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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Bingeing, self-restriction, and increased body weight in rats with limited access to a sweet-fat diet.

Journal:
Obesity (Silver Spring, Md.)
Year:
2008
Authors:
Berner, Laura A et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology · United States
Species:
rodent

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Prior research has shown that fasting alternated with a diet of standard rodent chow and a 10% sucrose solution produces bingeing on the sucrose, but animals remain at normal body weight. The present study investigated whether restricted access to a highly palatable combination of sugar and fat, without food deprivation, would instigate binge eating and also increase body weight. METHODS AND PROCEDURES: Male rats were maintained for 25 days on one of four diets: (i) sweet-fat chow for 2 h/day followed by ad libitum standard chow, (ii) 2-h sweet-fat chow only 3 days/week and access to standard chow the rest of the time, (iii) ad libitum sweet-fat chow, or (iv) ad libitum standard chow. RESULTS: Both groups with 2-h access to the sweet-fat chow exhibited bingeing behavior, as defined by excessively large meals. The body weight of these animals increased due to large meals and then decreased between binges as a result of self-restricted intake of standard chow following binges. However, despite these fluctuations in body weight, the group with 2-h access to sweet-fat chow every day gained significantly more weight than the control group with standard chow available ad libitum. DISCUSSION: These findings may have implications for the body weight fluctuations associated with binge-eating disorder, as well as the relationship between binge eating and the obesity epidemic.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19186326/