Monosodium l -glutamate in soup reduces subsequent energy intake from high-fat savoury food in overweight and obese women
Autor: | Susan Shuzhen Hao, Takashi Miyaki, Toshifumi Imada, Eiichiro Kimura |
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Rok vydání: | 2015 |
Předmět: |
Adult
0301 basic medicine Taste Medicine (miscellaneous) Umami Overweight Satiety Response Eating 03 medical and health sciences Double-Blind Method Sodium Glutamate Vegetables Food choice Humans Medicine Obesity Food science Cross-Over Studies 030109 nutrition & dietetics Nutrition and Dietetics business.industry digestive oral and skin physiology Water medicine.disease Dietary Fats Crossover study Flavoring Agents Eating disorders Lunch Food Female medicine.symptom Energy Intake business |
Zdroj: | British Journal of Nutrition. 115:176-184 |
ISSN: | 1475-2662 0007-1145 |
DOI: | 10.1017/s0007114515004031 |
Popis: | The umami seasoning, monosodium l-glutamate (MSG), has been shown to increase satiety in normal body weight adults, although the results have not been consistent. The satiety effect of MSG in overweight and obese adults has not been examined yet. The objective of the present study was to investigate the effect of MSG in a vegetable soup on subsequent energy intakes as well as food selection in overweight and obese adult women without eating disorders. A total of sixty-eight overweight and obese women (BMI range: 25·0–39·9 kg/m2), otherwise healthy, were recruited to our study. A fixed portion (200 ml) of control vegetable soup or the same soup with added MSG (0·5 g/100 ml) was provided 10 min before an ad libitum lunch and an ad libitum snack in the mid-afternoon. The control soup had equivalent amount of Na to the soup with added MSG. Energy intakes at the ad libitum lunch and ad libitum snack time after the soup preload were assessed using a randomised, double-blind, two-way cross-over design. The soup with MSG in comparison with the control soup resulted in significantly lower consumption of energy at lunch. The addition of MSG in the soup also reduced energy intake from high-fat savoury foods. The soup with MSG showed lower but no significant difference in energy intake at mid-afternoon. The addition of umami seasoning MSG in a vegetable soup may decrease subsequent energy intake in overweight and obese women who do not have eating disorders. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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