Preventing gastric sieving by blending a solid/water meal enhances satiation in healthy humans

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Abstract

Separation of solids and liquids within the stomach allows faster gastric emptying of liquids compared with solids, a phenomenon known as sieving. We tested the hypothesis that blending a solid and water meal would abolish sieving, preventing the early rapid decrease in gastric volume and thereby enhancing satiety. We carried out 2 separate studies. Study 1 was a 2-way, crossover, satiety study of 22 healthy volunteers who consumed roasted chicken and vegetables with a glass of water (1008 kJ) or the same blended to a soup. They completed satiety visual analogue scales at intervals for 3 h. Study 2 was a 2-way, crossover, mechanistic study of 18 volunteers who consumed the same meals and underwent an MRI to assess gastric emptying, gallbladder contraction, and small bowel water content (SBWC) at intervals for 3 h. In Study 1, the soup meal was associated with reduced hunger (P = 0.02). In Study 2, the volume of the gastric contents after the soup meal decreasedmore slowly than after the solid/liquid meal (P = 0.0003). The soup meal caused greater gallbladder contraction (P< 0.04). SBWC showed a biphasic response with an initial "gastric" phase during which SBWC was greater when the solid/liquidmeal was consumed (P< 0.001) and a later "small bowel" phase when SBWC was greater when the soup meal was consumed (P< 0.01). Blending the solid/liquid meal to a soup delayed gastric emptying and increased the hormonal response to feeding, which may contribute to enhanced postprandial satiety. © 2012 American Society for Nutrition.

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Marciani, L., Hall, N., Pritchard, S. E., Cox, E. F., Totman, J. J., Lad, M., … Spiller, R. C. (2012). Preventing gastric sieving by blending a solid/water meal enhances satiation in healthy humans. Journal of Nutrition, 142(7), 1253–1258. https://doi.org/10.3945/jn.112.159830

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