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 >

[A randomized comparison of two weight-reducing diets. Calorie counting versus low-fat carbohydrate-rich ad libitum diet]

Author: Toubro S, Astrup AV

Author affiliation: Forskningsinstitut for Human Ernaering, Den Kongelige Veterinaer- og Landbohojskole, Frederiksberg. st@kvl.dk

Publication date & source: 1998.02.02, Ugeskr Laeger., 160(6):816-20.

Publication type: Clinical Trial; Comparative Study ; English Abstract; Randomized Controlled Trial

We compared the importance of rate of initial weight loss for long term outcome in obese patients and the efficacy of two different dietary weight maintenance programmes. An initial weight loss of 12.6 kg was achieved either by eight weeks low energy diet (2 MJ/day) (n = 21) or 17 weeks conventional hypocaloric, high protein diet (5 MJ/day) (n = 22) both supported by an anorectic compound (ephedrine 20 mg and caffeine 200 mg thrice daily). Weight loss rate had no effect on long-term weight maintenance. Randomisation to one year weight maintenance of either an ad lib, low fat, high carbohydrate diet or a fixed energy diet (< 8 MJ/day), both supported by reinforcement sessions 2-3 times monthly, resulted in a maintenance of 13.2 of initial 13.5 kg weight loss in the ad lib group versus 9.7 of 13.8 kg in the fixed energy intake group. At follow-up two years after the initial weight loss, 65% of the ad lib group and only 40% of the fixed energy intake group had maintained a weight loss of > 5 kg.



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.