Sunday, August 5, 2007 - Page updated at 02:02 AM
E-mail article
Print view Share:
Digg
Newsvine
Drink up, but you'll be hungry later
Los Angeles Times
Glasses of juice may go down more easily and more quickly than bowls of fruit, but if you drink them, beware. Your body is less likely to register the calories they contain, and you may end up overindulging.
That's the conclusion of researchers Richard Mattes and Wayne Campbell, professors of food and nutrition at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind., in a paper published in the International Journal of Obesity. Having a liquid form of a food instead of a solid one, they found, results in more calories consumed during the day.
The study adds to a body of research on the effects of high-calorie beverages on diet, but the new research takes the science further by comparing not just high-carbohydrate but also high-fat and high-protein drinks with solid-food equivalents.
In the three-day study, 120 men and women ate a specially prepared test lunch and later ate a dinner of their choosing. They answered questions about their feelings of hunger after the test meal and every hour thereafter until bed. They also kept a record of what they ate.
The test lunches began with a meal of chicken sandwiches accompanied by water, given as a control on the first day. On the second and third days, a liquid or a solid food sample accompanied the sandwiches. In one group, the sample was high-protein milk or cheese (a nutritionally equivalent solid). In another, it was either high-carbohydrate watermelon or watermelon juice; in a third, it was either high-fat coconut or coconut milk.
After consuming the samples, subjects ate as many of the sandwiches as they wanted, and later ate dinner until they felt full.
The results: Compared with the sandwich-and-water control, subjects who ate solid test foods consumed fewer calories after their lunches, but subjects who drank their test foods ate more. This was true whether the sample calories came from sugary, fatty or protein-rich sources.
Overall, the subjects in the solid-test-food groups gave similar answers regarding hunger and fullness as those in the li-quid-test-food groups. They also consumed about the same number of sandwiches at that meal. But key differences later emerged.
All three groups consumed the most total calories on days when a meal supplement was liquid (be it milk, watermelon juice or coconut milk), consuming 12 to 20 percent more calories than on solid-food days.
Campbell says that many prior studies have measured people's feelings of hunger but that it has been "a leap of faith to believe that feelings of hunger correspond to the amount of calories consumed."
This experiment stands out, he says, because calorie intake was directly measured — revealing that people drinking liquid foods later consumed more calories even though they had reported feeling just as full.
Dr. Zhaoping Li, an associate professor of clinical medicine at the Center for Human Nutrition, at the University of California, Los Angeles, says the study is more elegant and controlled than previous studies that compared solids and liquids, such as Coca-Cola vs. doughnuts, that were nutritionally very different.
![]()
Many signals set off by food but not beverages could lead to people feeling more satisfied, such as sight, smell, chewing and pressure of food in the stomach, says Sai Das, an assistant professor at the Friedman School of Nutrition at Tufts University.
Barry Popkin, the director of the interdisciplinary obesity program at the University of North Carolina, says the study highlights how a broad array of liquid foods do not fill people up the way solid foods do. He says the reason may be evolutionary. Today, people may get 20 to 50 percent of their calories from beverages — but for most of human history, the only beverage was water.
The idea that liquids contain nutrients, he says, is one our bodies aren't yet aware of.
Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company

general classifieds
Garage & estate salesFurniture & home furnishings
Sporting goods
just listed
42" Hitachi Plasma 1080i - $500
8 Drawer Dresser with Attached Mirror - $200
8 seat pecon formal dining table and china hutch - $1500
More listings
POST A FREE LISTING
shopping
Give yourself a treat and visit Watson Kennedy's Holiday Open Houses
More minding the store
events for Monday, Nov. 23
- Castle Discount with Military ID
- CraftsGiving
- Alhambra 20 Percent Off Jewelry Sale
- Dish It Up! Totally Truffles
editors' picks
- Phinney Ridge & Greenwood shopping
- Independent video stores
- Pioneer Square shopping
- Garden furnishings
Rules to dine by when eating in restaurants with kids
The Ultimate Holiday Cookbook Social at Palace Ballroom
Washington businesses break ties to industrial-food chain
Taste: The Great Pie Bake-off pits friends and fruit
Nicole Brodeur: A welcome extended to everyone
- 'The Road' takes Viggo Mortensen to Mount St. Helens and Astoria, Ore.
- Tugboat sinks at Seattle waterfront pier
- Illegal workers quietly let go
- Child-support error costs nearly $21,000
- Vikings easily beat the Seahawks
- Craigslist adoption ad: A plea by young mother-to-be? A scam?
- Chase shrugs off loss of CD investors
- Woman stabbed by stranger in North Seattle
- Snow piles up on Cascade slopes
- Denny Triangle gains skyline, but tenants slow to come
- Sprouts, raw fish on attorney's 'do not eat' list
- Tattoos at Mill Creek church pierce skin, soul
- Illegal workers quietly let go
- Food-safety lawyer's wish: Put me out of business
- Architects, chefs find 'kid' within to build Gingerbread Village
- Rediscovering Moab, 'the most beautiful place on Earth'
- It's possible to recover a life lost to hoarding
- Child-support error costs nearly $21,000
- 'The Road' takes Viggo Mortensen to Mount St. Helens and Astoria, Ore.
- Taste | The Great Pie Bake-off pits friends and fruit



