| Beneficial effects of combined olive oil ingestion and acute exercise on postprandial TAG concentrations in healthy young women. | |
| | |
MedLine Citation:
|
PMID: 22264653 Owner: NLM Status: Publisher |
Abstract/OtherAbstract:
|
Foods high in monounsaturated fat, such as olive oil, and endurance exercise are both known to independently reduce postprandial TAG concentrations. We examined the combined effects of exercise and dietary fat composition on postprandial TAG concentrations in nine healthy pre-menopausal females (age 26·8 (sd 3·3) years, BMI 22·3 (sd 2·0) kg/m2). Each participant completed four, 2 d trials in a randomised order: (1) butter-no exercise, (2) olive oil-no exercise, (3) butter-exercise, (4) olive oil-exercise. On day 1 of the exercise trials, participants walked or ran on a treadmill for 60 min. On the no-exercise trials, participants rested on day 1. On day 2 of each trial, participants rested and consumed an olive oil meal (saturated fat 15 % and unsaturated fat 85 %) or a butter meal (saturated fat 71 % and unsaturated fat 29 %) for breakfast. Venous blood samples were obtained in the fasted state and for 6 h postprandially on day 2. A significant main effect on physical activity (exercise or control) was obtained for plasma TAG concentration (three-way ANOVA, P = 0·043), and the total area under the concentration v. time curve for TAG was 26 % lower on the olive oil-exercise trial (4·40 (sd 0·40) mmol × 6 h/l) than the butter-no exercise trial (5·91 (sd 1·01) mmol × 6 h/l) (one-way ANOVA, P = 0·029). These findings suggest that the combination of exercise and a preference for monounsaturated dietary fat intake in the form of olive oil may be most beneficial for reducing postprandial TAG concentrations. |
| | |
Authors:
|
Chihoko Sasahara; Stephen F Burns; Masashi Miyashita; David J Stensel |
Related Documents
:
|
21744023 - Effect of zinc and selenium supplementation on serum testosterone and plasma lactate in... 21996633 - The factors influencing motivation to start exercise among elderly people in an urban a... 21317403 - How to prescribe tai chi therapy. |
Publication Detail:
|
Type: JOURNAL ARTICLE Date: 2012-1-23 |
Journal Detail:
|
Title: The British journal of nutrition Volume: - ISSN: 1475-2662 ISO Abbreviation: - Publication Date: 2012 Jan |
Date Detail:
|
Created Date: 2012-1-23 Completed Date: - Revised Date: - |
Medline Journal Info:
|
Nlm Unique ID: 0372547 Medline TA: Br J Nutr Country: - |
Other Details:
|
Languages: ENG Pagination: 1-7 Citation Subset: - |
Affiliation:
|
Department of Education, School of Education, Meisei University, Tokyo, Japan. |
Export Citation:
|
APA/MLA Format Download EndNote Download BibTex |
| MeSH Terms | |
Descriptor/Qualifier:
|
|
From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine
Previous Document: Fetal-placental inflammation, but not adrenal activation, is associated with extreme preterm deliver...
Next Document: Effect of communicating depression severity on physician prescribing patterns: findings from the Cli...