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'Proof' behind high protein diets


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#1 doug123

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Posted 06 September 2006 - 06:27 AM


Link to source

Proof' behind high protein diets

Scientists say a gut hormone could explain why high protein diets can aid weight loss.

PYY is released when a person eats protein-rich foods and sends signals to the brain indicating fullness.

The Medical Research Council team at University College London believe their findings could help tackle obesity.

But dieticians said much more work was needed before people could be advised to make long-term changes to their eating habits.

It's not a diet that you would go on for a few months. You would go on it for life


Many popular diets, including the Atkins, employ high protein foods.

Although there has been evidence to suggest high protein diets are effective in achieving and maintaining weight loss, the reasons for this have been unclear.

Although PYY was discovered more than 20 years ago, its role is still debated.

Dr Rachel Batterham and colleagues have shown that low levels of PYY can result in obesity.

Dietary control

High protein diets lead to highest PYY levels in the body and the greatest curb in hunger in both obese and normal weight people.

Overall, however, the PYY levels were lower in the obese individuals than in the normal weight individuals. The associated reduction in appetite was also smaller when the person was obese.

The researchers decided to engineer mice that were genetically unable to produce PYY in order to study the long-term effects of a high protein diet.

The engineered mice ate more than normal mice and became obese, even when they were offered protein-rich foods.

When the researchers gave the mice PYY to treat their deficiency, their food consumption went down to normal levels, as did their weight.

When they withdrew the PYY treatment, the mice ate more and became obese again.

Long-term commitment

The researchers said small tweaks to meals - a couple of spoonfuls less of potato and an extra slice of meat - could make a difference.

Dr Batterham said: "We have proved that if you do not have PYY you become obese, and if you give it back then you lose the weight again."

She said the next step was to do longer studies in humans.

"It's not a diet that you would go on for a few months. You would go on it for life.

"We need to check that it would be compatible with lifestyle and look at the safety aspect."

More research is certainly needed on this type of dietary regimen before firm recommendations can be made about its long-term safety and efficacy


Dr Batterham said the changes required to the average person's diet would be small - 2-3% increases in protein intake and small reductions in carbohydrate intake.

"It's not drastic. It's subtle changes. Less potato and slightly more meat with your main meal, for example."

She suspects that there is an evolutionary explanation for why protein is most satiating, with protein making up a substantial part of hunter-gatherer diets.

Rachel Cooke from the British Dietetics Association said: "More research is certainly needed on this type of dietary regimen before firm recommendations can be made about its long-term safety and efficacy."

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.u...lth/5302054.stm

Published: 2006/09/06 01:36:10 GMT

© BBC MMVI

#2 biknut

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Posted 06 September 2006 - 02:53 PM

Apparently this only works when eating food. Companies have tried making pharmaceutical PYY (Peptide YY) and so far all of them have failed to be effective.

I try to follow this kind of diet but the problem is I still get cravings for sugar and other crap.

#3 streety

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Posted 07 September 2006 - 08:42 AM

The abstract:
"Dietary protein enhances satiety and promotes weight loss, but the mechanisms by which appetite is affected remain unclear. We investigated the role of gut hormones, key regulators of ingestive behavior, in mediating the satiating effects of different macronutrients. In normal-weight and obese human subjects, high-protein intake induced the greatest release of the anorectic hormone peptide YY (PYY) and the most pronounced satiety. Long-term augmentation of dietary protein in mice increased plasma PYY levels, decreased food intake, and reduced adiposity. To directly determine the role of PYY in mediating the satiating effects of protein, we generated Pyy null mice, which were selectively resistant to the satiating and weight-reducing effects of protein and developed marked obesity that was reversed by exogenous PYY treatment. Our findings suggest that modulating the release of endogenous satiety factors, such as PYY, through alteration of specific diet constituents could provide a rational therapy for obesity."

biknuts post:
"Apparently this only works when eating food. Companies have tried making pharmaceutical PYY (Peptide YY) and so far all of them have failed to be effective."

If this is true then how does the exogenous PYY treatment in the study work? I would just look at the study myself but I can't get access.

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