How Important Is Eating Rate in the Physiological Response to Food Intake, Control of Body Weight, and Glycemia?
Georgia ArgyrakopoulouStamatia SimatiGeorge D DimitriadisAlexander KokkinosPublished in: Nutrients (2020)
The link between eating rate and energy intake has long been a matter of extensive research. A better understanding of the effect of food intake speed on body weight and glycemia in the long term could serve as a means to prevent weight gain and/or dysglycemia. Whether a fast eating rate plays an important role in increased energy intake and body weight depends on various factors related to the studied food such as texture, viscosity and taste, but seems to be also influenced by the habitual characteristics of the studied subjects as well. Hunger and satiety quantified via test meals in acute experiments with subsequent energy intake measurements and their association with anorexigenic and orexigenic regulating peptides provide further insight to the complicated pathogenesis of obesity. The present review examines data from the abundant literature on the subject of eating rate, and highlights the main findings in people with normal weight, obesity, and type 2 diabetes, with the aim of clarifying the association between rate of food intake and hunger, satiety, glycemia, and energy intake in the short and long term.
Keyphrases
- body weight
- weight gain
- weight loss
- body mass index
- type diabetes
- birth weight
- physical activity
- insulin resistance
- systematic review
- glycemic control
- magnetic resonance imaging
- magnetic resonance
- amino acid
- climate change
- big data
- high fat diet induced
- risk assessment
- contrast enhanced
- electronic health record
- respiratory failure
- drug induced
- data analysis
- solid state
- mechanical ventilation