High-fat diet-related stimulation of sweetness desire is greater in women than in men despite high vegetable intake

Public Health Nutr. 2015 May;18(7):1272-81. doi: 10.1017/S1368980014001426. Epub 2014 Jul 31.

Abstract

Objective: To examine the effects of lunches with different dietary energy densities on food preferences between genders.

Design: Randomized crossover study. Participants were administered the following packed test meals once weekly on a specified day during six sessions: control (150 g of rice with a sautéed beef entrée containing 40 g of raw beef and 240 g of vegetables), high-meat/low-rice, low-vegetable, medium-fat/low-vegetable, high-fat and high-fat/low-vegetable meals. Subjective levels of sensory properties were assessed over time using visual analogue scales.

Setting: University of Tokushima Graduate School, Tokushima, Japan.

Subjects: Sixty-five men and sixty-five women matched by age and BMI.

Results: Men showed significantly stronger desires for salty and fatty foods after meals (P<0.05). Women showed a significantly stronger desire for sweetness from 2 h after the low-vegetable meal, and increasing fat content under high-vegetable conditions caused a significant stimulated sweetness desire in women more than in men (P<0.05). Moreover, after a high-meat/low-rice meal with 100 g of rice, sweetness desire was stronger in women (P=0.024), whereas no significant differences in sweetness desire were shown between genders after another low-energy-density control meal with 150 g of rice.

Conclusions: Men had significantly stronger desires for salty and fatty foods, whereas women preferred sweet food after meals. The sweetness desire in women was stimulated by increasing fat content, even with a high vegetable intake. Low rice intake in a low-energy-density diet also caused a relative stimulation of sweetness desire in women.

Keywords: Sweetness desire.

Publication types

  • Randomized Controlled Trial
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Appetite Regulation*
  • Cross-Over Studies
  • Diet, High-Fat / adverse effects*
  • Diet, Reducing / adverse effects
  • Dietary Fats / administration & dosage
  • Dietary Fats / adverse effects
  • Energy Intake
  • Female
  • Food Preferences*
  • Humans
  • Japan
  • Lunch
  • Male
  • Postprandial Period
  • Sex Characteristics
  • Sodium Chloride, Dietary / administration & dosage
  • Sodium Chloride, Dietary / adverse effects
  • Sweetening Agents / administration & dosage*
  • Sweetening Agents / adverse effects
  • Vegetables*

Substances

  • Dietary Fats
  • Sodium Chloride, Dietary
  • Sweetening Agents