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A Short-Term Paleolithic Dietary Intervention Does Not Alter Adipokines Linked to Adiposity

Authors :
Rachel M, Graff
Kristofer, Jennings
Natalie A, Davies
Andres E, Carrillo
Emily C, Lavoy
Edward J, Ryan
Melissa M, Markofski
Source :
Int J Exerc Sci
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Berkeley Electronic Press, 2021.

Abstract

The Paleolithic diet, characterized by an emphasis on hunter-gatherer type foods accompanied by an exclusion of grains, dairy products, and highly processed food items, is often promoted for weight loss and a reduction in cardiometabolic disease risk factors. Specific adipokines, such as adiponectin, omentin, nesfatin, and vaspin are reported to be dysregulated with obesity and may respond favorably to diet-induced fat loss. We aimed to evaluate the effects of an eight-week Paleolithic dietary intervention on circulating adiponectin, omentin, nesfatin, and vaspin in a cohort of physically inactive, but otherwise healthy adults. Methods: Seven inactive adults participated in eight weeks of adherence to the Paleolithic Diet. Fasting blood samples, anthropometric, and body composition data were collected from each participant pre-and post-intervention. Serum adiponectin, omentin, nesfatin, and vaspin were measured. Results: After eight weeks of following the Paleolithic diet, there were reductions (p0.05), while serum vaspin levels for all participants were undetectable. Conclusions: It is possible that although eight weeks resulted in modest body composition changes, short-term fat loss will not induce changes in adiponectin, omentin, and nesfatin in apparently healthy adults. Larger, long-term intervention studies that examine Paleolithic diet-induced changes across sex, body composition, and in populations with metabolic dysregulation are warranted.

Subjects

Subjects :
Original Research

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Int J Exerc Sci
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....42de535295a800fdc2d723425831c6af