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Cambridge University Press, British Journal of Nutrition, 7(117), p. 1042-1051, 2017

DOI: 10.1017/s0007114517000848

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Faster eating rates are associated with higher energy intakes during anad libitummeal, higher BMI and greater adiposity among 4·5-year-old children: results from the Growing Up in Singapore Towards Healthy Outcomes (GUSTO) cohort

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This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.

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Abstract

AbstractFaster eating rates are associated with increased energy intake, but little is known about the relationship between children’s eating rate, food intake and adiposity. We examined whether children who eat faster consume more energy and whether this is associated with higher weight status and adiposity. We hypothesised that eating rate mediates the relationship between child weight andad libitumenergy intake. Children (n386) from the Growing Up in Singapore Towards Healthy Outcomes cohort participated in a video-recordedad libitumlunch at 4·5 years to measure acute energy intake. Videos were coded for three eating-behaviours (bites, chews and swallows) to derive a measure of eating rate (g/min). BMI and anthropometric indices of adiposity were measured. A subset of children underwent MRI scanning (n153) to measure abdominal subcutaneous and visceral adiposity. Children above/below the median eating rate were categorised as slower and faster eaters, and compared across body composition measures. There was a strong positive relationship between eating rate and energy intake (r0·61,P<0·001) and a positive linear relationship between eating rate and children’s BMI status. Faster eaters consumed 75 % more energy content than slower eating children (Δ548 kJ (Δ131 kcal); 95 % CI 107·6, 154·4,P<0·001), and had higher whole-body (P<0·05) and subcutaneous abdominal adiposity (Δ118·3 cc; 95 % CI 24·0, 212·7,P=0·014). Mediation analysis showed that eating rate mediates the link between child weight and energy intake during a meal (b13·59; 95 % CI 7·48, 21·83). Children who ate faster had higher energy intake, and this was associated with increased BMIz-score and adiposity.