PrintPrintEmailEmail
Faculty Member: 
TitleInterstitial glucose level is a significant predictor of energy intake in free-living women with healthy body weight
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2005
AuthorsPittas AG, Hariharan R, Stark PC, Hajduk CL, Greenberg AS, Roberts SB
JournalThe Journal of Nutrition
Volume135
Pagination1070–1074
ISSN0022-3166
KeywordsAdolescent, Adult, Ambulatory, Biological Markers, Blood Glucose, Body Mass Index, Body Weight, Energy Metabolism, Female, Glucose Tolerance Test, Humans, Monitoring, Predictive Value of Tests, Reference Values
Abstract

The relative contribution of circulating glucose to meal-to-meal variability in energy intake is not known. In 8 free-living young (median age 26.5 y) women with healthy body weight (median BMI 22.2 kg/m(2)), we measured glucose in the interstitial space by an automated monitoring procedure (continuous glucose monitoring system, CGMS) for up to 3 consecutive days (mean 706 glucose readings per subject). We examined the association between interstitial glucose (which lags blood glucose by approximately 10 min), self-reported hunger, satiety, desire for a meal, and nutrient intakes. Participants reported consuming a typical Western diet (59% carbohydrate, 27% fat, 14% protein). Median (interquartile range) interstitial glucose was 5.2 mmol/L (4.7-5.8). Using repeated-measures techniques in univariate analyses, desire for a meal (r = 0.45, P < 0.0001), hunger (r = 0.37

URLhttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15867283