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Yogurt may help dieters shed more
body fat
New York -
Replacing other foods with a few daily servings of yogurt may help
obese adults trim their waistlines better than calorie-cutting alone,
a new study suggests.
Among 34 obese men and women who went
on a 12-week, reduced-calorie diet, those who ate three daily servings
of yogurt shed more fat around the middle compared with dieters who
got little to no dairy and low amounts of calcium.
The findings add to recent evidence
linking calcium and dairy foods to slimmer waistlines, including
research showing that children and teens who get the recommended
amounts of milk, yogurt and cheese tend to be leaner than their peers
who shun dairy.
Though calcium is believed important
for maintaining healthful levels of body fat, evidence is accumulating
that dairy products may be particularly good weapons in the battle of
the bulge, according to Dr. Michael B. Zemel of the University of
Tennessee in Knoxville.
"Dairy contains a wide array of
bioactive compounds," said Zemel, who led the new research.
In the study, published in the
International Journal of Obesity, Zemel and his colleagues had
participants followed one of two diets for 12 weeks. One regimen
slashed 500 calories from the dieters' normal daily intake and allowed
no more than one serving of dairy and 500 milligrams (mg) of calcium
per day.
The other diet also cut out 500
calories, but included three daily servings of fat-free yogurt, which
brought participants' calcium intake to 1,100 mg -- in line with the
recommended intake for adults.
General Mills, maker of the Yoplait
yogurt used in the diet, funded the research.
By the end of the study, both groups
had lost weight and body fat, Zemel's team found, but those in the
yogurt group shed 61 percent more in fat pounds, as well as 81 percent
more abdominal fat. They also held on to more lean, muscular body
tissue compared with men and women in the low-calcium group.
Usually, Zemel said, when people lose
weight through dieting, the tendency is to lose both fat and lean
tissue.
It's thought that calcium may keep
body fat in check through effects on hormones that help regulate the
storage of calories as fat and the breakdown of fat cells. Low calcium
levels in the body, Zemel explained, may result in "bigger, fatter fat
cells, and more of them."
But some studies have suggested that
dairy products, independent of their calcium content, help trim fat
from the middle. The reason, according to Zemel, may rest in the fact
that dairy foods have certain compounds, including a high
concentration of small protein particles called branched-chain amino
acids, whose metabolic effects may promote fat loss while preserving
muscle.
However, he said, yogurt is no magic
recipe for melting fat, and as the weight-loss mantra goes, "calories
count."
"There's no monolithic answer to
obesity," said Zemel, adding that a healthful overall diet and
exercise are vital.
Also, yogurt is not unique among
dairy products. This study focused on yogurt for "practical reasons,"
Zemel said, because adults are likely to find several daily servings
of yogurt more palatable than a few glasses of milk.
Still, while the study results are
"impressive," the mechanism by which calcium and dairy may promote fat
loss remains a matter of speculation. according to an editorial
published with the report.
And a chief question is whether the
calcium must come in the form of dairy protein, writes Ruth B. Harris,
an associate professor of food and nutrition at the University of
Georgia in Athens.
It's also unknown whether a cup of
yogurt and a calcium supplement, for example, produce the same fat
loss as three servings of yogurt, Harris notes.
"Identification of the factors that
are important in promoting weight loss...is essential for the
development of appropriate dietary recommendations," she writes. --
Reuters
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