2021
DOI: 10.3390/nu13093122
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The Effects of a Macronutrient-Based Diet and Time-Restricted Feeding (16:8) on Body Composition in Physically Active Individuals—A 14-Week Randomised Controlled Trial

Abstract: The number of people suffering from being overweight or obese has risen steadily in recent years. Consequently, new forms of nutrition and diets were developed as potential solutions. In the last years, the time-restricted feeding and continuous energy restriction via macronutrient-based diets were increasingly popular. Both diets were exclusively studied separately. A comparison of the two diets for people with a high body mass index despite regular physical activity has not yet been studied in detail. Theref… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(85 citation statements)
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References 38 publications
(110 reference statements)
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“…Only the duration of the eating window differed between the TRE and control groups in the same study, the rest of the interventions (e.g., exercise and calorie restriction) were the same. Participants in three studies ( 26 , 29 , 30 ) were allowed to eat ad libitum . Participants in six studies ( 21 , 22 , 25 , 27 , 28 , 31 ) were advised to follow a calorie-restricted diet, one of which was to be combined with exercise ( 28 ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Only the duration of the eating window differed between the TRE and control groups in the same study, the rest of the interventions (e.g., exercise and calorie restriction) were the same. Participants in three studies ( 26 , 29 , 30 ) were allowed to eat ad libitum . Participants in six studies ( 21 , 22 , 25 , 27 , 28 , 31 ) were advised to follow a calorie-restricted diet, one of which was to be combined with exercise ( 28 ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…All the studies included an intervention group with a TRE duration of 8 h ( 22 , 26 30 ), 10 h ( 25 , 31 ), and 12 h ( 21 ). For the control groups, the eating window was ≤12 h ( 22 , 28 , 31 ) or with no restriction ( 21 , 25 27 , 29 , 30 ). The duration of the intervention was 8 weeks ( 22 , 29 , 31 ), 12 weeks ( 26 , 30 ), 14 weeks ( 28 ), 39 weeks ( 25 ), and 12 months ( 21 , 27 ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Irrespective of the duration of the intervention (short term [4–12 weeks] or long term [24–102 weeks]), weight loss with ADF and 5:2 fasting was comparable to that achieved by calorie restriction (CR). 10 , 14 , 15 , 25–34 Meanwhile, weight loss with TRE alone (1%–5% decrease from baseline over 8–12 weeks) 23 , 35 , 36 was not superior to that achieved with CR and was less than that observed with ADF or 5:2 fasting unless total calorie intake was restricted along with TRE. Thus, long-term TRE combined with an appropriate energy-restricted diet can enhance weight loss, but this is mainly attributed to CR.…”
Section: Common Forms Of Ifmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…In the long term, more people seem to have difficulty following IF than CR. CR (80% of the individual energy requirement) ↓5.1% at 12 weeks; ↓5.6% at 24 weeks; ↓4.9% at 50 weeks; ↓5.0% at 102 weeks; NA NA NA Control (no calorie restriction) NA NA NA NA TRE Lowe et al, 23 2020 USA N = 116 (m = 70, f = 46), ages 18~64 years, BMI 27 ~43kg/m 2 12 weeks 8-h TRE (12:00–20:00) ↓0.95% at 12 weeks NA NA NA No significant differences in weight loss, fat mass, fasting insulin, glucose, HbA1C, or blood lipids between two groups Control (no meal timing restrictions) ↓0.69% at 12 weeks NA NA NA Liu et al, 24 2022 China N = 118, ages 31.9 ± 9.1 years, BMI 28~45kg/m 2 12 months 8-h TRE (8:00–16:00) ↓10.6% at 6 months; ↓9.0% at 12 months ↓26.9% at 6 months; ↓21.3% at 12 months ↓22.4% at 6 months; ↓17.0% at 12 months ↓20.9% at 6 months; ↓17.9% at 12 months Similar reduction in body weight, body fat, or metabolic risk factors with IF and CR, TRE can lead to weight loss, mainly attributed to CR CR (man 1500~1800 kcal, women 1200~1500kcal) ↓10.1% at 6 months; ↓7.2% at 12 months ↓25.1% at 6 months; ↓16.9% at 12 months ↓16.2% at 6 months; ↓12.2% at 12 months ↓19.3% at 6 months; ↓13.6% at 12 months Isenmann et al, 35 2021 ...…”
Section: Common Forms Of Ifmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, due to the common mechanisms of an overall negative energy balance, which is involuntary in IF and TRF, they share certain molecular mechanisms that contribute to the overall energy homeostasis. Each of the above-mentioned strategies have challenges and potential barriers to adherence for a long-term weight-loss strategy, though the current view supports TRF as a promising tool with greater-than-ordinary adherence, a good safety profile, and socially acceptable flexible implementation [ 237 , 238 , 239 , 240 ]…”
Section: Time-restricted Eating—just Another Approach To Reduce Calor...mentioning
confidence: 99%