Impact of isoenergetic intake of irregular meal patterns on energy expenditure metabolism and appetite regulation

Meal pattern has been identified as a factor influencing the thermic effect of food (TEF) and metabolic status, and therefore health.This thesis investigated the effects of an irregular meal pattern, with a controlled energy intake, in normal-weight (n=11) and obese with insulin resistance (n=9) fem...

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Main Author: Alhussain, Maha
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31988/
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author Alhussain, Maha
author_facet Alhussain, Maha
author_sort Alhussain, Maha
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Meal pattern has been identified as a factor influencing the thermic effect of food (TEF) and metabolic status, and therefore health.This thesis investigated the effects of an irregular meal pattern, with a controlled energy intake, in normal-weight (n=11) and obese with insulin resistance (n=9) females over a 14-day period. Measurements were made of the TEF, circulating glucose, insulin, lipids concentration and appetite regulation, using a crossover design. The irregular intervention period led to a significant reduction in the TEF following a test drink consumption in both normal-weight and obese participants. Glucose iAUC responses to the test drink measured over 3h were higher after the irregular compared with the regular intervention with no difference in the insulin response in the normal-weight study. In the obese study, glucose responses were unaffected by the regular and irregular intervention periods, whilst there was a main effect of meal pattern in insulin responses. In the normal-weight study, fasting GLP-1 decreased after both interventions. In contrast, fasting GLP-1 increased after both interventions in the obese study. Furthermore, in the obese study, the regular intervention produced a higher GLP-1 iAUC compared with the irregular intervention, but there were no such effects in the normal-weight study. The normal-weight study showed that fasting PYY was lower after the interventions compared with before. Moreover, iAUC for PYY increased after the interventions compared with before. However, there were no significant differences in fasting and iAUC PYY responses between the two interventions in the obese study. A regular meal pattern appears to be associated with greater TEF, which might result in more favourable energy balance for weight maintenance. Also, it is likely that a regular meal pattern improved insulin sensitivity in healthy normal-weight females. Therefore, a regular meal pattern could be a lifestyle factor that may promote an individual’s health.
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format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
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institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
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language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T19:14:11Z
publishDate 2016
recordtype eprints
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spelling nottingham-319882025-02-28T13:23:45Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31988/ Impact of isoenergetic intake of irregular meal patterns on energy expenditure metabolism and appetite regulation Alhussain, Maha Meal pattern has been identified as a factor influencing the thermic effect of food (TEF) and metabolic status, and therefore health.This thesis investigated the effects of an irregular meal pattern, with a controlled energy intake, in normal-weight (n=11) and obese with insulin resistance (n=9) females over a 14-day period. Measurements were made of the TEF, circulating glucose, insulin, lipids concentration and appetite regulation, using a crossover design. The irregular intervention period led to a significant reduction in the TEF following a test drink consumption in both normal-weight and obese participants. Glucose iAUC responses to the test drink measured over 3h were higher after the irregular compared with the regular intervention with no difference in the insulin response in the normal-weight study. In the obese study, glucose responses were unaffected by the regular and irregular intervention periods, whilst there was a main effect of meal pattern in insulin responses. In the normal-weight study, fasting GLP-1 decreased after both interventions. In contrast, fasting GLP-1 increased after both interventions in the obese study. Furthermore, in the obese study, the regular intervention produced a higher GLP-1 iAUC compared with the irregular intervention, but there were no such effects in the normal-weight study. The normal-weight study showed that fasting PYY was lower after the interventions compared with before. Moreover, iAUC for PYY increased after the interventions compared with before. However, there were no significant differences in fasting and iAUC PYY responses between the two interventions in the obese study. A regular meal pattern appears to be associated with greater TEF, which might result in more favourable energy balance for weight maintenance. Also, it is likely that a regular meal pattern improved insulin sensitivity in healthy normal-weight females. Therefore, a regular meal pattern could be a lifestyle factor that may promote an individual’s health. 2016-03-15 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31988/1/Thesis_Final.pdf Alhussain, Maha (2016) Impact of isoenergetic intake of irregular meal patterns on energy expenditure metabolism and appetite regulation. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Energy metabolism Energy intake Appetite Thermic effect of food
spellingShingle Energy metabolism
Energy intake
Appetite
Thermic effect of food
Alhussain, Maha
Impact of isoenergetic intake of irregular meal patterns on energy expenditure metabolism and appetite regulation
title Impact of isoenergetic intake of irregular meal patterns on energy expenditure metabolism and appetite regulation
title_full Impact of isoenergetic intake of irregular meal patterns on energy expenditure metabolism and appetite regulation
title_fullStr Impact of isoenergetic intake of irregular meal patterns on energy expenditure metabolism and appetite regulation
title_full_unstemmed Impact of isoenergetic intake of irregular meal patterns on energy expenditure metabolism and appetite regulation
title_short Impact of isoenergetic intake of irregular meal patterns on energy expenditure metabolism and appetite regulation
title_sort impact of isoenergetic intake of irregular meal patterns on energy expenditure metabolism and appetite regulation
topic Energy metabolism
Energy intake
Appetite
Thermic effect of food
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31988/