scholarly journals A fixed carbohydrate:protein ratio ≤ 1.8 on an energy basis consumed in the context of an energy‐restricted diet and reduction of body weight: evaluation of a health claim pursuant to Article 13(5) of Regulation (EC) No 1924/2006

EFSA Journal ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 15 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Dominique Turck ◽  
Jean‐Louis Bresson ◽  
Barbara Burlingame ◽  
Tara Dean ◽  
...  
EFSA Journal ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 17 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Dominique Turck ◽  
Jacqueline Castenmiller ◽  
Stefaan De Henauw ◽  
Karen Ildico Hirsch‐Ernst ◽  
...  

Nutrients ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 781 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katherine F. Wallis ◽  
Stepan B. Melnyk ◽  
Isabelle R. Miousse

Dietary methionine restriction is associated with improved health outcomes and an increase in lifespan in animal models. We have previously shown that an increase in dietary methionine induces alteration in the intestinal microbiome. The composition of the intestinal microbiota is a determinant of health and we, therefore, hypothesized that dietary methionine restriction would also induce changes in the murine microbiome. After one month on a methionine-restricted diet, five-month-old male and female C57BL/6 mice had decreased levels of serum methionine, without changes in body weight. We identified a decrease in the hepatic methylation status of animals fed a methionine-restricted diet compared to controls. This decrease was not associated with changes in DNA or protein methylation in the liver. In males, we saw an increase in families Bacteroidaceae and Verrucoccaceae (mostly A. mucinophila) and a decrease in Rumminococcaceae in animals fed a methionine-restricted diet compared to controls. In females, Bacteroidales family S24-7 was increased two-fold, while families Bacteroidaceae, Verrucoccaceae, Rumminococcaceae, and Rikenellaceae were decreased compared to controls. In summary, feeding a methionine-restricted diet for one month was associated with significant and sex-specific changes in the intestinal microbiome.


1964 ◽  
Vol 206 (4) ◽  
pp. 762-764 ◽  
Author(s):  
Herbert Wohl ◽  
Clarence Merskey

Rats were divided into two groups such that mean weight and hemoglobin and hematocrit levels were not significantly different. One group (controls) was then fed a normal chow ad libitum. The other group was fed 6 g daily (30% of normal intake) for 2 weeks. The hemoglobin levels of rats fed the restricted diet rose 1.4–3.5 g/100 ml and hematocrit level rose 2–6%. At the end of 2 weeks total red cell mass (Cr51) was 5.5–6.0 ml in the underfed groups compared with 6.8 ml in the control group. Body weight fell proportionally more than did red cell mass, elevating the calculated red cell mass per unit body weight. Serum osmolality and K+ were not significantly different from control values, and there was a slightly higher serum Na+ and Cl– in the restricted diet group. It is concluded that restriction of food intake produced a relative polycythemia. At the end of 2 weeks of restriction an isosmotic reduction in plasma volume was present.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 123 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rossella Attini ◽  
Benedetta Montersino ◽  
Filomena Leone ◽  
Fosca Minelli ◽  
Federica Fassio ◽  
...  

Pregnancy is increasingly reported in chronic kidney disease (CKD), reflecting higher awareness, improvements in materno-foetal care, and a more flexible attitude towards “allowing” pregnancy in the advanced stages of CKD. Success is not devoid of problems and an important grey area regards the indications for starting dialysis (by urea level, clinical picture, and residual glomerular filtration rate) and for dietary management. The present case may highlight the role of plant-based diets in dietary management in pregnant CKD women, aimed at retarding dialysis needs. The case. A 28-year-old woman, affected by glomerulocystic disease and unilateral renal agenesis, in stage-4 CKD, was referred at the 6th week of amenorrhea: she weighed 40 kg (BMI 16.3), was normotensive, had no sign of oedema, her serum creatinine was 2.73 mg/dL, blood urea nitrogen (BUN) 35 mg/dL, and proteinuria 200 mg/24 h. She had been on a moderately protein-restricted diet (about 0.8 g/kg/real body weight, 0.6 per ideal body weight) since childhood. Low-dose acetylsalicylate was added, and a first attempt to switch to a protein-restricted supplemented plant-based diet was made and soon stopped, as she did not tolerate ketoacid and aminoacid supplementation. At 22 weeks of pregnancy, creatinine was increased (3.17 mg/dL, BUN 42 mg/dL), dietary management was re-discussed and a plant-based non-supplemented diet was started. The diet was associated with a rapid decrease in serum urea and creatinine; this favourable effect was maintained up to the 33rd gestational week when a new rise in urea and creatinine was observed, together with signs of cholestasis. After induction, at 33 weeks + 6 days, she delivered a healthy female baby, adequate for gestational age (39th centile). Urea levels decreased after delivery, but increased again when the mother resumed her usual mixed-protein diet. At the child’s most recent follow-up visit (age 4 months), development was normal, with normal weight and height (50th–75th centile). In summary, the present case confirms that a moderate protein-restricted diet can be prescribed in pregnancies in advanced CKD without negatively influencing foetal growth, supporting the importance of choosing a plant-based protein source, and suggests focusing on the diet’s effects on microcirculation to explain these favourable results.


1965 ◽  
Vol 43 (5) ◽  
pp. 809-817 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. J. Perrault ◽  
L. P. Dugal

Previous work has suggested that the degeneration of the male reproductive system caused by severe cold (−5 °C; 18–32 days) represents the sum of the following factors: (a) systemic, or metabolic alterations in various structures of the entire organism; (b) endocrine, or neurohumoral events, especially androgenic.Observation of changes in weight of the accessory sex organs, prostate and seminal vesicles, as indicators of androgenic function, permits a demonstration of the two separate effects of cold. A restricted diet given to animals at room temperature results in a loss of body weight (percentage of control) almost identical in rate and in level with the loss caused by cold, and simulates the systemic component of the action of cold; the observed loss of weight of the accessories follows the proportionality (nonlinear) between body weight and organ weight. The further loss observed in the accessories of the cold-exposed rat may then be taken to represent the endocrine component, that is, the true androgenic depression; testosterone treatment in the "starved" castrate at room temperature shows the dissociation between the two components.


2020 ◽  
Vol 318 (1) ◽  
pp. F35-F42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Faith Omede ◽  
Shiqin Zhang ◽  
Cassandra Johnson ◽  
Emily Daniel ◽  
Yan Zhang ◽  
...  

Studies in rodents with reduced nephron mass have suggested a strong positive correlation between dietary phosphate consumption and CKD progression. Prior work by our group demonstrated that dietary phosphate restriction can prevent tubular injury and microcyst formation in rodents with glomerulonephritis. Tubular injury and cystic dilation of tubules are key contributors to kidney function decline in polycystic kidney disease (PKD). Here, we determined whether dietary phosphate restriction slows renal cyst growth and fibrosis in a mouse model of PKD. Pcy/pcy mice received a normal phosphate (0.54%) or a phosphate-restricted (0.02%) diet ( n = 10/group) from 7 to 20 wk of age. All of the other major dietary constituents, including protein source and content, were comparable between the two diets. At 20 wk, body weight, kidney weight-to-body weight ratio (KW/BW), cystic area, cyst number, and kidney fibrosis were quantified. Pcy/pcy mice fed a phosphate-restricted diet had lower serum phosphate, fibroblast growth factor 23, and parathyroid hormone levels, along with elevated serum calcium levels and increased kidney Klotho gene expression compared with mice that consumed the control diet. Dietary phosphate restriction resulted in a 25% lower KW/BW ratio and reduced the cyst number, cystic index, and gene expression for the tubular injury markers neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin and interleukin-18. Mice fed the phosphate-restricted diet exhibited lower kidney expression for pathways involved in collagen deposition and myofibroblast activation (collagen type I-α1, phosphorylated SMAD3, and α-smooth muscle actin); however, histological differences in kidney fibrosis were not appreciated. Dietary phosphate restriction slows cystogenesis and inhibits the activation of key pathways in the generation of kidney fibrosis in PKD mice.


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