People who haven't
eaten for many hours turn to high-calorie foods like starches and proteins -
not vegetables - once they can satisfy their hunger, a new study suggests.
And, researchers found, fasters ended up eating extra of
whatever foods they chose to chow down on first at that meal.
The findings carry a message for anyone who goes for long
spans of time without eating, researchers said. That includes patients fasting
before a procedure or blood test, some dieters and medical interns working long
shifts without a snack break, for example.
"I think this really pushes the importance of what
(food) options you have in your environment," said Aner Tal, one of the
study's authors from the Cornell Food and Brand Lab in Ithaca, New York.
Tal told Reuters Health that if he knew he wouldn't be
able to eat for long periods, he would pay extra attention to what types of
food he kept at home.
"It would be important to not overstock on unhealthy
options," he said.
For the study, published as a letter in the Archives of
Internal Medicine, Tal and his colleagues recruited 128 students from Cornell
University.
The students were randomly assigned to one of two groups.
One group was told not to eat or drink anything after 6 p.m. the day before the
lunchtime study. The other group, which acted as a comparison, was able to eat
normally.
By the time students sat down for lunch on the test day,
the fasting group had not had anything to eat for about 18 hours.
Each student was offered a buffet lunch of dinner rolls,
French fries, chicken, cheese, carrots and green beans, while under video
surveillance.
Using the video logs, the researchers recorded which
foods the students ate off their plates first. They also measured how much
students ate by embedding scales in the lunch table.
Forty-three of the original students didn't follow their
assignment and so weren't included in the main analysis.
Of the remaining 40 fasters, 30 first went for the dinner
rolls, French fries, chicken or cheese, compared to 20 of 45 students in the
comparison group.
Participants ended up eating almost 47 per cent more
calories of their first-choice food compared to other menu items.
The study cannot say why some students went for the
starches and proteins first, but Tal told Reuters Health it may have something
to do with an internal drive to seek high-fat foods after a period of
deprivation.
PRACTICAL
APPLICATIONS
The researchers suggest hospitals and cafeterias who
serve people going long periods of time without food should consider these
findings and make vegetables and other healthy foods "more convenient,
visible, and enticing."
That, they say, may encourage people to pick healthier
foods if they haven't had a chance to eat for several hours.
In a commentary published with the study, two nutrition
researchers suggest the findings may apply to settings outside of hospitals and
cafeterias.
They say this type of research is important for people
who are experiencing hunger and food insecurity.
"I think we're just starting to understand some of
these factors with obesity, food insecurity and related factors as things that
interrelate. I think it will be a missed opportunity if we don't (look into
this)," said Amy Yaroch, one of the commentary's authors and the director
of the Gretchen Swanson Center for Nutrition in Omaha, Nebraska.
SOURCES: bit.ly/OxDprH and bit.ly/L2edZ4 Archives of
Internal Medicine, online June 25, 2012.
Reuters
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