Linseed dietary fibers reduce apparent digestibility of energy and fat and weight gain in growing rats

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Linseed dietary fibers reduce apparent digestibility of energy and fat and weight gain in growing rats. / Kristensen, Mette Bredal; Knudsen, Knud Erik Bach; Jørgensen, Henry Johs. Høgh; Oomah, David; Bügel, Susanne Gjedsted; Toubro, Søren; Tetens, Inge; Astrup, Arne.

In: Nutrients, Vol. 5, No. 8, 2013, p. 3287-3298.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Kristensen, MB, Knudsen, KEB, Jørgensen, HJH, Oomah, D, Bügel, SG, Toubro, S, Tetens, I & Astrup, A 2013, 'Linseed dietary fibers reduce apparent digestibility of energy and fat and weight gain in growing rats', Nutrients, vol. 5, no. 8, pp. 3287-3298. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu5083287

APA

Kristensen, M. B., Knudsen, K. E. B., Jørgensen, H. J. H., Oomah, D., Bügel, S. G., Toubro, S., Tetens, I., & Astrup, A. (2013). Linseed dietary fibers reduce apparent digestibility of energy and fat and weight gain in growing rats. Nutrients, 5(8), 3287-3298. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu5083287

Vancouver

Kristensen MB, Knudsen KEB, Jørgensen HJH, Oomah D, Bügel SG, Toubro S et al. Linseed dietary fibers reduce apparent digestibility of energy and fat and weight gain in growing rats. Nutrients. 2013;5(8):3287-3298. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu5083287

Author

Kristensen, Mette Bredal ; Knudsen, Knud Erik Bach ; Jørgensen, Henry Johs. Høgh ; Oomah, David ; Bügel, Susanne Gjedsted ; Toubro, Søren ; Tetens, Inge ; Astrup, Arne. / Linseed dietary fibers reduce apparent digestibility of energy and fat and weight gain in growing rats. In: Nutrients. 2013 ; Vol. 5, No. 8. pp. 3287-3298.

Bibtex

@article{95cdcee1d109446fa90e8909ab23a3b0,
title = "Linseed dietary fibers reduce apparent digestibility of energy and fat and weight gain in growing rats",
abstract = "Dietary fibers (DF) may affect energy balance, an effect often ascribed to the viscous nature of some water soluble DF, which affect luminal viscosity and thus multiple physiological processes. We have tested the hypothesis that viscous linseed DF reduce apparent nutrient digestibility, and limit weight gain, in a randomized feeding trial where 60 male, growing, Wistar rats, with an initial weight of ~200 g, were fed different diets (n = 10 per group): low DF control (C), 5% DF from cellulose (5-CEL), CEL + 5% DF from whole (5-WL) or ground linseed (5-GL), CEL + 5% DF from linseed DF extract (5-LDF), and CEL + 10% DF from linseed DF extract (10-LDF). Diets were provided ad libitum for 21 days. Feed intake and faecal output were measured during days 17-21. Faecal fat excretion increased with increasing DF content and was highest in the 10-LDF group. Apparent fat digestibility was highest with the C diet (94.9% ± 0.8%) and lowest (74.3% ± 0.6%) with the 10-LDF diet, and decreased in a non-linear manner with increasing DF (p <0.001). Apparent fat digestibility also decreased with increased accessibility of DF (5-WL vs. 5-GL) and when the proportion of viscous DF increased (5-GL vs. 5-LDF). The 10-LDF resulted in a lower final body weight (258 ± 6.2 g) compared to C (282 ± 5.9 g), 5-CEL (281 ± 5.9 g), and 5-WL (285 ± 5.9 g) (p <0.05). The 10-LDF diet reduced body fat compared to 5-CEL (p <0.01). In conclusion, DF extracted from linseed reduced apparent energy and fat digestibility and resulted in restriction of body weight gain in growing rats.",
author = "Kristensen, {Mette Bredal} and Knudsen, {Knud Erik Bach} and J{\o}rgensen, {Henry Johs. H{\o}gh} and David Oomah and B{\"u}gel, {Susanne Gjedsted} and S{\o}ren Toubro and Inge Tetens and Arne Astrup",
note = "CURIS 2013 NEXS 218",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.3390/nu5083287",
language = "English",
volume = "5",
pages = "3287--3298",
journal = "Nutrients",
issn = "2072-6643",
publisher = "M D P I AG",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Linseed dietary fibers reduce apparent digestibility of energy and fat and weight gain in growing rats

AU - Kristensen, Mette Bredal

AU - Knudsen, Knud Erik Bach

AU - Jørgensen, Henry Johs. Høgh

AU - Oomah, David

AU - Bügel, Susanne Gjedsted

AU - Toubro, Søren

AU - Tetens, Inge

AU - Astrup, Arne

N1 - CURIS 2013 NEXS 218

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - Dietary fibers (DF) may affect energy balance, an effect often ascribed to the viscous nature of some water soluble DF, which affect luminal viscosity and thus multiple physiological processes. We have tested the hypothesis that viscous linseed DF reduce apparent nutrient digestibility, and limit weight gain, in a randomized feeding trial where 60 male, growing, Wistar rats, with an initial weight of ~200 g, were fed different diets (n = 10 per group): low DF control (C), 5% DF from cellulose (5-CEL), CEL + 5% DF from whole (5-WL) or ground linseed (5-GL), CEL + 5% DF from linseed DF extract (5-LDF), and CEL + 10% DF from linseed DF extract (10-LDF). Diets were provided ad libitum for 21 days. Feed intake and faecal output were measured during days 17-21. Faecal fat excretion increased with increasing DF content and was highest in the 10-LDF group. Apparent fat digestibility was highest with the C diet (94.9% ± 0.8%) and lowest (74.3% ± 0.6%) with the 10-LDF diet, and decreased in a non-linear manner with increasing DF (p <0.001). Apparent fat digestibility also decreased with increased accessibility of DF (5-WL vs. 5-GL) and when the proportion of viscous DF increased (5-GL vs. 5-LDF). The 10-LDF resulted in a lower final body weight (258 ± 6.2 g) compared to C (282 ± 5.9 g), 5-CEL (281 ± 5.9 g), and 5-WL (285 ± 5.9 g) (p <0.05). The 10-LDF diet reduced body fat compared to 5-CEL (p <0.01). In conclusion, DF extracted from linseed reduced apparent energy and fat digestibility and resulted in restriction of body weight gain in growing rats.

AB - Dietary fibers (DF) may affect energy balance, an effect often ascribed to the viscous nature of some water soluble DF, which affect luminal viscosity and thus multiple physiological processes. We have tested the hypothesis that viscous linseed DF reduce apparent nutrient digestibility, and limit weight gain, in a randomized feeding trial where 60 male, growing, Wistar rats, with an initial weight of ~200 g, were fed different diets (n = 10 per group): low DF control (C), 5% DF from cellulose (5-CEL), CEL + 5% DF from whole (5-WL) or ground linseed (5-GL), CEL + 5% DF from linseed DF extract (5-LDF), and CEL + 10% DF from linseed DF extract (10-LDF). Diets were provided ad libitum for 21 days. Feed intake and faecal output were measured during days 17-21. Faecal fat excretion increased with increasing DF content and was highest in the 10-LDF group. Apparent fat digestibility was highest with the C diet (94.9% ± 0.8%) and lowest (74.3% ± 0.6%) with the 10-LDF diet, and decreased in a non-linear manner with increasing DF (p <0.001). Apparent fat digestibility also decreased with increased accessibility of DF (5-WL vs. 5-GL) and when the proportion of viscous DF increased (5-GL vs. 5-LDF). The 10-LDF resulted in a lower final body weight (258 ± 6.2 g) compared to C (282 ± 5.9 g), 5-CEL (281 ± 5.9 g), and 5-WL (285 ± 5.9 g) (p <0.05). The 10-LDF diet reduced body fat compared to 5-CEL (p <0.01). In conclusion, DF extracted from linseed reduced apparent energy and fat digestibility and resulted in restriction of body weight gain in growing rats.

U2 - 10.3390/nu5083287

DO - 10.3390/nu5083287

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 23966109

VL - 5

SP - 3287

EP - 3298

JO - Nutrients

JF - Nutrients

SN - 2072-6643

IS - 8

ER -

ID: 50126905