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A study of the thermic responses to a meal and to a sympathomimetic drug (ephedrine) in relation to energy balance in man

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TLDR
The results suggest the meal size required to promote a maximum thermic effect is smaller in energetically inefficient individuals and the sensitivity to a sympathomimetic drug is also increased in ener getically-inefficient individuals.
Abstract
1. Sixteen adult male volunteers were selected on the basis of body size and customary food intake: half could be described as "lean' and habitually consuming large amounts of food (group mean +/- SEM: 15.03 +/- 1.13 MJ/d), the high-energy-intake group (HEI group), and half though "lean' admitted to a weight problem and regularly consumed a lower than average food intake (group mean +/- SEM: 6.90 +/- 0.39 MJ/d), the low-energy-intake group (LEI group). 2. Energy expenditure was measured by open-circuit indirect calorimetry. Resting metabolic rate (RMR) was recorded. A meal (Complan, either 2.1 MJ or 4.2 MJ), ephedrine hydrochloride (0.25 mg and 0.50 mg/kg body-weight) or a water control were then administered and metabolic rate (MR) was measured for 4 h. Blood was collected before and 1 h after the meal or drug, and the serum analysed for various hormones and blood metabolites. 3. The size of the thermic response to feeding but not the time-course was related to meal size in both groups. MR increased by 21.6 and 28.6% in the HEI group and by 8.2 and 20.0% in the LEI group in response to the 2.1 and 4.2 MJ Complan meals respectively. Fasting insulin levels were similar in both groups but showed a significantly higher level in the LEI than HEI group after the Complan meals. 4. The mean RMR increased by 5.2 and 10.3% in the LEI in response to ephedrine and by 15.7 and 11.2% in the HEI groups after 0.25 mg and 0.50 mg ephedrine/kg respectively. The rise in serum-free fatty acids in response to ephedrine was significantly higher in the HEI group than in the LEI group. 5. These results suggest (1) the meal size required to promote a maximum thermic effect is smaller in energetically-inefficient individuals (2) the sensitivity to a sympathomimetic drug is also increased in energetically-inefficient individuals. 6. We conclude that in energetically-efficient individuals both the thermic response to a meal and the sympathetic-mediated thermogenesis are lower than in energetically-inefficient ones.

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The validity of self-reported energy intake as determined using the doubly labelled water technique.

TL;DR: A more comprehensive picture of under-reporting is presented by tying in the findings of many DLW studies with other studies focusing particularly on the characteristics and mechanisms for under- reporting.
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Specific dynamic action: a review of the postprandial metabolic response

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Diet-induced thermogenesis

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Selected herbals and human exercise performance

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Contribution of BAT and skeletal muscle to thermogenesis induced by ephedrine in man

TL;DR: It is concluded that skeletal muscle is a tissue of importance with respect to the thermogenic effect of sympathomimetics in man, whereas the results do not support a major role for perirenal BAT.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Body fat assessed from total body density and its estimation from skinfold thickness: measurements on 481 men and women aged from 16 to 72 years

TL;DR: Skinfold thicknesses at four sites – biceps, triceps, subscapular and supra-iliac – and total body density were measured on 209 males and 272 females aged from 16 to 72 years, finding it necessary to use the logarithm of skinfold measurements in order to achieve a linear relationship with body density.
Journal ArticleDOI

A role for brown adipose tissue in diet-induced thermogenesis

TL;DR: Measurement of energy balance during voluntary over-eating in rats unequivocally establishes the quantitative importance of diet-induced thermogenesis in energy balance and suggests that this tissue may determine metabolic efficiency and resistance to obesity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Human Energy Expenditure

TL;DR: In the past most assessments of total energy needs have been made from dietary studies, but recently there has been a renewal of interest in such measurements due to the development of apparatus which can be conveniently applied under many industrial conditions, where it had not hitherto been practicable to use the more cumbersome apparatus designed for laboratory studies.
Book

Energy balance and obesity in man

J.S. Garrow
TL;DR: Most good biomedical monographs today are closely-knit, logically organized analyses of the most recent, data in a specific field, but such a compendium, seemingly eternal, or at least indestructible, can be turned to dust overnight by a few new data.
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