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Hypocaloric high-protein diet improves clinical and biochemical markers in patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD).

Nutricion hospitalaria
January 1, 1970
Sebastião Mauro Bezerra Duarte et al. (10 authors)
Clinical StudyJournal ArticleHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to investigate the effects of a hypocaloric high-protein diet on lipid profile, glucose homeostasis, and liver enzymes in patients with NAFLD, independent of BMI or body fat reduction.

Results Summary

The study found that a hypocaloric high-protein diet improved HDL-cholesterol, reduced total, LDL, and VLDL cholesterol, triglycerides, liver enzymes (AST, GGT, AP), fasting blood glucose, and HbA1c. Weight loss was associated with additional liver benefits, but improvements occurred even without BMI or fat mass reduction.

Population

48 stable NAFLD patients

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

75 days

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (20)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
hypocaloric high-protein diet
no change
BMI
NAFLD patients
-1.3%
remained relatively stable
#1
hypocaloric high-protein diet
no change
waist circumference
NAFLD patients
-1.8%
remained relatively stable
#2
hypocaloric high-protein diet
no change
body fat mass
NAFLD patients
-2.5%
remained relatively stable
#3
hypocaloric high-protein diet
increase
HDL-cholesterol
NAFLD patients
-
increased
#4
hypocaloric high-protein diet
decrease
total cholesterol
NAFLD patients
-
decreased
#5
hypocaloric high-protein diet
decrease
LDL cholesterol
NAFLD patients
-
decreased
#6
hypocaloric high-protein diet
decrease
VLDL cholesterol
NAFLD patients
-
decreased
#7
hypocaloric high-protein diet
decrease
triglycerides
NAFLD patients
-
decreased
#8
hypocaloric high-protein diet
decrease
aspartate aminotransferase
NAFLD patients
-
decreased
#9
hypocaloric high-protein diet
decrease
gamma glutamyltransferase
NAFLD patients
-
decreased
#10
hypocaloric high-protein diet
decrease
alkaline phosphatase
NAFLD patients
-
decreased
#11
hypocaloric high-protein diet
decrease
fasting blood glucose
NAFLD patients
-
decreased
#12
hypocaloric high-protein diet
decrease
glycated hemoglobin
NAFLD patients
-
decreased
#13
hypocaloric high-protein diet
decrease
ALT
NAFLD patients with weight decrease
-
associated with liver benefit
#14
hypocaloric high-protein diet
decrease
AP
NAFLD patients with weight decrease
-
associated with liver benefit
#15
hypocaloric high-protein diet
decrease
AST/ALT ratio
NAFLD patients with weight decrease
-
associated with liver benefit
#16
hypocaloric high-protein diet
no change
liver enzymes
patients who gained weight
-
No change could be demonstrated
#17
hypocaloric high-protein diet
improvement
lipid profile
NAFLD patients
-
were associated with improvement
#18
hypocaloric high-protein diet
improvement
glucose homeostasis
NAFLD patients
-
were associated with improvement
#19
hypocaloric high-protein diet
improvement
liver enzymes
NAFLD patients
-
were associated with improvement
#20
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the role of hypocaloric highprotein diet, a prospective clinical study was conducted in NAFLD patients. RESEARCH METHODS AND PROCEDURES: Pre-versus post-interventional data were analyzed in 48 stable NAFLD patients (submitted to a hypocaloric high-protein diet during 75 days. Variables included anthropometrics (body mass index/ BMI and waist circumference/WC), whole-body and segmental bioimpedance analysis and biochemical tests. Diet compliance was assessed by interviews every two weeks. RESULTS: BMI, WC and body fat mass remained relatively stable (-1.3%, -1.8% and -2.5% respectively, no significance). HDL- cholesterol increased (P < 0.05) whereas total, LDL and VLDL cholesterol, triglycerides, aspartate aminotransferase/ AST, gamma glutamyltransferase/GGT, alkaline phosphatase/ AP, fasting blood glucose and glycated hemoglobin/ HbA1c decreased (P < 0.05). When patients were stratified according to increase (22/48, 45.8%) and decrease (21/48, 43.8%) of BMI, association between weight decrease and liver benefit could be elicited in such circumstances for ALT, AP and AST/ALT ratio. No change could be demonstrated in patients who gained weight. Multivariate assessment confirmed that waist circumference, ferritin, triacylglycerol, and markers of glucose homeostasis were the most relevant associated with liver enzymes. DISCUSSION: Ours results are consistent with the literature of calorie restriction in the management of NAFLD. Changes in lifestyle and weight loss are recommended for NAFLD patients. European guidelines also support this recommendation. CONCLUSION: This is the first study that demonstrated that a high protein, hypocaloric diet were associated with improvement of lipid profile, glucose homeostasis and liver enzymes in NAFLD independent on BMI decrease or body fat mass reduction.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdiposityAgedAnthropometryBody Mass IndexCaloric RestrictionDiet, ReducingDietary ProteinsElectric ImpedanceFemaleHumansMaleMiddle AgedNon-alcoholic Fatty Liver DiseaseProspective StudiesTreatment Outcome
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy85/10
Quality75/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations29
Citations/Year2.6
Relative Citation Ratio1.04
NIH Percentile51.8%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score1.72
Normalized Score0.69
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