Abstract
Diet composition and energy content modulate free fatty acid (FFA) release. The aim of this study was to evaluate the dose-response effects of euenergetic variations in dietary carbohydrate and fat content on postabsorptive FFA release. The rate of appearance (R-a) of palmitate was measured by infusion of [2,2-H-2(2)]palmitate after an overnight fast in six healthy men on three separate occasions, i.e. after 7 d on euenergetic control, high-carbohydrate and high-fat diets. The protein content and composition was identical for each diet. Postabsorptive plasma fatty acid concentrations were not different between the high-carbohydrate and control diets (0.36 (se 0.07) v. 0.43 (se 0.04) mmol/l), but were increased after the high-fat diet (0.75 (se 0.09) mmol/l, (P <0.01 compared with the other diets). R-a palmitate was not different between the high-carbohydrate and control diets (1.36 (se 0.20) v. 1.47 (se 0.15) mumol/kg per min). However, R-a palmitate was increased to 2.36 (se 0.26) mumol/kg per min after the high-fat diet (P <0.01 compared with the other diets). The fatty acid flux and whole-body fat oxidation were not affected by the high-carbohydrate diet compared with the control diet, but were increased by 67 and 47 % respectively, on the high-fat diet (P <0.01 compared with the other diets). A euenergetic high-fat diet results in increased postabsorptive FFA release and fat oxidation, whereas a euenergetic high-carbohydrate diet does not affect these variables of fat metabolism
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 555-559 |
| Journal | British journal of nutrition |
| Volume | 87 |
| Issue number | 6 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 2002 |
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