Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02653378

The Effects of Acute Caloric Deprivation on Odour Identification and Food Reward

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
10 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Ottawa · Academic / Other
Sex
Male
Age
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine how the modality of energy depletion can differently impact appetite hormones, ad libitum food intake, food hedonics, and olfaction.

Detailed description

The objectives of the current randomized controlled study were to examine how the modality of an acute 3 day isocaloric -25% energy depletion by dieting alone or by aerobic exercise alone differently impacts appetite and appetite-related hormones, ad libitum energy intake (EI), food hedonics and food reward, and olfaction. It was hypothesized that independent of modality of depletion, that relative to the control, there would be increased ad libitum feeding and food reward, improvements in smell performance, and a decline in fasting leptin and increase in fasting total ghrelin. It was also hypothesized that the increased food reward would prove to be a predictor of ad libitum EI and that relative to the depletion by aerobic exercise alone, the depletion by diet alone would produce greater compensatory increases in appetite, ad libitum EI, and food reward. Statistics To test for differences in body weight, plasma hormone concentrations, relative-reinforcing value of food (RRVF), and olfaction across each condition of the study, repeated measures ANOVA controlling for day 1 as a covariate was employed. Pairwise comparisons at day 4 using Sidak adjustment to account for multiple comparisons are reported when the ANOVA was significant. One way repeated measures ANOVAs with Sidak adjustments for multiple comparisons were used to test for differences in variables measured only at day 4: body composition (fat mas, %Fat, and fat free mass), appetite, palatability, and ad libitum EI.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALDIET25% Energy Depletion by Diet only for 3 Days
BEHAVIORALEX25% Energy Depletion by Exercise only for 3 Days

Timeline

Start date
2009-11-01
Primary completion
2012-03-01
Completion
2012-03-01
First posted
2016-01-12
Last updated
2016-01-12

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02653378. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.