Abstract
Foods and dietary patterns that enhance satiety may provide benefit to consumers. The aim of the present review was to describe, consider
and evaluate research on potential benefits of enhanced satiety. The proposal that enhanced satiety could only benefit consumers by a
direct effect on food intake should be rejected. Instead, it is proposed that there is a variety of routes through which enhanced satiety
could (indirectly) benefit dietary control or weight-management goals. The review highlights specific potential benefits of satiety, including:
providing appetite control strategies for consumers generally and for those who are highly responsive to food cues; offering pleasure
and satisfaction associated with low-energy/healthier versions of foods without feeling ‘deprived’; reducing dysphoric mood associated
with hunger especially during energy restriction; and improved compliance with healthy eating or weight-management efforts. There is
convincing evidence of short-term satiety benefits, but only probable evidence for longer-term benefits to hunger management, possible
evidence of benefits to mood and cognition, inadequate evidence that satiety enhancement can promote weight loss, and no evidence on
which consumers would benefit most from satiety enhancement. The appetite-reducing effects of specific foods or diets will be much more
subtle than those of pharmaceutical compounds in managing hunger; nevertheless, the experience of pharmacology in producing
weight loss via effects on appetite suggests that there is potential benefit of satiety enhancement from foods incorporated into the diet
to the consumer.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 22-38 |
Journal | Nutrition Research Reviews |
Volume | 26 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2013 |
Keywords
- low-calorie diet
- high-protein-diet
- body-weight loss
- disentangling food reward
- sensory-specific satiety
- glucagon-like peptide-1
- cognitive performance
- energy-intake
- appetite sensations
- eating behavior