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Dietary Compensation With Substitution of Meat Products With White Button Mushrooms. (Mush 1)

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health logo

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Status

Completed

Conditions

Obesity

Treatments

Dietary Supplement: dietary substitution to assess level of caloric compensation

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00198770
MC2004-01

Details and patient eligibility

About

Unfortunately, current methods of achieving weight control are disappointing. There is also a great deal of public confusion over what constitutes an appropriate diet for weight control; there is a paucity of carefully performed, randomized, controlled clinical treatment trials to evaluate the varying opinions. Mushrooms are not widely appreciated as the nutritious, low calorie, low fat food (and potential meat substitute) that they are. Mushrooms may be a new "diet food," especially as a substitute for higher calorie and fat staples like meat.

This study examines whether there is compensation for the potential calorie and fat savings of substituting mushrooms for meat in dishes over a 4-day period.

Full description

  1. Development of suitable mushroom-meat substitutions. In this phase, guided by information gathered from test subjects (see 2. below) we will devise and internally taste-test test meals that entail mushroom substitutions that result in potential energy savings of at least 125 kcal per meal.
  2. Study the palatability, consumer acceptance, and satiating properties of each mushroom-substituted meal using a panel of obese and normal weight men, women, seniors, and teenagers.
  3. Test in a controlled fashion the percent compensation over a 4-day period for the calorie and fat deficit that results when these mushroom-substituted meals are consumed compared with unsubstituted meals among obese and normal weight adults.

In this phase, the following two hypotheses will be tested:

Hyp 1. Use of white button mushrooms as a substitute for meat at a single meal will result in significant reduction in total daily energy intake during the same 24 h period.

Hyp 2. The amount of calories and fat grams compensated for will be significantly less than 100% when the substitution of mushrooms for meat is continued on a one-meal daily basis for a period of 4 days.

Summary of experimental design: Controlled intervention study, crossover design with each subject serving as his or her own control. Subjects: n=40 healthy men and women, aged 18-65, stratified by BMI Intervention: 11-day feeding study divided into two, 4-day intervention periods (Mondays through Thursdays), separated by a 3-day washout period (Friday through Sunday); subjects fed a standard lunch meal on site, and precise food records gathered for any meals or snacks taken off-site. One of the two 4-day intervention periods will include one meal per day that substitutes one of the 7 mushroom meals devised in phases 1 and 2 in place of meat meals, while the other 4-day intervention period will be the same except for not having any substituted meals. The order of the interventions will be randomized to eliminate order effects. Satiety measures will be obtained as in experiment #3, as well as measures of diet satisfaction. Weight will be measured.

Enrollment

55 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

ages 18-65 (for phase 3), Body Mass Index between 18-45; not using appetite-affecting medications unless on established and stable dose; not using weight loss drugs; willing and able to comply with the protocol requirements; willing and able to give informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

Those participants that: have a strong dislike of the foods that may be involved; have a mold allergy/food allergy; have chronic, uncontrolled health problems (not including obesity and diabetes); have bulimia, laxative abuse, substance abuse, alcohol intake > 10 drinks per week, or have an uncontrolled psychiatric disorder (major depression, bipolar disorder, etc as determined at screening); are breast-feeding or pregnant at screening.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

55 participants in 1 patient group

Crossover design - 1 arm
Experimental group
Description:
Meat week followed by mushroom week, counterbalanced order
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: dietary substitution to assess level of caloric compensation

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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