Cutting Fat, Boosting Fruit
May Fight Weight Gain
Modifying the consumption of different
food-groups may keep body weight from creeping up over time, new
research suggests.
The six-year study found that adults
who boosted their intake of fruit during the research period put
on less weight and body fat than those whose fruit consumption
dipped. The same benefit was seen among men and women who started
drinking more skim or low-fat milk, or who cut back on fatty foods.
Although high-fat, Atkins-style
diets have been advocated for weight loss, the new study provides
evidence that over the long-term, relatively high fat intake promotes
weight gain, according to lead author Vicky Drapeau.
The findings support the standard
public health recommendation that adults eat more fruits and vegetables
and limit fat intake, noted Drapeau, a researcher at Laval University
in Quebec, Canada.
In addition, she told Reuters Health,
the results suggest that low-fat milk, and possibly other calcium-rich
foods, are important in weight control.
The study, published in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition, included 248 adults who kept a
record of their food intake over three days, once at the beginning
of the study, then again six years later. The point was to see
how shifts in a person's consumption of the various food groups
are related to weight changes over time.
Drapeau's team found that people
whose intake of fruit was higher during the second survey tended
to have gained less weight and body fat than those whose fruit
intake had declined over time. The benefit was related to "whole"
fruits only, and not fruit juice -- which the researchers say
is unsurprising, since whole fruit contains fiber and is therefore
likely to be more filling than juice.
Increasing intakes of skim or low-fat
milk were also tied to less weight gain and trimmer waistlines,
while adding fat to the diet seemed to help add fat to the body,
the researchers found.
According to Drapeau, the benefit
of bumping up fruit intake and cutting out fats is partially explained
by calories; people who ate more fat and less fruit tended to
have higher overall calorie intakes.
SOURCE: American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition, July 2004.
Reference
Source 89
Aug 18, 2004
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