Meal rich in rapeseed oil increases 24-h fat oxidation more than meal rich in palm oil.

The fatty acid composition of the diet has been linked to the prevalence of diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Compared with monounsaturated fatty acids, saturated fatty acids decrease fat oxidation and diet-induced thermogenesis. A potential limitation of previous studies was the short duration...

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Main Authors: Katsuhiko Yajima, Kaito Iwayama, Hitomi Ogata, Insung Park, Kumpei Tokuyama
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0198858&type=printable
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author Katsuhiko Yajima
Kaito Iwayama
Hitomi Ogata
Insung Park
Kumpei Tokuyama
author_facet Katsuhiko Yajima
Kaito Iwayama
Hitomi Ogata
Insung Park
Kumpei Tokuyama
author_sort Katsuhiko Yajima
collection DOAJ
description The fatty acid composition of the diet has been linked to the prevalence of diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Compared with monounsaturated fatty acids, saturated fatty acids decrease fat oxidation and diet-induced thermogenesis. A potential limitation of previous studies was the short duration (≦5h) of calorimetry used. The present study compared the effects of a meal rich in saturated and unsaturated fatty acids on 24-h of fat oxidation. Ten males participated in two sessions of indirect calorimetry in a whole-room metabolic chamber. At each session, subjects consumed three meals rich in palm oil (44.3% as saturated, 42.3% as monounsaturated and 13.4% as polyunsaturated fatty acid) or rapeseed oil (11.7% as saturated, 59.3% as monounsaturated and 29.0% as polyunsaturated fatty acid). Fat oxidation over 24-h was significantly higher in the meal rich in rapeseed oil (779 ± 202 kcal/day) than that rich in palm oil (703 ± 158 kcal/day, P < 0.05), although energy expenditure was similar between both meal conditions. Meal rich in unsaturated fatty acids increased the oxidation of exogenous and/or endogenous fat. The results of a long calorimetry period indicate that rapeseed oil offered an advantage toward increased 24-h fat oxidation in healthy young males.
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institution DOAJ
issn 1932-6203
language English
publishDate 2018-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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spelling doaj-art-0c482cf47736400ea4a55fd3828900b72025-08-20T02:45:28ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01136e019885810.1371/journal.pone.0198858Meal rich in rapeseed oil increases 24-h fat oxidation more than meal rich in palm oil.Katsuhiko YajimaKaito IwayamaHitomi OgataInsung ParkKumpei TokuyamaThe fatty acid composition of the diet has been linked to the prevalence of diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Compared with monounsaturated fatty acids, saturated fatty acids decrease fat oxidation and diet-induced thermogenesis. A potential limitation of previous studies was the short duration (≦5h) of calorimetry used. The present study compared the effects of a meal rich in saturated and unsaturated fatty acids on 24-h of fat oxidation. Ten males participated in two sessions of indirect calorimetry in a whole-room metabolic chamber. At each session, subjects consumed three meals rich in palm oil (44.3% as saturated, 42.3% as monounsaturated and 13.4% as polyunsaturated fatty acid) or rapeseed oil (11.7% as saturated, 59.3% as monounsaturated and 29.0% as polyunsaturated fatty acid). Fat oxidation over 24-h was significantly higher in the meal rich in rapeseed oil (779 ± 202 kcal/day) than that rich in palm oil (703 ± 158 kcal/day, P < 0.05), although energy expenditure was similar between both meal conditions. Meal rich in unsaturated fatty acids increased the oxidation of exogenous and/or endogenous fat. The results of a long calorimetry period indicate that rapeseed oil offered an advantage toward increased 24-h fat oxidation in healthy young males.https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0198858&type=printable
spellingShingle Katsuhiko Yajima
Kaito Iwayama
Hitomi Ogata
Insung Park
Kumpei Tokuyama
Meal rich in rapeseed oil increases 24-h fat oxidation more than meal rich in palm oil.
PLoS ONE
title Meal rich in rapeseed oil increases 24-h fat oxidation more than meal rich in palm oil.
title_full Meal rich in rapeseed oil increases 24-h fat oxidation more than meal rich in palm oil.
title_fullStr Meal rich in rapeseed oil increases 24-h fat oxidation more than meal rich in palm oil.
title_full_unstemmed Meal rich in rapeseed oil increases 24-h fat oxidation more than meal rich in palm oil.
title_short Meal rich in rapeseed oil increases 24-h fat oxidation more than meal rich in palm oil.
title_sort meal rich in rapeseed oil increases 24 h fat oxidation more than meal rich in palm oil
url https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0198858&type=printable
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AT kaitoiwayama mealrichinrapeseedoilincreases24hfatoxidationmorethanmealrichinpalmoil
AT hitomiogata mealrichinrapeseedoilincreases24hfatoxidationmorethanmealrichinpalmoil
AT insungpark mealrichinrapeseedoilincreases24hfatoxidationmorethanmealrichinpalmoil
AT kumpeitokuyama mealrichinrapeseedoilincreases24hfatoxidationmorethanmealrichinpalmoil