized, controlled trial
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Njike, Valentine Yanchou (Author)
- Kavak, Yasemin (Author)
- Treu, Judith A. (Author)
- Doughty, Kimberly (Author)
- Katz, David L. (Author)
Title
Snacking, satiety, and weight: A randomized, controlled trial
Abstract
Purpose. To compare the effects of nut-based snack bars (NBSB) vs. prepackaged 200-kcal portions of typical conventional snack foods, when consumed over a 12-week period by a group of overweight adults. Design. Randomized, single-blind parallel design with two treatment groups. Setting. Clinical trial. Subjects. Thirty-four overweight participants were enrolled. Intervention. Commercially available NBSB or conventional snack foods as part of an ad libitum diet for 12 weeks. Measures. Primary outcome measures: body mass index, body weight, body composition, waist circumference. Secondary outcome measures: blood pressure, lipid profile, nutrients intake, hunger/satiety, quality of life. Analysis. Generalized linear models with time as repeated measure were used to analyze these data. Results. Daily consumption of NBSB for 12 weeks, as compared to daily consumption of conventional snacks, significantly reduced percentage body fat (-1.7% +/- 10.8% vs. 6.2% 6 9.3%; p = .04) and visceral fat (-1.3 +/- 5.9 vs. 2.7 +/- 4.0; p = .03). There were no between-group differences (p ¿ .05) for blood pressure, lipid panel, satiety, or quality of life measures. Conclusion. Our data suggest that daily consumption of NBSB for 12 weeks reduced body fat and had no adverse effects on weight, blood pressure, lipid profile, satiety, or quality of life in this small sample of overweight adults.
Publication
American Journal of Health Promotion
Date
2017-07
Volume
31
Issue
4
Pages
296-301
Journal Abbr
Am. J. Health Promot.
Citation Key
ISI:000404026200005
ISSN
0890-1171
Language
English
Extra
9 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31]
Citation Key: ISI:000404026200005
Citation Key Alias: lens.org/091-556-161-065-396
tex.eissn: [object Object]
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Citation
Njike, V. Y., Kavak, Y., Treu, J. A., Doughty, K., & Katz, D. L. (2017). Snacking, satiety, and weight: A randomized, controlled trial. American Journal of Health Promotion, 31(4), 296–301. https://doi.org/10.4278/ajhp.150120-QUAN-676
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