Foods Within a Meal and Food Liking Study



Status:Recruiting
Conditions:Obesity Weight Loss
Therapuetic Areas:Endocrinology
Healthy:No
Age Range:18 - 35
Updated:12/23/2018
Start Date:December 13, 2018
End Date:December 2019
Contact:Hollie Raynor, PhD
Email:hraynor@utk.edu
Phone:865-974-6259

Use our guide to learn which trials are right for you!

For weight loss to occur, energy intake needs to be reduced to incur an energy deficit. One
dietary strategy that may facilitate weight loss is consuming a diet low in dietary energy
density (ED). It is hypothesized that a diet low in ED, which can be achieved by a high
intake of low-ED foods, low intake of high-ED foods, or a combination of the two, will allow
a greater amount of volume of food to be consumed relative to energy consumed, which can
assist with reducing energy intake.

To understand how best to lower the ED of the diet, it is important to understand the
relationship between low-ED and high-ED foods. Behavioral economics is a framework that
provides a foundation to understand that eating behaviors can be substitutes for each other.
Substitute eating behaviors are two behaviors that change in the opposite direction of each
other (i.e. one behavior increases as the other behavior decreases). If low-ED and high-ED
foods are substitutes for each other, in situations in which low-ED food intake increases,
high-ED food should automatically decrease, and vice versa. If they are not substitutes, when
low-ED food intake increases, high-ED food intake should remain unchanged, and when high-ED
food intake decreases, low-ED food intake should remain unchanged. When low-Ed and high-ED
foods are not substitutes for each other, purposeful change in intake for both low- and
high-ED foods need to occur to best lower dietary ED.

Thus, the purpose of this study is to investigate if low-ED foods and high-ED foods
substitute for each other. Healthy weight adults will be served a meal over 4 sessions, with
each meal containing 5 different food items. The foods in the meal will vary in ED: low-ED =
0 to 1.0 kcal/kg; medium-ED = 1.1 to 2.9 kcal/kg; high-ED = > 3.0 kcal/g. For the 4 sessions,
the meals will include: 1) 3 low-ED foods, 0 medium-ED foods, 2 high-ED foods; 2) 3 low-ED
foods, 1 medium-ED food, 1 high-ED food; 3) 1 low-ED food, 2-medium ED foods, 2 high-ED
foods; and 4) 1 low-ED food, 3 medium-ED foods, and 1 high-ED food.

All participants will be asked to come to Healthy Eating and Activity Lab (HEAL) for 1,
60-minute screening session and 4, 30-minute meal sessions, with no more than two meal
sessions occurring per week between the hours of 11:00am and 7:00pm. For each participant,
each meal session will need to occur within the same two-hr time frame (i.e., all meal
sessions occurring between 11am and 1pm). During the first session interested participants
will sign the consent form. After signing the consent form, eligibility will be confirmed by
taking height and weight measures and confirming liking of foods, using a 100mm visual
analogue scale (VAS). Participants will also be given questionnaires related to demographics.
Prior to attending their meal session, participants will be asked to not change their typical
eating pattern in the day prior to their session (including eating before 10 am), but to not
eat within 3 hours of their session, and to not engage in physical activity for 24 hours
prior to the session.

For the remaining four sessions, at the start of the session the participant will be asked to
recall all foods and beverages consumed 24 hours prior to the scheduled appointment. During
this recall if a participant reports consuming any foods or beverages besides water within 3
hours of the appointment, the appointment will be rescheduled. Participants will also be
asked if they have participated in any physical activity 24 hours prior to their scheduled
appointment. If the participant answers "yes," then the appointment will be rescheduled.

After completing hunger, fullness, and liking of foods questionnaires, participants will be
presented with one of the four variations of meals. Each meal consists of a total of
1,500kcals of five of the following items: chicken noodle soup (Low-ED), sugar-free chocolate
pudding (Low-ED), red seedless grapes (Low-ED), macaroni and cheese (Medium-ED), strawberry
yogurt (Medium-ED), vanilla ice cream (Medium-ED), pretzels (High-ED), or graham crackers
(High-ED). Following the presentation of the meal, participants will be instructed to taste
each foods and that they will have 25 minutes to eat as much or as little as they would like
of the meal provided. At the completion of 25 minutes, the lunch will be removed and the
participant will be asked to complete a scale for evaluating levels of hunger, fullness, and
liking of the foods. The participant will also be scheduled for a subsequent session the
following week at a similar time. Upon completing all 5 sessions, participants will receive a
$25 gift card.

Inclusion Criteria:

- age between 18 and 35 years;

- body mass index (BMI) 18.5 to 24.9 kg/m2;

- unrestrained eater (≤12 on Three Factor Eating Questionnaire (TFEQ);

- report liking chicken noodle soup, chocolate sugar-free pudding, grapes, strawberry
yogurt, macaroni and cheese, vanilla ice cream, pretzels, and graham crackers (rate
all items ≥ 50mm on a visual analogue scale (VAS);

- report regularly eating before 10 am; and 6) can complete all sessions within 8 weeks
of the screening session, will be eligible for the study.

Exclusion Criteria:

- report binge eating;

- report a medical condition that influences eating;

- report allergies to foods used in the investigation;

- currently smoke;

- report dietary restrictions;

- report taking a medication that affects appetite;

- report being pregnant or breast-feeding;

- report being an athlete in training.
We found this trial at
1
site
Knoxville, Tennessee 37996
(865) 974-1000
University of Tennessee - Knoxville Founded in 1794, we're big on tradition and proud of...
?
mi
from
Knoxville, TN
Click here to add this to my saved trials