Eating plant protein may help keep you feeling full longer — and help
you eat less at your next meal — than eating animal protein, a new study
suggests.
In the study, 43 young men in Denmark ate three different breakfast
meals, on three different days, each two weeks apart. The meals varied in the protein
patty and mash that was included: The first included a high-protein
meat patty and a potato mash, the second had a high-protein patty that
was made from legumes (a plant group that includes beans and lentils)
and a split pea mash, and the third had a low-protein legume patty with a
combination split pea and potato mash. The researchers found that the
men reported feeling fuller, and less hungry, after they ate the high-protein legume patty meal than they did after eating the other two meals.
Even more surprisingly, while the participants rated the high-protein vegetable
patty meal as the most filling, they also said that the low-protein
vegetable patty meal was just as filling as the high-protein meat patty
meal, said Anne Raben, the study's senior author and a professor of
obesity research at the University of Copenhagen.
The researchers also found that after the participants consumed the high-protein
legume patty meal for breakfast, they consumed 12 to 13 percent fewer
calories at lunch than when they consumed either a high-protein meat
patty meal or the low-protein legume patty meal at breakfast — a
difference of 95 to 105 calories, Raben told Live Science.
All meals consisted of oven-baked patties, either of veal, pork and
potatoes (the high-protein meat patty); fava beans and split peas (the high-protein legume
patty); or fava beans, split peas and potatoes (the low-protein legume
patty). All patties included a variety of spices, rapeseed oil and
butter.
In both the high-protein meat patty and the high-protein legume patty, 19 percent of the calories came from protein, while 53 percent of the calories came from carbohydrates. Where the high-protein patties differed, however, was in the amount of fiber
each had: The high-protein meat patty had only 6 grams of fiber per 100
grams, while the high-protein legume patty had 25 grams of fiber per
100 grams.
In the low-protein legume patty, on the other hand, only 9 percent of
the calories came from protein, while 62 percent came from carbs. That
patty had 10 grams of fiber per 100 grams. [Which Types of Food Are the Most Filling?]
The higher amount of fiber
in the high-protein legume patty may have contributed to the higher
levels of satiety, or fullness, that the participants felt compared to
when they consumed the high-protein meat patty, according to the
findings, published Oct. 19 in the journal Food and Nutrition Research.
"Fiber and protein act through different mechanisms," Raben told Live Science. The body does not break down fiber, so it remains in the gastrointestinal tract until it passes out of the body. But protein is digested and absorbed into the body, so that its components can be used by body tissues, including the brain.
The researchers noted that the results do not necessarily mean that
eating vegetable protein will always lead people to feel more satiated
than eating animal protein. "Testing meals with both similar fiber and protein content could be useful," Raben said.
One limitation of the study was the difference in the taste of the
meals: The participants said that the high-protein legume patty was
significantly less tasty than both the high-protein meat patty and the low-protein legume patty. This is important, because in general, tastier foods
are considered to be less filling than foods that are not as tasty,
which may have affected the study's results, the researchers said.
The study is the first, the researchers said, to directly compare the
effects on appetite regulation of vegetable meals that are based on
beans and peas to animal meals that are based on pork and veal. Similar
studies have compared soy and dairy
proteins (in the form of whey, casein and milk), or have used food
substitutes (such as dissolved protein powder in water) instead of real
foods as their test meals.
The researchers are interested in the environmental implications of
such findings. Raben said that from "a global perspective, it would be
more ecological to choose the more vegetable-based approach" to eating.
SOURCE:
LiveScience



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