Home | Site Map | About | Contact 
  The scientific approach to weight loss and maintenance. Indepenent, hype-free research.
 
Weight Loss Guide
 Weight Loss Basics
 Diets & Dieting
 Drug Therapy
 Supplements
 Weight Loss Surgery
 Tools & Calculators
 
News & Research
 Weight Loss News
 Published Studies
   > Drugs
   > Diets
   > Supplements
   > Surgery
   > Lifestyle
 Clinical Trials
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
You are here: Published Weight Loss Studies >

The usefulness of dietary medium-chain triglycerides in body weight control: fact or fancy?

Author: Bach AC, Ingenbleek Y, Frey A

Author affiliation: CEPE, CNRS, Strasbourg, France.

Publication date & source: 1996.04, J Lipid Res., 37(4):708-26.

Publication type: Review

Compared to long-chain triglycerides (LCT), medium-chain triglycerides (MCT) display some specific physico-chemical, and biological characteristics. Thus, MCT are currently used in clinical nutrition as energy-yielding substrates, and have been advocated for three decades as a useful mean for body weight reduction. This review encompasses most aspects of MCT metabolism arguing this slimming hypothesis pro and con. Findings in support of the opinion (lower energy density, control of satiety, rapid intrahepatic delivery and oxidation rates, poor adipose tissue incorporation) may be invalidated by counteracting data (stimulation of insulin secretion and of anabolic-related processes, increased de novo fatty acid synthesis, induced hypertriglyceridemia). The balance between these two opposing influences depends on the composition (energy intake, nature of ingredients, MCT/LCT ratio, octanoate/decanoate ratio) and duration of the regimen. Due to the high energy level (around 50%) of MCT necessary to achieve body weight loss, long-term compliance to such slimming regimens is unlikely in human nutrition.



Indexes of Weight Loss Research Abstracts
Weight Loss Drugs
Weight Loss Diets
Supplements
Bariatric Surgery
Lifestyle


Back to Published Weight Loss Studies

     
-- advertisements --


Copyright © 2006 by Weight-Loss-Science.com
All inormation is for education purposes only and should not be considered as a medical advice.