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Effects of Oligofructose and Barley on Satiety and Energy Intake

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Appetite Regulation
Registration Number
NCT00776256
Lead Sponsor
Unilever R&D
Brief Summary

The effect of beta-glucan or fructo-oligosaccharide or their combination in bars on satiety and food intake was tested by supplying these bars on two consecutive days.

Detailed Description

Background: Increasing gastro-intestinal viscosity or colonic fermentation is suggested to help improve appetite control and reduce food intake. Beta-glucan (BG) and fructo-oligosaccharide (FOS) are food ingredients proposed to act this way, but results so far remain inconclusive.

Objective: To test the effect of FOS, BG, or their combination in bars on appetite ratings and food intake during 2 consecutive days.

Design: In a 4-way balanced order cross-over double-blind design, 21 healthy volunteers (mean BMI 25.9 kg/m2) received a meal replacement bar at 09.00h and an ad libitum lunch at 13.00h on 2 consecutive days. On day 1 only, subjects consumed a second (identical) bar at 17.00h and a fixed snack at 19.00h. The control bar contained 0.3g BG (control, from 6.8 g oats), vs equi-caloric bar formulations containing an additional: 1) 0.9 g BG (from 8.0g barley), 2) 8g FOS, or 3) 0.9 g BG + 8g FOS. Appetite scores and subsequent ad libitum test meal intakes were measured. Bar viscosities were determined under simulated gastric conditions. Results were analyzed using ANCOVA.

Results: Addition of BG, FOS or their combination did not affect appetite ratings or food intake, although addition of BG to the bar doubled apparent gastric viscosity (841 vs 351 mPa.s).

Conclusions: BG, FOS or their combination in bars at these levels do not improve appetite control when consumed on 2 consecutive days. Efficacy might be increased by a longer exposure period, increasing the BG content, or a form of BG that generates even higher gastric viscosity.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
24
Inclusion Criteria
  • Age at start of the study 18 till 60 years
  • Quetelet-Index (BMI) from 21 till 32 kg/m2 inclusive
  • Apparently healthy: measured by questionnaire: no reported current or previous metabolic diseases or chronic gastrointestinal disorders
  • Reported dietary habits: no medically prescribed diet, no slimming diet, used to eat 3 meals a day, no vegetarian, macro-biotic or biologic dynamic food habits
  • No Fibre supplements (only once a day)
  • No blood donations during the study.
  • Reported intense sporting activities less than 10h/w
  • Reported alcohol consumption less than 21 units/w (female volunteers) or less than 28 units/w (male volunteers)
  • Having a General Practitioner
  • Informed consent signed
  • Recruitment form filled out
Exclusion Criteria
  • Smoking
  • Dislike, allergy/intolerance or not known with the foods of the ad libitum meal
  • Possible eating disorder (measured by SCOFF questionnaire)
  • High or very high restrained eaters (measured by questionnaire) (men with BMI < 27: restraint score > 2.37, men with BMI less than 27: restraint score > 3.04, women with BMI < 26: restraint score > 3.24, women with BMI less than 26: restraint score > 3.41)
  • Reported medical treatment that may affect eating habits/satiety
  • Reported intolerance or allergy to test products
  • Women reported lactating (or lactating < 6 weeks ago), pregnant (or pregnant < 3 months ago) or wish to become pregnant during the study
  • Reported weight loss/gain (10%) in the last six month before the trial
  • Reported participation in another biomedical trial 1 month before the start of the study
  • Reported working on late turns -

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Satiety and food intake2 days each week for 4 weeks
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Unilever R&D Vlaardingen

🇳🇱

Vlaardingen, Netherlands

Unilever R&D Vlaardingen
🇳🇱Vlaardingen, Netherlands

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