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The satiety effects of intragastric macronutrient infusions in fatty and lean Zucker rats
Authors:Carol A. Maggio  M.R.C. Greenwood  Joseph R. Vasselli
Affiliation:1. Department of Biology, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601 USA;2. Obesity Research Center, St. Luke''s-Roosevelt Hospital Center Amsterdam Avenue at 114th Street, New York, NY 10025 USA
Abstract:To evaluate satiety in the hyperphagic, genetically obese Zucker “fatty” (fafa) rat, food-deprived fatty and lean (FaFa) control rats were given equicaloric intragastric infusions consisting largely of fat, carbohydrate, or protein. Relative to distilled water infusion, these infusions resulted in immediate reductions of food intake in both fatty and lean rats allowed to feed 20 min post-infusion. Cumulative food intakes remained reduced throughout the 2 hr period of observation. Thus, despite its hyperphagia, the fatty rat is responsive to the satiating effect of infused nutrients. However, the relative satiating effectiveness of the macronutrient infusions differed for the two genotypes. In lean rats, the different macronutrient infusions resulted in equivalent reductions of feeding. In contrast, in fatty rats, fat was the least satiating and protein was the most satiating macronutrient. Moreover, compared to lean rats, fatty rats displayed less initial suppression of feeding after fat infusion and greater overall suppression after protein infusion. These effects are consistent with the long-term feeding behavior of the fatty rat for the different macronutrients and may be related to pre- and postabsorptive metabolic alterations that have been documented in this animal.
Keywords:Zucker fatty rat  Genetic obesity  Satiety  Intragastric infusions  Macronutrients  Short-term feeding behavior
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