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 >

Garcinia cambogia (hydroxycitric acid) as a potential antiobesity agent: a randomized controlled trial.

Author: Heymsfield SB, Allison DB, Vasselli JR, Pietrobelli A, Greenfield D, Nunez C

Author affiliation: Department of Medicine, Obesity Research Center, St Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY 10025, USA. sbh2@columbia.edu

Publication date & source: 1998.11.11, JAMA., 280(18):1596-600.

Publication type: Clinical Trial; Randomized Controlled Trial; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ; Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.

CONTEXT: Hydroxycitric acid, the active ingredient in the herbal compound Garcinia cambogia, competitively inhibits the extramitochondrial enzyme adenosine triphosphate-citrate (pro-3S)-lyase. As a citrate cleavage enzyme that may play an essential role in de novo lipogenesis inhibition, G cambogia is claimed to lower body weight and reduce fat mass in humans. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy of G cambogia for body weight and fat mass loss in overweight human subjects. DESIGN: Twelve-week randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. SETTING: Outpatient weight control research unit. PARTICIPANTS: Overweight men and women subjects (mean body mass index [weight in kilograms divided by the square of height in meters], approximately 32 kg/m2). INTERVENTION: Subjects were randomized to receive either active herbal compound (1500 mg of hydroxycitric acid per day) or placebo, and both groups were prescribed a high-fiber, low-energy diet. The treatment period was 12 weeks. Body weight was evaluated every other week and fat mass was measured at weeks 0 and 12. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Body weight change and fat mass change. RESULTS: A total of 135 subjects were randomized to either active hydroxycitric acid (n = 66) or placebo (n = 69); 42 (64%) in the active hydroxycitric acid group and 42 (61%) in the placebo group completed 12 weeks of treatment (P = .74). Patients in both groups lost a significant amount of weight during the 12-week treatment period (P<.001); however, between-group weight loss differences were not statistically significant (mean [SD], 3.2 [3.3] kg vs 4.1 [3.9] kg; P = .14). There were no significant differences in estimated percentage of body fat mass loss between treatment groups, and the fraction of subject weight loss as fat was not influenced by treatment group. CONCLUSIONS: Garcinia cambogia failed to produce significant weight loss and fat mass loss beyond that observed with placebo.



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.