SEGURIDAD ALIMENTARIA Y CALIDAD
TECNOLOGÍA ALIMENTARIA
NUTRICIÓN
SALUD Y ESTILO DE VIDA
ENFERMEDADES RELACIONADAS CON LA DIETA
CONSUMER INSIGHTS
(Solamente en inglés)
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
(Solamente en inglés)
INICIATIVAS DE LA UE
(Parcialmente traducido)
BAJO LOS FOCOS
Tamaño del texto:

Three meals may be better than one

Due to lifestyle changes, there is an increasing number of people who choose to eat just once a day, but is this good for our health? New research suggests that our body copes better with the traditional three meals a day when compared with the same amount eaten in one meal.

A team of US scientists compared the health effects of two different eating patterns: three meals a day versus one meal a day. Energy (calorie) content of both diets was similar. Healthy, normal weight adults followed each eating pattern for 8 weeks. During this time, regular measurements were taken of weight, body fat, blood cholesterol and hunger.

The results showed that eating one meal a day reduced body fat slightly, but increased blood pressure and LDL or ‘bad’ cholesterol. Perception of hunger was greater on the one meal a day regime. There were no differences in weight. It would seem that eating three meals a day is healthier overall than eating once a day.

For more information, see
Stote KS et al (2007). A controlled trial of reduced meal frequency without caloric restriction in healthy, normal-weight, middle-aged adults. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Vol 85, pg 981-988.

EUFIC related material:
Health & Lifestyle: Healthy eating
Health & Lifestyle: Diet & weight control

Fuente: El Consejo Europeo de Información sobre la Alimentación

Imprimir IMPRIMIR
Descargar como PDF DESCARGAR COMO PDF
ENVIAR A UN AMIGO ENVIAR A UN AMIGO
   
CS-Cestina DE-Deutsch EL-Ελληνικά EN-English ES-Español FR-Français IT-Italiano PL-Polski SK-Slovenský
FOOD TODAY THE BASICS EUFIC REVIEW EUFIC FORUM MINI GUIDE 10 TIPS