43 results on '"Frost, Gary"'
Search Results
2. Dietary metabolite profiling brings new insight into the relationship between nutrition and metabolic risk: An IMI DIRECT study
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Eriksen, Rebeca, Perez, Isabel Garcia, Posma, Joram M., Haid, Mark, Sharma, Sapna, Prehn, Cornelia, Thomas, Louise E., Koivula, Robert W., Bizzotto, Roberto, Mari, Andrea, Giordano, Giuseppe N., Pavo, Imre, Schwenk, Jochen M., De Masi, Federico, Tsirigos, Konstantinos D., Brunak, Søren, Viñuela, Ana, Mahajan, Anubha, McDonald, Timothy J., Kokkola, Tarja, Rutter, Femke, Teare, Harriet, Hansen, Tue H., Fernandez, Juan, Jones, Angus, Jennison, Chris, Walker, Mark, McCarthy, Mark I., Pedersen, Oluf, Ruetten, Hartmut, Forgie, Ian, Bell, Jimmy D., Pearson, Ewan R., Franks, Paul W., Adamski, Jerzy, Holmes, Elaine, and Frost, Gary
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- 2020
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3. Genetic studies of abdominal MRI data identify genes regulating hepcidin as major determinants of liver iron concentration
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Jennison, Christopher, Ehrhardt, Beate, Baum, Patrick, Schoelsch, Corinna, Freijer, Jan, Grempler, Rolf, Graefe-Mody, Ulrike, Hennige, Anita, Dings, Christiane, Lehr, Thorsten, Scherer, Nina, Sihinecich, Iryna, Pattou, Francois, Raverdi, Violeta, Caiazzo, Robert, Torres, Fanelly, Verkindt, Helene, Mari, Andrea, Tura, Andrea, Giorgino, Toni, Bizzotto, Roberto, Froguel, Philippe, Bonneford, Amelie, Canouil, Mickael, Dhennin, Veronique, Brorsson, Caroline, Brunak, Soren, De Masi, Federico, Gudmundsdóttir, Valborg, Pedersen, Helle, Banasik, Karina, Thomas, Cecilia, Sackett, Peter, Staerfeldt, Hans-Henrik, Lundgaard, Agnete, Nilsson, Birgitte, Nielsen, Agnes, Mazzoni, Gianluca, Karaderi, Tugce, Rasmussen, Simon, Johansen, Joachim, Allesøe, Rosa, Fritsche, Andreas, Thorand, Barbara, Adamski, Jurek, Grallert, Harald, Haid, Mark, Sharma, Sapna, Troll, Martina, Adam, Jonathan, Ferrer, Jorge, Eriksen, Heather, Frost, Gary, Haussler, Ragna, Hong, Mun-gwan, Schwenk, Jochen, Uhlen, Mathias, Nicolay, Claudia, Pavo, Imre, Steckel-Hamann, Birgit, Thomas, Melissa, Adragni, Kofi, Wu, Han, Hart, Leen't, Roderick, Slieker, van Leeuwen, Nienke, Dekkers, Koen, Frau, Francesca, Gassenhuber, Johann, Jablonka, Bernd, Musholt, Petra, Ruetten, Hartmut, Tillner, Joachim, Baltauss, Tania, Bernard Poenaru, Oana, de Preville, Nathalie, Rodriquez, Marianne, Arumugam, Manimozhiyan, Allin, Kristine, Engelbrechtsen, Line, Hansen, Torben, Hansen, Tue, Forman, Annemette, Jonsson, Anna, Pedersen, Oluf, Dutta, Avirup, Vogt, Josef, Vestergaard, Henrik, Laakso, Markku, Kokkola, Tarja, Kuulasmaa, Teemu, Franks, Paul, Giordano, Nick, Pomares-Millan, Hugo, Fitipaldi, Hugo, Mutie, Pascal, Klintenberg, Maria, Bergstrom, Margit, Groop, Leif, Ridderstrale, Martin, Atabaki Pasdar, Naeimeh, Deshmukh, Harshal, Heggie, Alison, Wake, Dianne, McEvoy, Donna, McVittie, Ian, Walker, Mark, Hattersley, Andrew, Hill, Anita, Jones, Angus, McDonald, Timothy, Perry, Mandy, Nice, Rachel, Hudson, Michelle, Thorne, Claire, Dermitzakis, Emmanouil, Viñuela, Ana, Cabrelli, Louise, Loftus, Heather, Dawed, Adem, Donnelly, Louise, Forgie, Ian, Pearson, Ewan, Palmer, Colin, Brown, Andrew, Koivula, Robert, Wesolowska-Andersen, Agata, Abdalla, Moustafa, McRobert, Nicky, Fernandez, Juan, Jiao, Yunlong, Robertson, Neil, Gough, Stephen, Kaye, Jane, Mourby, Miranda, Mahajan, Anubha, McCarthy, Mark, Shah, Nisha, Teare, Harriet, Holl, Reinhard, Koopman, Anitra, Rutters, Femke, Beulens, Joline, Groeneveld, Lenka, Bell, Jimmy, Thomas, Louise, Whitcher, Brandon, Wilman, Henry R., Parisinos, Constantinos A., Atabaki-Pasdar, Naeimeh, Kelly, Matt, Thomas, E. Louise, Neubauer, Stefan, Hingorani, Aroon D., Patel, Riyaz S., Hemingway, Harry, Franks, Paul W., Bell, Jimmy D., Banerjee, Rajarshi, and Yaghootkar, Hanieh
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- 2019
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4. Characterization of diet-dependent temporal changes in circulating short-chain fatty acid concentrations: A randomized crossover dietary trial.
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Brignardello, Jerusa, Fountana, Sofia, Posma, Joram Matthias, Chambers, Edward S, Nicholson, Jeremy K, Wist, Julien, Frost, Gary, Garcia-Perez, Isabel, and Holmes, Elaine
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FOOD habits ,WESTERN diet ,FASTING ,CLINICAL trials ,LUNCHEONS ,GUT microbiome ,DIET ,GAS chromatography ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,HEALTH behavior ,MASS spectrometry ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,BREAKFASTS ,SHORT-chain fatty acids ,DIETARY fats ,FATTY acids ,LACTIC acid ,FERMENTATION - Abstract
Background Production of SCFAs from food is a complex and dynamic saccharolytic fermentation process mediated by both human and gut microbial factors. Knowledge of SCFA production and of the relation between SCFA profiles and dietary patterns is lacking. Objectives Temporal changes in SCFA concentrations in response to 2 contrasting diets were investigated using a novel GC-MS method. Methods Samples were obtained from a randomized, controlled, crossover trial designed to characterize the metabolic response to 4 diets. Participants (n = 19) undertook these diets during an inpatient stay (of 72 h). Serum samples were collected 2 h after breakfast (AB), after lunch (AL), and after dinner (AD) on day 3, and a fasting sample (FA) was obtained on day 4. The 24-h urine samples were collected on day 3. In this substudy, samples from the 2 extreme diets representing a diet with high adherence to WHO healthy eating recommendations and a typical Western diet were analyzed using a bespoke GC-MS method developed to detect and quantify 10 SCFAs and precursors in serum and urine samples. Results Considerable interindividual variation in serum SCFA concentrations was observed across all time points, and temporal fluctuations were observed for both diets. Although the sample collection timing exerted a greater magnitude of effect on circulating SCFA concentrations, the unhealthy diet was associated with a lower concentration of acetic acid (FA: coefficient: –17.0; SE: 5.8; P -trend = 0.00615), 2-methylbutyric acid (AL: coefficient: –0.1; SE: 0.028; P -trend = 4.13 × 10
–4 and AD: coefficient: –0.1; SE: 0.028; P -trend = 2.28 × 10–3 ), and 2-hydroxybutyric acid (FA: coefficient: –15.8; SE: 5.11; P -trend: 4.09 × 10–3 ). In contrast, lactic acid was significantly higher in the unhealthy diet (AL: coefficient: 750.2; SE: 315.2; P -trend = 0.024 and AD: coefficient: 1219.3; SE: 322.6; P -trend: 8.28 × 10–4 ). Conclusions The GC-MS method allowed robust mapping of diurnal patterns in SCFA concentrations, which were affected by diet, and highlighted the importance of standardizing the timing of SCFA measurements in dietary studies. This trial was registered on the NIHR UK clinical trial gateway and with ISRCTN as ISRCTN43087333. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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5. An approach towards method development for untargeted urinary metabolite profiling in metabonomic research using UPLC/QToF MS
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Wong, Max C.Y., Lee, Warren T.K., Wong, Jayme S.Y., Frost, Gary, and Lodge, John
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- 2008
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6. effects of SCFAs on glycemic control in humans: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Cherta-Murillo, Anna, Pugh, Jennifer E, Alaraj-Alshehhi, Sumayya, Hajjar, Dana, Chambers, Edward S, and Frost, Gary S
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ONLINE information services ,MEDICAL databases ,META-analysis ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,GLYCEMIC control ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PROPIONATES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DATA analysis software ,MEDLINE ,SHORT-chain fatty acids ,BUTYRIC acid - Abstract
Background Noncommunicable disease development is related to impairments in glycemic and insulinemic responses, which can be modulated by fiber intake. Fiber's beneficial effects upon metabolic health can be partially attributed to the production of SCFAs via microbial fermentation of fiber in the gastrointestinal tract. Objectives We aimed to determine the effects of SCFAs, acetate, propionate, and butyrate on glycemic control in humans. Methods The CENTRAL, Embase, PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science databases were searched from inception to 7 December 2021. Papers were included if they reported a randomized controlled trial measuring glucose and/or insulin compared to a placebo in adults. Studies were categorized by the type of SCFA and intervention duration. Random-effects meta-analyses were performed for glucose and insulin for those subject categories with ≥3 studies, or a narrative review was performed. Results We identified 43 eligible papers, with 46 studies within those records (n = 913), and 44 studies were included in the meta-analysis. Vinegar intake decreased the acute glucose response [standard mean difference (SMD), −0.53; 95% CI, −0.92 to −0.14; n = 67] in individuals with impaired glucose tolerance or type 2 diabetes and in healthy volunteers (SMD, −0.27; 95% CI, −0.54 to 0.00; n = 186). The meta-analyses for acute acetate, as well as acute and chronic propionate studies, showed no significant effect. Conclusions Vinegar decreased the glucose response acutely in healthy and metabolically unhealthy individuals. Acetate, propionate, butyrate, and mixed SCFAs had no effect on blood glucose and insulin in humans. Significant heterogeneity, risks of bias, and publication biases were identified in several study categories, including the acute vinegar glucose response. As evidence was very uncertain, caution is urged when interpreting these results. Further high-quality research is required to determine the effects of SCFAs on glycemic control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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7. THU158 - Designing a polymetabolic risk score for non-alcoholic steatohepatitis patients by differentiating their metabolic profiles from healthy controls
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Habboub, Nadeen, Manousou, Pinelopi, Forlano, Roberta, Mullish, Benjamin H., Frost, Gary, Challis, Benjamin, Thursz, Mark, and Dumas, Marc-Emmanuel
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- 2022
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8. Contribution of reformulation, product renewal, and changes in consumer behavior to the reduction of salt intakes in the UK population between 2008/2009 and 2016/2017.
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Gressier, Mathilde, Sassi, Franco, and Frost, Gary
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SALT ,BLOOD pressure ,SALT-free diet ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CONSUMER attitudes ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,DIARY (Literary form) ,SURVEYS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ELEMENTAL diet ,NUTRITION policy - Abstract
Background The UK salt reduction program started in 2003, consisting of education campaigns to raise awareness about the risks associated with a high-salt diet and of a reformulation strategy for food manufacturers. This program is often cited as an example of a successful public health program. Objectives This study aimed to assess: 1) the impacts of changes in food composition and changes in consumer behavior on sodium intakes; and 2) whether changes were similar across socioeconomic groups. Methods Food intakes for the UK population were derived from food diaries in the UK National Diet and Nutrition Survey for 2008/09 (year 1; n = 1334) and 2016/17 (year 9; n = 995). Year-specific sodium densities of foods were used to calculate the average sodium density of all food and beverage consumed. Changes in sodium density between the 2 years were explained by changes in food composition (change in sodium density of products) and/or changes in behavior (type and quantity of food consumed) using a decomposition approach. Results The program was linked to a 16% (95% CI: −21% to −12%) decrease in sodium intake between years 1 and 9, while the sodium density of foods consumed decreased by 17% (95% CI: −21% to −12%). This decrease was largely driven by reformulation (−12.0 mg/100 g). Changes in food choices reinforced the effects of the program, but had a smaller impact (−1.6 mg/100 g). These effects were similar across socioeconomic groups, whether stratified by education or income, with a consistent effect of reformulation across groups and no differences between groups in behavioral responses to the program. Conclusions A multi-component sodium reduction strategy deployed in the United Kingdom starting in 2003 corresponded to an important reduction in sodium intakes for the population. This reduction was mostly driven by changes in the food environment (reformulated food products to reduce the sodium density of foods) and, to a smaller extent, by changes in food choices. Impacts were consistent across socioeconomic groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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9. The impact of starchy food structure on postprandial glycemic response and appetite: a systematic review with meta-analysis of randomized crossover trials.
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Cai, Mingzhu, Dou, Bowen, Pugh, Jennifer E, Lett, Aaron M, and Frost, Gary S
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GLUCOSE metabolism ,ENERGY metabolism ,APPETITE ,ONLINE information services ,META-analysis ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,GLUCANS ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,GLYCEMIC control ,INGESTION ,INSULIN ,GLYCEMIC index ,DIGESTION ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MOLECULAR structure ,MEDLINE - Abstract
Background Starchy foods can have a profound effect on metabolism. The structural properties of starchy foods can affect their digestibility and postprandial metabolic responses, which in the long term may be associated with the risk of type 2 diabetes and obesity. Objectives This systematic review sought to evaluate the clinical evidence regarding the impact of the microstructures within starchy foods on postprandial glucose and insulin responses alongside appetite regulation. Methods A systematic search was performed in the PUBMED, Ovid Medicine, EMBASE, and Google Scholar databases for data published up to 18 January 2021. Data were extracted by 3 independent reviewers from randomized crossover trials (RCTs) that investigated the effect of microstructural factors on postprandial glucose, insulin, appetite-regulating hormone responses, and subjective satiety scores in healthy participants. Results We identified 745 potential articles, and 25 RCTs (n = 369 participants) met our inclusion criteria: 6 evaluated the amylose-to-amylopectin ratio, 6 evaluated the degree of starch gelatinization, 2 evaluated the degree of starch retrogradation, 1 studied starch–protein interactions, and 12 investigated cell and tissue structures. Meta-analyses showed that significant reductions in postprandial glucose and insulin levels was caused by starch with a high amylose content [standardized mean difference (SMD) = −0.64 mmol/L*min (95% CI: −0.83 to −0.46) and SMD = −0.81 pmol/L*min (95% CI: −1.07 to −0.55), respectively], less-gelatinized starch [SMD = −0.54 mmol/L*min (95% CI: −0.75 to −0.34) and SMD = −0.48 pmol/L*min (95% CI: −0.75 to −0.21), respectively], retrograded starch (for glucose incremental AUC; SMD = −0.46 pmol/L*min; 95% CI: −0.80 to −0.12), and intact and large particles [SMD = −0.43 mmol/L*min (95% CI: −0.58 to −0.28) and SMD = −0.63 pmol/L*min (95% CI: −0.86 to −0.40), respectively]. All analyses showed minor or moderate heterogeneity (I
2 < 50%). Sufficient evidence was not found to suggest how these structural factors influence appetite. Conclusions The manipulation of microstructures in starchy food may be an effective way to improve postprandial glycemia and insulinemia in the healthy population. The protocol for this systematic review and meta-analysis was registered in the international prospective register of systematic reviews (PROSPERO) as CRD42020190873. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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10. Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, left ventricular dysfunction, and early heart failure
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Cleland, John G., Shah, Dilip, Krikler, Shirley, Frost, Gary, and Oakley, Celia M.
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ACE inhibitors -- Physiological aspects ,Heart ventricle, Left ,Heart failure ,Lisinopril -- Physiological aspects ,Exercise ,Health - Published
- 1992
11. Spot and Cumulative Urine Samples Are Suitable Replacements for 24-Hour Urine Collections for Objective Measures of Dietary Exposure in Adults Using Metabolite Biomarkers.
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Wilson, Thomas, Garcia-Perez, Isabel, Posma, Joram M, Lloyd, Amanda J, Chambers, Edward S, Tailliart, Kathleen, Zubair, Hassan, Beckmann, Manfred, Mathers, John C, Holmes, Elaine, Frost, Gary, and Draper, John
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NUCLEAR magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,PROTON magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,URINE ,METABOLIC profile tests - Abstract
Background: Measurement of multiple food intake exposure biomarkers in urine may offer an objective method for monitoring diet. The potential of spot and cumulative urine samples that have reduced burden on participants as replacements for 24-h urine collections has not been evaluated.Objective: The aim of this study was to determine the utility of spot and cumulative urine samples for classifying the metabolic profiles of people according to dietary intake when compared with 24-h urine collections in a controlled dietary intervention study.Methods: Nineteen healthy individuals (10 male, 9 female, aged 21-65 y, BMI 20-35 kg/m2) each consumed 4 distinctly different diets, each for 1 wk. Spot urine samples were collected ∼2 h post meals on 3 intervention days/wk. Cumulative urine samples were collected daily over 3 separate temporal periods. A 24-h urine collection was created by combining the 3 cumulative urine samples. Urine samples were analyzed with metabolite fingerprinting by both high-resolution flow infusion electrospray mass spectrometry (FIE-HRMS) and proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H-NMR). Concentrations of dietary intake biomarkers were measured with liquid chromatography triple quadrupole mass spectrometry and by integration of 1H-NMR data.Results: Cross-validation modeling with 1H-NMR and FIE-HRMS data demonstrated the power of spot and cumulative urine samples in predicting dietary patterns in 24-h urine collections. Particularly, there was no significant loss of information when post-dinner (PD) spot or overnight cumulative samples were substituted for 24-h urine collections (classification accuracies of 0.891 and 0.938, respectively). Quantitative analysis of urine samples also demonstrated the relation between PD spot samples and 24-h urines for dietary exposure biomarkers.Conclusions: We conclude that PD spot urine samples are suitable replacements for 24-h urine collections. Alternatively, cumulative samples collected overnight predict similarly to 24-h urine samples and have a lower collection burden for participants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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12. Starting the day the right way
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Frost, Gary and Dornhorst, Anne
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Breakfasts -- Health aspects ,Glycemic index -- Health aspects ,Type 2 diabetes -- Risk factors - Published
- 2001
13. Acute dietary saturated fat intake can suppress the inflammatory response in human circulating foamy monocytes
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Rahman, Shamim, Vorkas, Panagiotis, Morrison, Douglas, Frost, Gary, Haskard, Dorian, and Woollard, Kevin
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- 2017
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14. How strong is the evidence base for carbohydrate restriction in the management of type 2 diabetes?
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Frost, Gary
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GLYCEMIC control ,SERIAL publications ,LOW-carbohydrate diet ,TYPE 2 diabetes ,DIETARY carbohydrates ,DISEASE management - Abstract
The article discusses the study "Dose-Dependent Effect of Carbohydrate Restriction for Type 2 Diabetes Management: A Systematic Review and Dose-Response Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials," by A. Jayedi, Y. Mousavi, A. T. Jibril and colleagues, that was published within the issue. Topics covered include glycemic control, dietary carbohydrate restriction, and cardiovascular health.
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- 2022
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15. Estimation of Chicken Intake by Adults Using Metabolomics-Derived Markers.
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Xiaofei Yin, Gibbons, Helena, Rundle, Milena, Frost, Gary, McNulty, Breige A., Nugent, Anne P., Walton, Janette, Flynn, Albert, Gibney, Michael J., Brennan, Lorraine, and Yin, Xiaofei
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METABOLOMICS ,MEAT ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,MASS spectrometry ,METABOLITES - Abstract
Background: Improved assessment of meat intake with the use of metabolomics-derived markers can provide objective data and could be helpful in clarifying proposed associations between meat intake and health.Objective: The objective of this study was to identify novel markers of chicken intake using a metabolomics approach and use markers to determine intake in an independent cohort.Methods: Ten participants [age: 62 y; body mass index (in kg/m2): 28.25] in the NutriTech food intake study consumed increasing amounts of chicken, from 88 to 290 g/d, in a 3-wk span. Urine and blood samples were analyzed by nuclear magnetic resonance and mass spectrometry, respectively. A multivariate data analysis was performed to identify markers associated with chicken intake. A calibration curve was built based on dose-response association using NutriTech data. A Bland-Altman analysis evaluated the agreement between reported and calculated chicken intake in a National Adult Nutrition Survey cohort.Results: Multivariate data analysis of postprandial and fasting urine samples collected in participants in the NutriTech study revealed good discrimination between high (290 g/d) and low (88 g/d) chicken intakes. Urinary metabolite profiles showed differences in metabolite levels between low and high chicken intakes. Examining metabolite profiles revealed that guanidoacetate increased from 1.47 to 3.66 mmol/L following increasing chicken intakes from 88 to 290 g/d (P < 0.01). Using a calibration curve developed from the NutriTech study, chicken intake was calculated through the use of data from the National Adult Nutrition Survey, in which consumers of chicken had a higher guanidoacetate excretion (0.70 mmol/L) than did nonconsumers (0.47 mmol/L; P < 0.01). A Bland-Altman analysis revealed good agreement between reported and calculated intakes, with a bias of -30.2 g/d. Plasma metabolite analysis demonstrated that 3-methylhistidine was a more suitable indicator of chicken intake than 1-methylhistidine.Conclusions: Guanidoacetate was successfully identified and confirmed as a marker of chicken intake, and its measurement in fasting urine samples could be used to determine chicken intake in a free-living population. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01684917. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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16. A metabolomic study of biomarkers of meat and fish intake.
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Cheung, William, Keski-Rahkonen, Pekka, Assi, Nada, Ferrari, Pietro, Freisling, Heinz, Rinaldi, Sabina, Slimani, Nadia, Zamora-Ros, Raul, Rundle, Milena, Frost, Gary, Gibbons, Helena, Carr, Eibhlin, Brennan, Lorraine, Cross, Amanda J., Pala, Valeria, Panico, Salvatore, Sacerdote, Carlotta, Palli, Domenico, Tumino, Rosario, and Kühn, Tilman
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BIOMARKERS ,CARNITINE ,CHOLINE ,CLINICAL trials ,FISHES ,LIQUID chromatography ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MASS spectrometry ,MEAT ,NEUROPEPTIDES ,NUTRITIONAL assessment ,POULTRY ,PROBABILITY theory ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,T-test (Statistics) ,BODY mass index ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,CROSS-sectional method ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,METABOLOMICS ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test - Abstract
Background: Meat and fish intakes have been associated with various chronic diseases. The use of specific biomarkers may help to assess meat and fish intake and improve subject classification according to the amount and type of meat or fish consumed. Objective: A metabolomic approach was applied to search for biomarkers of meat and fish intake in a dietary intervention study and in free-living subjects from the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) study. Design: In the dietary intervention study, 4 groups of 10 subjects consumed increasing quantities of chicken, red meat, processed meat, and fish over 3 successive weeks. Twenty-four-hour urine samples were collected during each period and analyzed by high-resolution liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Signals characteristic of meat or fish intake were replicated in 50 EPIC subjects for whom a 24-h urine sample and 24-h dietary recall were available and who were selected for their exclusive intake or no intake of any of the 4 same foods. Results: A total of 249 mass spectrometric features showed a positive dose-dependent response to meat or fish intake in the intervention study. Eighteen of these features best predicted intake of the 4 food groups in the EPIC urine samples on the basis of partial receiver operator curve analyses with permutation testing (areas under the curve ranging between 0.61 and 1.0). Of these signals, 8 metabolites were identified. Anserine was found to be specific for chicken intake, whereas trimethylamine-N-oxide showed good specificity for fish. Carnosine and 3 acylcarnitines (acetylcarnitine, propionylcarnitine, and 2-methylbutyrylcarnitine) appeared to be more generic indicators of meat and meat and fish intake, respectively. Conclusion: The meat and fish biomarkers identified in this work may be used to study associations between meat and fish intake and disease risk in epidemiologic studies. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01684917. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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17. Fermentable carbohydrate stimulates FFAR2-dependent colonic PYY cell expansion to increase satiety.
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Brooks, Lucy, Viardot, Alexander, Tsakmaki, Anastasia, Stolarczyk, Emilie, Howard, Jane K., Cani, Patrice D., Everard, Amandine, Sleeth, Michelle L., Psichas, Arianna, Anastasovskaj, Jelena, Bell, Jimmy D., Bell-Anderson, Kim, Mackay, Charles R., Ghatei, Mohammad A., Bloom, Stephen R., Frost, Gary, and Bewick, Gavin A.
- Abstract
Objective Dietary supplementation with fermentable carbohydrate protects against body weight gain. Fermentation by the resident gut microbiota produces short-chain fatty acids, which act at free fatty acid receptor 2 (FFAR2). Our aim was to test the hypothesis that FFAR2 is important in regulating the beneficial effects of fermentable carbohydrate on body weight and to understand the role of gut hormones PYY and GLP-1. Methods Wild-type or Ffar2 −/− mice were fed an inulin supplemented or control diet. Mice were metabolically characterized and gut hormone concentrations, enteroendocrine cell density measurements were carried out. Intestinal organoids and colonic cultures were utilized to substantiate the in vivo findings. Results We provide new mechanistic insight into how fermentable carbohydrate regulates metabolism. Using mice that lack FFAR2, we demonstrate that the fermentable carbohydrate inulin acts via this receptor to drive an 87% increase in the density of cells that produce the appetite-suppressing hormone peptide YY (PYY), reduce food intake, and prevent diet-induced obesity. Conclusion Our results demonstrate that FFAR2 is predominantly involved in regulating the effects of fermentable carbohydrate on metabolism and does so, in part, by enhancing PYY cell density and release. This highlights the potential for targeting enteroendocrine cell differentiation to treat obesity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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18. Increased colonic propionate reduces anticipatory reward responses in the human striatum to high-energy foods.
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Byrne, Claire S., Chambers, Edward S., Alhabeeb, Habeeb, Chhina, Navpreet, Morrison, Douglas J., Preston, Tom, Tedford, Catriona, Fitzpatrick, Julie, Irani, Cherag, Busza, Albert, Garcia-Perez, Isabel, Fountana, Sofia, Holmes, Elaine, Goldstone, Anthony P., and Frost, Gary S.
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BRAIN physiology ,HYDROGEN analysis ,AFFECT (Psychology) ,ANALYSIS of covariance ,APPETITE ,BREATH tests ,CLINICAL trials ,COLON (Anatomy) ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CROSSOVER trials ,FOOD ,CARBOHYDRATE content of food ,DIGITAL image processing ,INGESTION ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,PEPTIDE hormones ,PHOTOGRAPHY ,PROBABILITY theory ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,RESEARCH funding ,REWARD (Psychology) ,STATISTICAL sampling ,STATISTICS ,T-test (Statistics) ,GLUCAGON-like peptide 1 ,DATA analysis ,BODY mass index ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,VISUAL analog scale ,PROMPTS (Psychology) ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SHORT-chain fatty acids ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), metabolites produced through the microbial fermentation of nondigestible dietary components, have key roles in energy homeostasis. Animal research suggests that colon-derived SCFAs modulate feeding behavior via central mechanisms. In humans, increased colonic production of the SCFA propionate acutely reduces energy intake. However, evidence of an effect of colonic propionate on the human brain or reward-based eating behavior is currently unavailable. Objectives: We investigated the effect of increased colonic propionate production on brain anticipatory reward responses during food picture evaluation. We hypothesized that elevated colonic propionate would reduce both reward responses and ad libitum energy intake via stimulation of anorexigenic gut hormone secretion. Design: In a randomized crossover design, 20 healthy nonobese men completed a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) food picture evaluation task after consumption of control inulin or inulin-propionate ester, a unique dietary compound that selectively augments colonic propionate production. The blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signal wasmeasuredinaprioribrainregions involved in reward processing, including the caudate, nucleus accumbens, amygdala, anterior insula, and orbitofrontal cortex (n = 18 had analyzable fMRI data). Results: Increasing colonic propionate production reduced BOLD signal during food picture evaluation in the caudate and nucleus accumbens. In the caudate, the reduction in BOLD signal was driven specifically by a lowering of the response to high-energy food. These central effects were partnered with a decrease in subjective appeal of high-energy food pictures and reduced energy intake during an ad libitum meal. These observations were not related to changes in blood peptide YY (PYY), glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1), glucose, or insulin concentrations. Conclusion: Our results suggest that colonic propionate production may play an important role in attenuating reward-based eating behavior via striatal pathways, independent of changes in plasma PYYand GLP-1. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00750438. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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19. Adherence to NICE guidelines on diabetes prevention in the UK: Effect on patient knowledge and perceived risk.
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Guess, Nicola D., Caengprasath, Natarin, Dornhorst, Anne, and Frost, Gary S.
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TYPE 2 diabetes diagnosis ,TYPE 2 diabetes prevention ,BEHAVIOR ,DIET ,EXERCISE ,FAMILY medicine ,GLUCOSE tolerance tests ,HEALTH attitudes ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDICAL protocols ,TYPE 2 diabetes ,PATIENT education ,SENSORY perception ,PREVENTIVE health services ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,RISK assessment ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,PREDICTIVE tests ,CROSS-sectional method ,SEDENTARY lifestyles - Abstract
Background: NICE Guidelines for prevention of diabetes include identifying people at risk followed by cost-effective intervention if necessary. Based on assessment of risk via a questionnaire and/or blood test the intervention may comprise a brief discussion of risk factors and preventive advice or referral to intensive lifestyle intervention.Design and Setting: In this cross-sectional study 59 subjects recruited from local GP practices were invited by letter to attend a screening for a diabetes prevention study.Method: Following a telephone screening during which subjects were asked whether they had been informed if they were at high-risk of type 2 diabetes, eligible subjects completed a Risk Perception Survey for Developing Diabetes (RPS-DD), a validated diabetes risk score and underwent an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) at a medical screening.Results: As measured by the Diabetes UK Risk Score, 44.1% were at high risk, 42.4% moderate risk and 13.6% at increased risk. 42% of patients had been informed they were at high-risk by a health professional. Those who had been informed of their risk had significantly higher perceived risk scores (p<0.001), higher knowledge scores (p<0.001) and decreased optimism scores (p=0.004), but were not more aware that diet (p=0.42) and weight management (p=0.57) can play a role in preventing diabetes.Conclusions: People at high-risk of diabetes are not being informed of their risk status as recommended by NICE guidelines. There is scope for education for health professionals and the public. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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20. Manipulation of starch bioaccessibility in wheat endosperm to regulate starch digestion, postprandial glycemia, insulinemia, and gut hormone responses: a randomized controlled trial in healthy ileostomy participants.
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Edwards, Cathrina H., Grundy, Myriam M. L., Grassby, Terri, Vasilopoulou, Dafni, Frost, Gary S., Butterworth, Peter J., Berry, Sarah E. E., Sanderson, Jeremy, and Ellis, Peter R.
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ANALYSIS of variance ,BIOAVAILABILITY ,BIOLOGICAL models ,BIOPHYSICS ,BLOOD sugar ,C-peptide ,CHOLECYSTOKININ ,CHOLESTEROL ,CLINICAL trials ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CROSSOVER trials ,FATTY acids ,GASTROINTESTINAL hormones ,GLUCANS ,GRAIN ,ILEOSTOMY ,INGESTION ,INSULIN ,INTESTINAL absorption ,RESEARCH methodology ,MICROSCOPY ,PEPTIDE hormones ,PROBABILITY theory ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,STATISTICS ,T-test (Statistics) ,TIME ,TRIGLYCERIDES ,STATISTICAL power analysis ,WHEAT ,DATA analysis ,STATISTICAL significance ,BODY mass index ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,REPEATED measures design ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,IN vitro studies ,PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Cereal crops, particularly wheat, are a major dietary source of starch, and the bioaccessibility of starch has implications for postprandial glycemia. The structure and properties of plant foods have been identified as critical factors in influencing nutrient bioaccessibility; however, the physical and biochemical disassembly of cereal food during digestion has not been widely studied. Objectives: The aims of this study were to compare the effects of 2 porridge meals prepared from wheat endosperm with different degrees of starch bioaccessibility on postprandial metabolism (e.g., glycemia) and to gain insight into the structural and biochemical breakdown of the test meals during gastroileal transit. Design: A randomized crossover trial in 9 healthy ileostomy participants was designed to compare the effects of 55 g starch, provided as coarse (2-mm particles) or smooth (,0.2-mm particles) wheat porridge, on postprandial changes in blood glucose, insulin, C-peptide, lipids, and gut hormones and on the resistant starch (RS) content of ileal effluent. Undigested food in the ileal output was examined microscopically to identify cell walls and encapsulated starch. Results: Blood glucose, insulin, C-peptide, and glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide concentrations were significantly lower (i.e., 33%, 43%, 40%, and 50% lower 120-min incremental AUC, respectively) after consumption of the coarse porridge than after the smooth porridge (P , 0.01). In vitro, starch digestion was slower in the coarse porridge than in the smooth porridge (33% less starch digested at 90 min, P , 0.05, paired t test). In vivo, the structural integrity of coarse particles (w2 mm) of wheat endosperm was retained during gastroileal transit. Microscopic examination revealed a progressive loss of starch from the periphery toward the particle core. The structure of the test meal had no effect on the amount or pattern of RS output. Conclusion: The structural integrity of wheat endosperm is largely retained during gastroileal digestion and has a primary role in influencing the rate of starch amylolysis and, consequently, postprandial metabolism. This trial was registered at isrctn.org as ISRCTN40517475. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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21. Saturation of fat and cholecystokinin release: implications for pancreatic carcinogenesis
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Beardshall, Kate, Morarji, Yogini, Bloom, Stephen R., Frost, Gary, Domin, Jan, and Calam, John
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Unsaturated fatty acids -- Physiological aspects ,Pancreatic cancer ,cholecystokinin -- Health aspects - Published
- 1989
22. Ghrelin mimics fasting to enhance human hedonic, orbitofrontal cortex, and hippocampal responses to food.
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Goldstone, Anthony P., Prechtl, Christina G., Scholtz, Samantha, Miras, Alexander D., Chhina, Navpreet, Durighel, Giuliana, Deliran, Seyedeh S., Beckmann, Christian, Ghatei, Mohammad A., Ashby, Damien R., Waldman, Adam D., Gaylinn, Bruce D., Thorner, Michael O., Frost, Gary S., Bloom, Stephen R., and Bell, Jimmy D.
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BRAIN physiology ,HIPPOCAMPUS physiology ,FOOD habits ,ANALYSIS of covariance ,ANALYSIS of variance ,ANTHROPOMETRY ,APPETITE ,CROSSOVER trials ,FASTING ,HUNGER ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,MATHEMATICS ,PHOTOGRAPHY ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,STATISTICS ,T-test (Statistics) ,TIME series analysis ,DATA analysis ,GHRELIN ,HUMAN growth hormone ,BODY mass index ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,VISUAL analog scale ,PROMPTS (Psychology) ,BLIND experiment ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ENERGY density - Abstract
Background: Ghrelin, which is a stomach-derived hormone, increases with fasting and energy restriction and may influence eating behaviors through brain hedonic reward-cognitive systems. Therefore, changes in plasma ghrelin might mediate counter-regulatory responses to a negative energy balance through changes in food hedonics. Objective: We investigated whether ghrelin administration (exogenous hyperghrelinemia) mimics effects of fasting (endogenous hyperghrelinemia) on the hedonic response and activation of brain-reward systems to food. Design: In a crossover design, 22 healthy, nonobese adults (17 men) underwent a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) food-picture evaluation task after a 16-h overnight fast (Fasted-Saline) or after eating breakfast 95 min before scanning (730 kcal, 14% protein, 31% fat, and 55% carbohydrate) and receiving a saline (Fed-Saline) or acyl ghrelin (Fed-Ghrelin) subcutaneous injection before scanning. One male subject was excluded from the fMRI analysis because of excess head motion, which left 21 subjects with brain-activation data. Results: Compared with the Fed-Saline visit, both ghrelin administration to fed subjects (Fed-Ghrelin) and fasting (Fasted-Saline) significantly increased the appeal of high-energy foods and associated orbitofrontal cortex activation. Both fasting and ghrelin administration also increased hippocampus activation to high-energy- and low-energy-food pictures. These similar effects of endogenous and exogenous hyperghrelinemia were not explicable by consistent changes in glucose, insulin, peptide YY, and glucagon-like peptide-1. Neither ghrelin administration nor fasting had any significant effect on nucleus accumbens, caudate, anterior insula, or amygdala activation during the food-evaluation task or on auditory, motor, or visual cortex activation during a control task. Conclusions: Ghrelin administration and fasting have similar acute stimulatory effects on hedonic responses and the activation of corticolimbic reward-cognitive systems during food evaluations. Similar effects of recurrent or chronic hyperghrelinemia on an anticipatory food reward may contribute to the negative impact of skipping breakfast on dietary habits and body weight and the long-term failure of energy restriction for weight loss. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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23. Fatty acid flux and oxidation are increased by rimonabant in obese women.
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Backhouse, Katharine, Sarac, Ivana, Shojaee-Moradie, Fariba, Stolinski, Michael, Robertson, M. Denise, Frost, Gary S., Bell, Jimmy D., Thomas, E. Louise, Wright, John, Russell-Jones, David, and Umpleby, A. Margot
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FATTY acids ,RIMONABANT ,CANNABINOID receptors ,OBESITY in women ,WEIGHT loss ,BODY mass index ,LIPOLYSIS ,PHYSIOLOGICAL oxidation - Abstract
Abstract: This study aimed to determine in obese women if endocannabinoid receptor antagonism has effects on fatty acid and triglyceride metabolism and insulin sensitivity which are independent from the metabolic effects of weight loss. Fourteen obese (BMI=33.0±0.5 kg/m
2 ) (mean±SEM) Caucasian post-menopausal women, aged 57.8±4.7 years were studied. The women were randomised to 2 groups, one group received the endocannabinoid receptor antagonist rimonabant (20 mg/d) for 12 weeks. A control group achieved the same weight loss by a hypocaloric dietary intervention over 12 weeks. Palmitate production rate (Ra), a measure of lipolysis, and palmitate oxidation rate, and VLDL1 and VLDL2 triglyceride (TG) kinetics, were measured using isotopic tracers before and after the intervention. Weight loss was not different in the 2 groups; 2.6±0.5 kg with rimonabant and 3.1±1.0 kg in the control group. Palmitate Ra increased with rimonabant with no change in the control group (p=0.03 between groups). Palmitate oxidation rate increased with rimonabant but decreased in the control group (p=0.005 between groups). VLDL1 TG secretion rate decreased in the control group and increased in the rimonabant group (p=0.008 between groups). There was no significant effect on insulin sensitivity. This study suggests that endocannabinoid receptor antagonism for 12 weeks in obese women increased lipolysis and fatty acid oxidation. The increase in VLDL1 TG secretion rate may be due to the increase in lipolysis which exceeded the increase in fatty acid oxidation. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]- Published
- 2012
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24. Single nucleotide polymorphisms at the ADIPOQ gene locus interact with age and dietary intake of fat to determine serum adiponectin in subjects at risk of the metabolic syndrome.
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AlSaleh, Aseel, O'Dell, Sandra, Frost, Gary S, Griffin, Bruce A, Lovegrove, Julie A, Jebb, Susan A, Sanders, Thomas AB, and RISCK Study Group
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BACKGROUND: Adiponectin gene expression is modulated by peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma, which is a transcription factor activated by unsaturated fatty acids. OBJECTIVE: We investigated the effect of the interaction between variants at the ADIPOQ gene locus, age, sex, body mass index (BMI), ethnicity, and the replacement of dietary saturated fatty acids (SFAs) with monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFAs) or carbohydrates on serum adiponectin concentrations. DESIGN: The RISCK (Reading, Imperial, Surrey, Cambridge, and Kings) study is a parallel-design, randomized controlled trial. Serum adiponectin concentrations were measured after a 4-wk high-SFA (HS) diet and a 24-wk intervention with reference (HS), high-MUFA (HM), and low-fat (LF) diets. Single nucleotide polymorphisms at the ADIPOQ locus -11391 G/A (rs17300539), -10066 G/A (rs182052), -7734 A/C (rs16861209), and +276 G/T (rs1501299) were genotyped in 448 participants. RESULTS: In white Europeans, +276 T was associated with higher serum adiponectin concentrations (n = 340; P = 0.006) and -10066 A was associated with lower serum adiponectin concentrations (n = 360; P = 0.03), after adjustment for age, BMI, and sex. After the HM diet, -10066 G/G subjects showed a 3.8% increase (95% CI: -0.1%, 7.7%) and G/A+A/A subjects a 2.6% decrease (95% CI: -5.6%, 0.4%) in serum adiponectin (P = 0.006 for difference after adjustment for the change in BMI, age, and sex). In -10066 G/G homozygotes, serum adiponectin increased with age after the HM diet and decreased after the LF diet. CONCLUSION: In white -10066 G/G homozygotes, an HM diet may help to increase adiponectin concentrations with advancing age. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as ISRCTN29111298. Copyright © 2011 American Society for Nutrition [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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25. Preliminary report: the effect of a 6-month dietary glycemic index manipulation in addition to healthy eating advice and weight loss on arterial compliance and 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure in men: a pilot study.
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Philippou, Elena, Bovill-Taylor, Candace, Rajkumar, Chakravarthi, Vampa, Maria Luisa, Ntatsaki, Eleana, Brynes, Audrey E., Hickson, Mary, and Frost, Gary S.
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GLYCEMIC index ,WEIGHT loss ,BLOOD pressure ,CORONARY heart disease risk factors ,BLOOD lipids ,CARBOHYDRATES - Abstract
Abstract: We aimed to determine whether altering dietary glycemic index (GI) in addition to healthy eating and weight loss advice affects arterial compliance and 24-hour blood pressure (BP), both coronary heart disease (CHD) risk factors. Middle-aged men with at least 1 CHD risk were randomized to a 6-month low-GI (LGI) or high-GI (HGI) diet. All were advised on healthy eating and weight loss. They were seen monthly to assess dietary compliance and anthropometrics. Carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (PWV), fasting blood lipid profile, and glucose and insulin concentrations were measured at baseline and at months 3 and 6. Six-hour postprandial glucose and insulin responses and 24-hour ambulatory BP were also assessed at baseline and month 6. Thirty-eight subjects (HGI group, n = 16; LGI group, n = 22) completed the study. At month 6, groups differed in dietary GI, glycemic load, and carbohydrate intake (P < .001). Fasting insulin concentration and insulin resistance (calculated by homeostatic model assessment) were lower in the LGI than the HGI group (P < .01). The reduction in total cholesterol and 24-hour BP was bigger in the LGI than the HGI group (P < .05); and only the LGI group had significant reductions (P < .05) in PWV, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and triacylglycerol concentration. There were no differences in postprandial glucose or insulin responses between the groups. The results suggest that an LGI diet may be more beneficial in reducing CHD risk, including PWV and 24-hour BP, even in the setting of healthy eating and weight loss; and thus, further study is warranted. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
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26. Successful Manipulation of the Quality and Quantity of Fat and Carbohydrate Consumed by Free-Living Individuals Using a Food Exchange Model.
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Moore, Carmel, Gitau, Rachel, Goff, Louise, Lewis, Fiona J., Griffin, Margaret D., Chatfield, Mark D., Jebb, Susan A., Frost, Gary S., Sanders, Tom A. B., Griffin, Bruce A., and Lovegrove, Julie A.
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FOOD exchange lists ,DIET therapy ,FOOD quality ,CARBOHYDRATES ,GLYCEMIC index ,CARBOHYDRATE content of food - Abstract
Our objective in this study was to develop and implement an effective intervention strategy to manipulate the amount and composition of dietary fat and carbohydrate (CHO) in free-living individuals in the RISCK study. The study was a randomized, controlled dietary intervention study that was conducted in 720 participants identified as higher risk for or with metabolic syndrome. All followed a 4-wk run-in reference diet [high saturated fatty acids (SF)/high glycemic index (Gl)[. Volunteers were randomized to continue this diet for a further 24 wk or to 1 of 4 isoenergetic prescriptions [high monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFA)/high GI; high MUFA/Iow GI; low fat (LF)/high GI; and LF/low GI]. We developed a food exchange model to implement each diet. Dietary records and plasma phospholipid fatty acids were used to assess the effectiveness of the intervention strategy. Reported fat intake from the LF diets was significantly reduced to 28% of energy 1% E) compared with 38% E from the HM and LF diets. SF intake was successfully decreased in the HM and LF diets to ≤10% E compared with 17% E in the reference diet (P= 0.001). Dietary MUFA in the HM diets was ∼17% E, significantly higher than in the reference (12%E) and LF diets (10%E) (P = 0.001). Changes in plasma phospholipid fatty acids provided further evidence for the successful manipulation of fat intake. The GI of the HGI and LGI arms differed by ∼9 points (P = 0.001). The food exchange model provided an effective dietary strategy for the design and implementation across multiple sites of 5 experimental diets with specific targets for the proportion of fat and CHO. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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27. Taste preferences for oral nutrition supplements in patients before and after pelvic radiotherapy: A double-blind controlled study.
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McGough, Camilla, Peacock, Natalie, Hackett, Claire, Baldwin, Christine, Norman, Andrew, Frost, Gary, Blake, Peter, Tait, Diana, Khoo, Vincent, Harrington, Kevin, Whelan, Kevin, and Andreyev, H. Jervoise N.
- Abstract
Summary: Background & aims: No data exists about the effect of pelvic radiotherapy on taste preference for oral nutrition supplements, including elemental diet, which may prevent gastrointestinal symptoms if taken during pelvic radiotherapy. This double blind study aimed to: (1) examine the palatability of elemental, peptide and polymeric oral nutrition supplements in patients with pelvic malignancies compared with healthy controls (2) assess changes in taste preference following pelvic radiotherapy (3) develop a reliable scale to measure taste preference. Methods: Subjects blind tasted six 30ml oral nutrition supplement samples, one duplicated, before and after 5 weeks of treatment (or the same time interval for controls). A Likert scale was used to score preference. Results: Fifty patients and 50 controls were recruited. Before radiotherapy, patients had a lower mean preference for the peptide formulation than the other oral nutrition supplements . There were no significant differences in preferences between patients and controls ( all supplements). Radiotherapy did not affect supplement preference. Conclusions: Patients with pelvic malignancy and healthy controls rate elemental nutritional supplements as highly as polymeric supplements and significantly better than peptide supplements. This trend continues even after pelvic radiotherapy. A Likert scale is a reliable tool in this scenario. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2006
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28. The prevalence of malnutrition in hospitals can be reduced: Results from three consecutive cross-sectional studies.
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O’Flynn, Jacqui, Peake, Hilary, Hickson, Mary, Foster, David, and Frost, Gary
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Summary: Aims: To assess and compare the rates of malnutrition in Hammersmith Hospital NHS Trust over a 5-year period following changes in hospital nutrition care strategies. Methods: Design: Three consecutive cross-sectional studies carried out in 1998, 2000 and 2003. Setting: Inpatients at Hammersmith Hospital NHS Trust. Participants: A total of 2283 inpatients aged over 16 years old, 686 in 1998, 780 in 2000, 817 in 2003. Inpatients excluded: ventilated patients, ante/post-natal women and people aged <16. Interventions: Improvements in the catering service and nutrition education provision in 2000, and the implementation of a nutrition screening tool and ‘Better Hospital Food’ in 2003. Main outcome measure: Prevalence of malnutrition. Results: There was a reduction in the prevalence of malnutrition in 2000 and 2003 from baseline data in 1998 (1998: 23.5%, 161/686; 2000: 20.4%, 159/780; 2003: 19.1%, 156/817; P<0.001). The odds ratio of being either at risk of malnutrition or malnourished was reduced in both 2000 and 2003 by approximately 33% (). Indicators of good nutritional practice also improved: Weighing patients on admission increased from 37.5% (257/686) in 1998, to 42.9% (335/780) in 2000, and 59.6% (487/817) in 2003 (). Dietetic referrals also increased from 31.5% (216/686) in 1998 to 41.6% (340/817) in 2003 ()(no change in 2000, 31%, 242/780). Appropriate referrals also improved, results showing that the proportion of malnourished patients who were referred showed a dramatic increase in 2003 (1998: 91/161, 56.5%; 2000: 85/159, 53.5%; 2003: 111/156, 71.2%; ). Conclusions: The prevalence of malnutrition in hospital can be influenced by the implementation of a variety of nutrition care strategies, which target identification of malnutrition and its treatment. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
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29. The palatability of milk-based and non-milk-based nutritional supplements in gastrointestinal cancer and the effect of chemotherapy.
- Author
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Rahemtulla, Zahra, Baldwin, Christine, Spiro, Ayelet, McGough, Camilla, Norman, Andrew R., Frost, Gary, Cunningham, David, and Andreyev, H. Jervoise N.
- Abstract
Summary: Introduction: Oral nutritional supplements may have a role in the management of weight loss in patients with cancer. Information on preference for different types of nutritional supplements and the influence of taste changes and chemotherapy is limited. Aims and methods: This study aimed, in patients with gastrointestinal (GI) cancer, to determine the short-term preference for commonly used nutritional supplements compared with controls, to examine whether preference is altered by chemotherapy and to assess the reproducibility of taste assessments conducted using a Visual Analogue Scale (VAS). Patients with GI cancer and controls were asked to rate the acceptability of three oral nutritional supplements on a VAS before starting chemotherapy and after 6 weeks of chemotherapy. Supplements were presented in a random order in sealed containers and subjects were blinded to the type of product. One supplement was repeated at random within each set (four cups) to assess the reproducibility of responses. Results: Sixty patients and 63 controls were included in the study, 47 patients and 47 controls were available for follow-up. Before the start of chemotherapy, patients had a higher mean preference for Calshake (5.9cm) than Ensure plus (5.1cm) and Fortijuce (3.2cm) ( and ). Calshake was the most preferred supplement in the control group (mean 6.6cm), with no significant differences in preferences between patients and controls. There were no changes in preference for patients after 6 weeks of chemotherapy. The results for the control group similarly showed no change after 6 weeks. No significant differences were found between scores assigned to the supplement repeated in the random order for any product at either timepoint. Discussion: Patients with GI cancers prefer the taste of fresh milk-based supplements and short-term preferences are not changed by chemotherapy. Preferences are similar between patients with GI cancers and people without cancer. A VAS is a reliable tool to assess taste preference. Further studies are needed to assess the patient compliance over longer periods and the reasons for non-compliance with prescriptions for nutritional supplements. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
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30. Resting metabolic rate, plasma leptin concentrations, leptin receptor expression, and adipose tissue measured by whole-body magnetic resonance imaging in women with Prader-Willi syndrome.
- Author
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Goldstone, Anthony P., Brynes, Audrey E., Thomas, E. Louise, Bell, Jimmy D., Frost, Gary, Holland, Anthony, Ghatei, Mohammad A., and Bloom, Stephen R.
- Abstract
Background: Obesity in Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) may be related to abnormalities in the adipocyte-leptin-hypothalamic pathway and may be exacerbated by reductions in the resting metabolic rate (RMR). Objective: We compared body composition, body-composition- adjusted RMR, and adiposity-adjusted plasma leptin between women with PWS and control women. We also examined leptin receptor expression in the PWS group. Design: We studied body composition using whole-body magnetic resonance imaging and measured plasma leptin by radioimmunoassay in 45 control women aged 18-56 y and in 13 women with PWS aged 20-38 y. RMR was measured by indirect calorimetry in 41 control women and in 8 women with PWS. Age, body composition, and regional adipose tissue (AT) depots were corrected for by multiple regression analysis. Messenger RNA expression of the leptin receptor was examined by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction in lymphocytes. Results: In the PWS group, fat mass was greater after correction for fat-free mass, and RMR was normal after correction for both fat-free mass and fat mass. Leptin was influenced primarily by subcutaneous AT volume in both subject groups. Leptin concentrations were not significantly different between the 2 groups after adjustment for age and AT content or distribution. Fulllength leptin receptor messenger RNA was expressed in the lymphocytes of the PWS group. Conclusions: Differences in RMR in women with PWS are explained by abnormal body composition, suggesting that energy expenditure is normal at the tissue level in PWS. There is no evidence that defective leptin production causes obesity in PWS, and leptin receptor deficiency is not a primary consequence of the gene defects leading to leptin resistance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
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31. Diet-induced change in fatty acid composition of plasma triacylglycerols is not associated with change in glucagon-like peptide 1 or insulin sensitivity in people with type 2 diabetes.
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Brynes, Audrey E., Edwards, C. Mark, Jadhav, Arvind, Ghatei, Mohammed A., Bloom, Stephen R., and Frost, Gary S.
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PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of fatty acids ,FATTY acid synthesis ,TRIGLYCERIDES ,PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of peptides ,PEPTIDE synthesis ,GLUCAGON-like peptide 1 ,TYPE 2 diabetes ,PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) and monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFAs) have been shown to positively affect blood lipids; however, their comparative effects on insulin sensitivity are unclear. Objective: Our objective was to investigate whether chronic intake of MUFAs or PUFAs improves insulin sensitivity in people with type 2 diabetes via stimulation of the endogenous gut hormone glucagon-like peptide 1 [7-36] amide (GLP-1). Design: Nine overweight people with type 2 diabetes received isoenergetic high-MUFA (20.3 ± 3.5% of total energy) or highPUFA (13.4 ± 1.3%) diets for 24 d in a randomized, double-blind crossover design. Results:Weight and glycemic control remained stable throughout the study. Despite a signi?cant change in the plasma triacylglycerol linoleic-oleic acid ratio (L:O) with both diets (MUFA: from 0.46 ± 0.03 to 0.29 ± 0.02, P < 0.005; PUFA: from 0.36 ± 0.04 to 0.56 ± 0.05, P < 0.05) and the phospholipid L:O (1.7 ± 0.1 to 2.0 ± 0.3; P = 0.04) during consumption of the PUFA diet, this change was not associated with a change in insulin sensitivity, measured by the short-insulin-tolerance test. There was a signi?cant reduction in the ratio of total to HDL cholesterol during consumption of the PUFA diet (5.2 ± 0.4 compared with 4.7 ± 0.3; P = 0.005) but no change with the MUFA diet. There was no change in the fasting or postprandial incremental area under the curve in response to an identical standard test meal for glucose, insulin, triacylglycerol, nonesteri?ed fatty acids, or GLP-1. Conclusions: Over the 3-wk intervention period, diet-induced change in the triacylglycerol or phospholipid L:O was not associated with either increased stimulation of GLP-1 or a change in insulin sensitivity in people with type 2 diabetes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
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32. Moderate intensity exercise training combined with inulin-propionate ester supplementation increases whole body resting fat oxidation in overweight women.
- Author
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Malkova, Dalia, Polyviou, Thelma, Rizou, Eleni, Gerasimidis, Konstantinos, Chambers, Edward S., Preston, Tom, Tedford, M. Catriona, Frost, Gary, and Morrison, Douglas J.
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FAT ,EXERCISE intensity ,OVERWEIGHT women ,BODY weight ,BLOOD gases ,FAT content of food ,REDUCING exercises ,PHORBOL esters - Abstract
Our previous work has shown that oral supplementation with inulin propionate ester (IPE) reduces intra-abdominal fat and prevents weight gain and that oral propionate intake enhances resting fat oxidation. The effects of IPE combined with exercise training on energy substrate utilisation are unknown. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of 4-weeks IPE supplementation, in combination with a moderate intensity exercise training programme, on whole body fat oxidation and on plasma GLP-1 and PYY. Twenty overweight healthy women participated in randomised parallel study and underwent 4 weeks of supervised exercise training either with IPE (EX/IPE group) or Placebo (EX/Placebo group) supplementation. Before and after the intervention participants conducted an experimental trial, which involved collection of expired gas and blood samples in the fasted state and during 7 h of the postprandial state. Within groups, the EX/IPE group significantly enhanced the amount of fat (Pre, 24.1 ± 1.2 g; Post, 35.9 ± 4.0 g, P < 0.05) oxidised and reduced CHO (Pre, 77.8 ± 6.0 g; Post, 57.8 ± 7.7 g, P < 0.05) oxidised, reduced body weight (Pre, 77.3 ± 4.2 kg; Post, 76.6 ± 4.1 kg, P < 0.05) and body fat mass (Pre, 37.7 ± 1.9%; Post, 36.9 ± 1.9%, P < 0.05). In EX/Placebo group, changes in amount of fat (Pre, 36.8 ± 3.9 g; Post, 37.0 ± 4.0 g) and CHO (Pre, 62.7 ± 6.5 g; Post, 61.5 ± 7.4 g) oxidised, body weight (Pre, 84.2 ± 4.3 kg; Post, 83.6 ± 4.3 kg) and body fat mass (Pre, 40.1 ± 1.9%; Post, 38.7 ± 1.5%) were not significant (P > 0.05). Comparing between groups, changes in the amount of fat oxidised were significantly (P < 0.05) different and a trend for difference was observed for amount of CHO oxidised (P = 0.06) and RER (P = 0.06). The interventions had no impact on fasting or postprandial plasma concentrations of GLP-1 and PYY. Moderate intensity exercise training programmes when combined with daily oral IPE supplementation may help overweight women to achieve increase in fat oxidation. The study was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT04016350. • Exercise induced weight loss without caloric restriction remains controversial and responses are highly individual. • Maximising fat oxidation may enhance body fat mass loss alongside exercise in overweight and obese individuals. • We have previously shown that oral propionate increases fat oxidation, here we investigate the effects of colonic propionate. • Inulin propionate ester increases resting fat oxidation consistently in overweight exercising women compared with placebo. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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33. Chemical biology of noncanonical G protein–coupled receptor signaling: Toward advanced therapeutics.
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Shchepinova, Maria M., Hanyaloglu, Aylin C., Frost, Gary S., and Tate, Edward W.
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CHEMICAL biology , *G protein coupled receptors , *MEMBRANE proteins , *THERAPEUTICS , *ARRESTINS , *DRUG marketing - Abstract
G protein–coupled receptors (GPCRs), the largest family of signaling membrane proteins, are the target of more than 30% of the drugs on the market. Recently, it has become clear that GPCR functions are far more multidimensional than previously thought, with multiple noncanonical aspects coming to light, including biased, oligomeric, and compartmentalized signaling. These additional layers of functional selectivity greatly expand opportunities for advanced therapeutic interventions, but the development of new chemical biology tools is absolutely required to improve our understanding of noncanonical GPCR regulation and pave the way for future drugs. In this opinion, we highlight the most notable examples of chemical and chemogenetic tools addressing new paradigms in GPCR signaling, discuss their promises and limitations, and explore future directions. Image 1 • Noncanonical GPCR signaling includes bias, oligomerization and compartmentalization. • Chemical biology delivers physiological understanding of noncanonical GPCR regulation. • -Chemical probes (light-controlled, bitopic, bivalent) address noncanonical signaling. • DREADDsChemogenetic and proteomic approaches are paving the way for advanced therapeutics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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34. The JAL Guide to the professional literature.
- Author
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Frost, Gary and Cooper, Jeff
- Subjects
- EARLY Bindings in Paper (Book)
- Abstract
Reviews the book `Early Bindings in Paper: A Brief History of European Hand-Made Paper-Covered Books with a Multilingual Glossary, by Michele V. Cloonan.
- Published
- 1993
35. Impact of chickpea hummus on postprandial blood glucose, insulin and gut hormones in healthy humans combined with mechanistic studies of food structure, rheology and digestion kinetics.
- Author
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Alshaalan, Rasha A., Charalambides, Maria N., Edwards, Cathrina H., Ellis, Peter R., Alrabeah, Shatha H., and Frost, Gary S.
- Subjects
- *
BLOOD sugar , *GASTROINTESTINAL hormones , *CHICKPEA , *HUMMUS , *DIGESTION , *RHEOLOGY - Abstract
[Display omitted] • Chickpea cell wall integrity affects starch bioaccessibility, digestion, and postprandial metabolism. •.Preserving cellular structure of processed chickpeas improves blood glucose homeostasis. •.Rheological tests provide insight of chickpea hummus properties for future studies of amylolysis. Slowing the rate of carbohydrate digestion leads to low postprandial glucose and insulin responses, which are associated with reduced risk of type 2 diabetes. There is increasing evidence that food structure plays a crucial role in influencing the bioaccessibility and digestion kinetics of macronutrients. The aims of this study were to compare the effects of two hummus meals, with different degrees of cell wall integrity, on postprandial metabolic responses in relation to the microstructural and rheological characteristics of the meals. A randomised crossover trial in 15 healthy participants was designed to compare the acute effect of 27 g of starch, provided as hummus made from either intact chickpea cells (ICC) or ruptured chickpea cells (RCC), on postprandial metabolic responses. In vitro starch digestibility, microstructural and rheological experiments were also conducted to evaluate differences between the two chickpea hummus meals. Blood insulin and GIP concentrations were significantly lower (P < 0.02, P < 0.03) after the consumption of the ICC meal than the meal containing RCC. In vitro starch digestion for 90 min was slower in ICC than in RCC. Microscopic examination of hummus samples digested in vitro for 90 min revealed more intact chickpea cells in ICC compared to the RCC sample. Rheological experiments showed that fracture for ICC hummus samples occurred at smaller strains compared to RCC samples. However, the storage modulus for ICC was higher than RCC, which may be explained by the presence of intact cells in ICC. Food structure can affect the rate and extent of starch bioaccessibility and digestion and may explain the difference in the time course of metabolic responses between meals. The rheological properties were measured on the two types of meals before ingestion, showing significant differences that may point to different breakdown mechanisms during subsequent digestion. This trial was registered at clinicaltrial.gov as NCT03424187. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Image-based volume estimation for food in a bowl.
- Author
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Jia, Wenyan, Li, Boyang, Xu, Qi, Chen, Guangzong, Mao, Zhi-Hong, McCrory, Megan A., Baranowski, Tom, Burke, Lora E., Lo, Benny, Anderson, Alex K., Frost, Gary, Sazonov, Edward, and Sun, Mingui
- Subjects
- *
FOOD chemistry , *FOOD containers , *MATHEMATICAL models - Abstract
Image-assisted dietary assessment has become popular in dietary monitoring studies in recent years. However, food volume estimation is still a challenging problem due to the lack of 3D information in a 2D image and the occlusion of the food by itself or container (e.g., bowl, cup). This study aims to investigate the relationship between the observable surface of food in a bowl and a normalized index (i.e., bowl fullness) to represent its volume. A mathematical model is established for describing different shapes of bowls, and a convenient experimental method is proposed to determine the bowl shape. An image feature called Food Area Ratio (FAR) is used to estimate the volume of food in a bowl based on the relationship between bowl fullness and the FAR calculated from the image. Both simulations and experiments with real food/liquid demonstrate the feasibility and accuracy of the proposed approach. • Developing a new mathematical model for describing shapes of dinning bowls. • Using a unitless index (i.e., fullness) to represent the volume of food in a bowl. • Estimating the volume of food in a bowl based on analysis of visible food surface. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Improved quantitation of short-chain carboxylic acids in human biofluids using 3-nitrophenylhydrazine derivatization and liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS).
- Author
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Valdivia-Garcia, Maria A., Chappell, Katie E., Camuzeaux, Stephane, Olmo-García, Lucía, van der Sluis, Verena Horneffer, Radhakrishnan, Shiva T., Stephens, Hannah, Bouri, Sonia, de Campos Braz, Lucia M., Williams, Horace T., Lewis, Matthew R., Frost, Gary, and Li, Jia V.
- Subjects
- *
LACTATES , *BUTYRATES , *CARBOXYLIC acids , *LIQUID chromatography-mass spectrometry , *MATRIX effect , *ENTEROSTOMY , *SHORT-chain fatty acids , *DERIVATIZATION - Abstract
Short-chain carboxylic acids (SCCAs) produced by gut microbial fermentation may reflect gastrointestinal health. Their concentrations in serum and urine are indicative of specific metabolic pathway activity; therefore, accurate quantitation of SCCAs in different biofluids is desirable. However, it is often challenging to quantitate SCCAs since matrix effects, induced by the presence of a vast variety of other compounds other than SCCAs in complex biofluids, can suppress or enhance signals. Materials used for sample preparation may introduce further analytical challenges. This study reports for the first time a LC-MS/MS-based method to quantitate ten SCCAs (lactate, acetate, 2-hydroxybutyrate, propionate, isobutyrate, butyrate, 2-methylbutyrate, isovalerate, valerate and hexanoate) and evaluates the matrix effects in five human biofluids: serum, urine, stool, and contents from the duodenum and intestinal stoma bags. The optimized method, using 3-Nitrophenylhydrazone as a derivatization agent and a Charge Surface Hybrid reverse phase column, showed clear separation for all SCCAs at a concentration range of 0.1−100 µM, in a 10.5 min run without carry-over effects. The validation of the method showed a good linearity (R2 > 0.99), repeatability (CV ≤ 15%) assessed by intra- and inter-day monitoring. The lowest limit of detection (LLOD) was 25 nM and lowest limit of quantitation (LLOQ) was 50 nM for nine SCCA except acetate at 0.5 and 1 µM, respectively. Quantitative accuracy in all biofluids for most compounds was < ±15%. In summary, this methodology has the advantages over other techniques for its simple and fast sample preparation and a high level of selectivity, repeatability and robustness for SCCA quantification. It also reduced interferences from the matrix or sample containers, making it ideal for use in high-throughput analyses of biofluid samples from large-scale studies. [Display omitted] • Improved LC-MS/MS-based quantitation of short-chain carboxylic acids. • Comprehensively evaluated matrix effects of human biofluids and intestinal content. • Optimized for high-throughput analyses of human biofluids from large-scale studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The impact of the consumer and neighbourhood food environment on dietary intake and obesity-related outcomes: A systematic review of causal impact studies.
- Author
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Atanasova, Petya, Kusuma, Dian, Pineda, Elisa, Frost, Gary, Sassi, Franco, and Miraldo, Marisa
- Subjects
- *
OBESITY risk factors , *FOOD habits , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *FOOD industry , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *ECOLOGY , *INGESTION , *RISK assessment , *MEDLINE - Abstract
The food environment has been found to impact population dietary behaviour. Our study aimed to systematically review the impact of different elements of the food environment on dietary intake and obesity. We searched MEDLINE, Embase, PsychInfo, EconLit databases to identify literature that assessed the relationship between the built food environments (intervention) and dietary intake and obesity (outcomes), published between database inception to March 26, 2020. All human studies were eligible except for those on clinical sub-groups. Only studies with causal inference methods were assessed. Studies focusing on the food environment inside homes, workplaces and schools were excluded. A risk of bias assessment was conducted using the CASP appraisal checklist. Findings were summarized using a narrative synthesis approach. 58 papers were included, 55 of which were conducted in high-income countries. 70% of papers focused on the consumer food environments and found that in-kind/financial incentives, healthy food saliency, and health primes, but not calorie menu labelling significantly improved dietary quality of children and adults, while BMI results were null. 30% of the papers focused on the neighbourhood food environments and found that the number of and distance to unhealthy food outlets increased the likelihood of fast-food consumption and higher BMI for children of any SES; among adults only selected groups were impacted - females, black, and Hispanics living in low and medium density areas. The availability and distance to healthy food outlets significantly improved children's dietary intake and BMI but null results were found for adults. Evidence suggests certain elements of the consumer and neighbourhood food environments could improve populations dietary intake, while effect on BMI was observed among children and selected adult populations. Underprivileged groups are most likely to experience and impact on BMI. Future research should investigate whether findings translate in other countries. • Elements of the consumer and neighbourhood food environments could improve populations dietary intake. • Effects on BMI were observed among children and selected adult populations. • Underprivileged groups are most likely to experience and impact on BMI. • Research on the built food environment is limited only to a number of countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Breeding low-glycemic index barley for functional food.
- Author
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Steele, Katherine, Dickin, Edward, Keerio, M.D., Samad, Samia, Kambona, Caroline, Brook, Robert, Thomas, William, and Frost, Gary
- Subjects
- *
BARLEY breeding , *GLYCEMIC index , *FUNCTIONAL foods , *SUPPLY chain management , *BIOMARKERS ,BARLEY genetics - Abstract
Highlights: [•] Naked (hull-less) barley lines with lower GI values than oats were selected for UK agronomy from large segregating bulks. [•] The naked lines are a valuable resource for breeding and product testing for commercial supply chain development for food barley. [•] A QTL for β glucan content associated with the CslF6 gene (but not associated with nud) can be targeted in marker assisted selection. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Administration of a new diabetes-specific enteral formula results in an improved 24h glucose profile in type 2 diabetic patients
- Author
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Ceriello, Antonio, Lansink, Mirian, Rouws, Carlette H.F.C., van Laere, Katrien M.J., and Frost, Gary S.
- Subjects
- *
TYPE 2 diabetes treatment , *DRUG administration , *BLOOD sugar monitoring , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *MEDICAL prescriptions , *ENTERAL feeding , *GLYCEMIC index - Abstract
Abstract: Aims: Study the effect of several boluses of a new diabetes-specific formula (DSF) during the day on 24h glucose profile. Methods: In this randomized, controlled, double-blind, cross-over study 12 ambulatory type 2 diabetic patients were included. Subjects received a new DSF and an isocaloric standard fibre-containing formula (SF) while continuing their anti-diabetic medication. Subjects received 100% of their calculated daily energy requirements as bolus feeding every 3h (5 times/day, starting at 8.00a.m.±1h). Results: Glucose profiles were significantly better after administration of DSF compared with SF determined as mean glucose concentration (±SEM) (8.7±0.5 versus 9.6±0.6mmol/L, p <0.05 during 24h; 9.4±0.6 versus 10.7±0.6mmol/L, p <0.001 during daytime) or as incremental area under the curve during daytime (−44%; p <0.05). Subjects receiving DSF experienced less hyperglycaemic time over 24h (−26%; p <0.05) and during daytime (−30%; p <0.05). Furthermore, lower individual and mean (delta) peak glucose levels were found (p <0.05). No clinically relevant differences in gastrointestinal tolerance were observed. Conclusions: Using DSF resulted in significantly better 24h and postprandial glucose profiles than fibre-containing SF after bolus administration and may therefore help to improve glycaemic control in diabetic patients. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Eulerian-Lagrangian finite element modelling of food flow-fracture in the stomach to engineer digestion.
- Author
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Skamniotis, C.G., Edwards, Cathrina H., Bakalis, Serafim, Frost, Gary, and Charalambides, M.N.
- Subjects
- *
BOLUS (Digestion) , *DIGESTION , *CHEMICAL processes , *STOMACH , *PROCESSED foods , *PYLORUS - Abstract
Highly processed foods tend to form weak structures which breakdown rapidly in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, often causing negative effects on human metabolism and health. Developing healthier foods has been limited by the lack of understanding of how foods are digested. Through computational modelling we reveal mechanical gastric food breakdown phenomena and relate food mechanical properties with performance during critical initial digestion stages. Our model relies strictly on a viscoplastic-damage constitutive law, calibrated via rheological experiments on an artificial biscuit bolus and validated by simulating cutting tests. Simulations suggest that bolus separation during bolus backward extrusion and/or indentation by peristaltic waves, and, bolus agglomeration due to hydrostatic compression near the pylorus, are two competing phenomena that can influence the bolus free surface to volume ratio. This showcases the importance of including mechanical aspects of breakdown when designing foods for controlled chemo-mechanical breakdown and associated nutrient release rates. • Understanding chemomechanical gastric food breakdown aids designing healthier foods. • We characterise-predict flow-fracture of biscuit bolus at primary digestion stages. • Compression and cutting tests provide essential gastric model input parameters. • Bolus cohesiveness affects mechanical breakdown rate due to peristaltic waves. • Our model can help studying how mechanical breakdown affects bio-chemical processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Development and Validation of an Objective, Passive Dietary Assessment Method for Estimating Food and Nutrient Intake in Households in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Study Protocol.
- Author
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Jobarteh, Modou L, McCrory, Megan A, Lo, Benny, Sun, Mingui, Sazonov, Edward, Anderson, Alex K, Jia, Wenyan, Maitland, Kathryn, Qiu, Jianing, Steiner-Asiedu, Matilda, Higgins, Janine A, Baranowski, Tom, Olupot-Olupot, Peter, and Frost, Gary
- Subjects
- *
FOOD consumption , *MIDDLE-income countries , *HOUSEHOLDS , *WEARABLE cameras , *NUTRITIONAL status , *MALNUTRITION , *NUTRITIONAL value - Abstract
Malnutrition is a major concern in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC), but the full extent of nutritional deficiencies remains unknown largely due to lack of accurate assessment methods. This study seeks to develop and validate an objective, passive method of estimating food and nutrient intake in households in Ghana and Uganda. Household members (including under-5s and adolescents) are assigned a wearable camera device to capture images of their food intake during waking hours. Using custom software, images captured are then used to estimate an individual's food and nutrient (i.e., protein, fat, carbohydrate, energy, and micronutrients) intake. Passive food image capture and assessment provides an objective measure of food and nutrient intake in real time, minimizing some of the limitations associated with self-reported dietary intake methods. Its use in LMIC could potentially increase the understanding of a population's nutritional status, and the contribution of household food intake to the malnutrition burden. This project is registered at clinicaltrials.gov (NCT03723460). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The Impact of Eating Frequency and Time of Intake on Nutrient Quality and Body Mass Index: The INTERMAP Study, a Population-Based Study.
- Author
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Aljuraiban, Ghadeer S., Chan, Queenie, Oude Griep, Linda M., Brown, Ian J., Daviglus, Martha L., Stamler, Jeremiah, Van Horn, Linda, Elliott, Paul, and Frost, Gary S.
- Subjects
- *
COMPARATIVE studies , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DIET , *EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research , *FOOD quality , *FOOD habits , *INGESTION , *LONGITUDINAL method , *NUTRITIONAL assessment , *TIME , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *BODY mass index , *CROSS-sectional method , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ENERGY density - Abstract
Background Epidemiologic evidence is sparse on the effect of dietary behaviors and diet quality on body mass index (BMI; calculated as kg/m 2 ), which can be important drivers of the obesity epidemic. Objective This study investigated the relationships of frequency of eating and time of intake to energy density, nutrient quality, and BMI using data from the International Study on Macro/Micronutrients and Blood Pressure including 2,696 men and women aged 40 to 59 years from the United States and the United Kingdom. Design The International Study on Macro/Micronutrients and Blood Pressure is a cross-sectional investigation with four 24-hour dietary recalls and BMI measurements conducted between 1996 and 1999. Consumption of solid foods was aggregated into eating occasion. Nutrient density is expressed using the Nutrient Rich Food Index 9.3. The ratio of evening/morning energy intake was calculated; mean values of four visits were used. Statistical analyses performed Characteristics across eating occasion categories are presented as adjusted mean with corresponding 95% CI. Multiple linear regression models were used to examine associations of eating occasions, ratio of evening/morning energy intake, dietary energy density, and Nutrient Rich Food Index 9.3 with BMI. Results Compared to participants with fewer than four eating occasions in 24 hours, those with six or more eating occasions in 24 hours had lower mean BMI (27.3 vs 29.0), total energy intake (2,129 vs 2,472 kcal/24 hours), dietary energy density (1.5 vs 2.1 kcal/g), and higher Nutrient Rich Food Index 9.3 (34.3 vs 28.1). In multiple regression analyses, higher evening intake relative to morning intake was directly associated with BMI; however, this did not influence the relationship between eating frequency and BMI. Conclusions Our results suggest that a larger number of small meals may be associated with improved diet quality and lower BMI. This may have implications for behavioral approaches to controlling the obesity epidemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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