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Study
Shows How Lean
Teen-Agers Stay That Way
Most teen-agers overeat when they hit the fast food counter but
lean youngsters stay that way by cutting back the rest of the
day while their overweight peers do not, according to a U.S. study
published.
"We don't know if this is an inherent
problem that leads to obesity or develops as a consequence of
obesity," said David Ludwig of Children's Hospital in Boston,
an author of the study.
"It may be that years of overeating
leads to a bit of a disconnect in the appetite mechanism," he
said in an interview. "At the very least its either causing obesity
or contributing to the maintenance of obesity."
The study, published in this week's
Journal of the American Medical Association, was designed to find
out why only some adolescents are obese although almost all eat
fast food.
One part of the study involved
54 adolescents age 13 to 17 about evenly divided between overweight
and lean who were given extra large fast food meals and told to
eat as much as they wanted in one hour.
In a second part of the study researchers
did a telephone survey of 51 members of the same group to find
out how much they ate under unsupervised conditions over four
days -- two when fast food was available and two days when it
was not.
In the first part of the study,
they all consumed calories equivalent to more than 61 percent
of their estimated daily energy requirement and in general the
overweight group ate more.
In the second part of the study,
overweight teens consumed "significantly more total energy" on
days when fast food was available -- something not observed among
the lean group.
"This observation suggests that
overweight individuals do not compensate completely for the massive
portion sizes characteristic of fast food today," the study said.
"These findings suggest that, at least, fast food consumption
serves to maintain or exacerbate obesity in susceptible individuals."
Ludwig said one factor is that
highly processed and tasty fast food goes down more easily. Consuming
the equivalent to a 1,600-calorie fast food meal in vegetables
and whole grains requires chewing and time, and would leave the
body feeling full long before reaching the same level.
In a second paper published in
the same issue, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
reported little change in the obesity epidemic in the United States,
based on an update of information from a national probability
sample.
"There is no indication that the
prevalence of obesity among adults and overweight among children
is decreasing," it said. "The high levels of overweight among
children and obesity among adults remain a major public health
concern."
Reference
Source 89
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