Overeating has been found to impair blood sugar (glucose) control and
insulin levels. A new study suggests that the duration of a bout of
overeating can affect how the body adapts glucose and insulin processing
when calorie intake increases. The article is published ahead of print in the American Journal of Physiology–Endocrinology and Metabolism.
Obesity
and type 2 diabetes have increased significantly worldwide within the
past 30 years. Lifestyle factors such as overindulging in high-calorie
foods play a large role in the development of these two serious health
conditions. Understanding how overeating causes changes in blood sugar
control and insulin processing may help scientists learn more about
metabolic disease.
Researchers from Deakin University in Australia
studied a small group of healthy, lean men with an average age of 22.
Volunteers participated in a short-term trial consisting of five days
“indicative of humans overeating during festivals and holidays” and a
long-term model of chronic overeating lasting 28 days. The nutritional
composition of the volunteers’ diet was representative of a typical
Australian diet (55 percent carbohydrates, 35 percent fat and 15 percent
protein). The “overfeeding” portion of the diet included high-calorie
snacks such as chocolate, meal replacement drinks and potato chips to
add approximately 1,000 more calories to the men’s normal food
consumption each day. The research team measured the volunteers’ weight,
fat mass, blood sugar and insulin levels before the trial began and
again after five and 28 days.
Although the amount of visceral fat
that surrounds internal organs increased substantially, short-term
overeating did not have a significant effect on the men’s weight or fat
mass. In addition, fasting levels of blood sugar and C-peptide–an amino
acid the body releases in response to increased production of
insulin–did not change. This finding was surprising because fasting
levels of endogenous glucose–new glucose the body produces in addition
to what it has already stored for future use–increased during the
short-term trial.
Chronic overeating increased the amount of total
body fat and visceral fat as well as post-meal blood sugar and
C-peptide levels. However, it did not alter fasting blood sugar levels,
endogenous glucose production or the rate of glucose removal from the
body (glucose disposal). This may be because the nutrient profile in the
long-term trial was consistent with a typical diet and dietary fat
percentages did not increase. Long-term overindulgence in fatty foods,
instead of more nutritionally balanced foods, may be an important factor
that causes rapid changes in blood sugar control.
These findings
“suggest that early adaptations in response to carbohydrate overfeeding
are directed at increasing glucose disposal in order to maintain
whole-body insulin sensitivity,” the researchers wrote.
https://www.physiology.org/doi/abs/10.1152/ajpendo.00500.2018
https://scienceblog.com/507534/its-ok-to-indulge-once-in-a-while-the-body-adapts-to-occasional-short-term-overeating/
https://scienceblog.com/507534/its-ok-to-indulge-once-in-a-while-the-body-adapts-to-occasional-short-term-overeating/
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