2000
DOI: 10.1017/s0007114500000921
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The role of dietary fat in body fatness: evidence from a preliminary meta-analysis of ad libitum low-fat dietary intervention studies

Abstract: The role of high-fat diets in weight gain and obesity has been questioned because of inconsistent reports in the literature concerning the efficacy of ad libitum low-fat diets to reduce body weight. We conducted a meta-analysis of weight loss occurring on ad libitum low-fat diets in intervention trials, and analysed the relationship between initial body weight and weight loss. We selected controlled trials lasting more than 2 months comparing ad libitum low-fat diets with a control group consuming their habitu… Show more

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Cited by 253 publications
(135 citation statements)
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“…This result agrees with previous findings that showed a positive and independent relationship between weight loss and pre-treatment body weight [48,49].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…This result agrees with previous findings that showed a positive and independent relationship between weight loss and pre-treatment body weight [48,49].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…Diets high in fat may enhance reabsorption of estrogens in the gut [50]. Although controversial, several lines of evidence suggest that increased dietary fat is also associated with increased risk of obesity [3,4]. Higher dietary fat intake tends to be associated with lower dietary fiber and fruit and vegetable intake, with resultant lower exposure to nutritive antioxidants and a large variety of other potentially anticarcinogenic phytochemicals [51,52].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because obesity and unopposed estrogens are strong risk factors for endometrial cancer [2] and fat intake has been postulated to affect both risk factors [3][4][5], its role on the etiology of this disease has received some attention. The role of dietary fat and cholesterol on endometrial cancer risk was reviewed in the 1997 WCRF/AICR Report on Food, Nutrition, and the Prevention of Cancer [6].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…48 The conflicting and inconclusive results of epidemiological studies of the association between dietary fat and obesity have been attributed to methodological problems, 49 but intervention trials examining the effect of low-fat, highcarbohydrate diets, or diets not restricting total energy intake in any way, have found losses in body weight and fat in older men and women, 50 and the prevention of weight gain in normal weight subjects. 51 The effect of dietary fibre on weight regulation is also controversial, 52 but it has been found that lower cereal fibre consumption is an independent predictor of a higher WHR in both male and female Europeans with type I diabetes. 53 We found that abdominal obesity was strongly and inversely associated with fibre intake in women.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%