Nine ‘large-eating’ (approximately 12 MJ/d) and nine ‘small-eating’ (approximately 5.3 MJ/d) women were selected from the population on the basis of diet and activity diaries. At rest and in the post-absorptive state the rate of oxygen consumption (V o2 )/kg fat-free mass (FFM) and rate of carbon dioxide production ( V co 2 )/kg FFM were 9–17% higher (P < 0.05) in the ‘large-eaters’ than in the ‘small-eaters’. As energy expenditure was increased by walking at 2.4, 3.9 and 5.4 km/h the differences between the two experimental groups for both V o 2 /kg FFM and V co 2 /kg FFM were decreased to negligible values, but energy expended on a body-weight basis (MJ/kg per min) remained significantly higher (5–10%) in ‘large-eaters’. Oral temperature was also consistently higher (up to 0.5°) in this group both at rest and during sitting, standing and walking activities. Although the average thermic effect of a standardized liquid meal tended to be higher (27%; not significant) in the ‘small-eaters’, the other results demonstrate that the ‘large-eating’ females had a markedly higher rate of energy expenditure at rest and during light physical activities.
CITATION STYLE
Clark, D., Tomas, F., Withers, R. T., Brinkman, M., Chandler, C., Phillips, J., … Nestel, P. (1992). Differences in energy metabolism between normal weight ‘large-eating’ and ‘small-eating’ women. British Journal of Nutrition, 68(1), 31–44. https://doi.org/10.1079/bjn19920064
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