Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/44618
Title: Relationship between bread and obesity
Authors: Serra-Majem, Luis 
Bautista-Castaño, Inmaculada 
Keywords: Prospective Weight Change
Whole-Grain Intake
Mediterranean Diet
Gut Microbiota
Glycemic Index, et al
Issue Date: 2015
Publisher: 0007-1145
Journal: British Journal of Nutrition 
Abstract: Some studies have indicated that promoting the Mediterranean diet pattern as a model of healthy eating may help to prevent weight gain and the development of overweight/obesity. Bread consumption, which has been part of the traditional Mediterranean diet, has continued to decline in Spain and in the rest of the world, because the opinion of the general public is that bread fattens. The present study was conducted to assess whether or not eating patterns that include bread are associated with obesity and excess abdominal adiposity, both in the population at large or in subjects undergoing obesity management. The results of the present review indicate that reducing white bread, but not whole-grain bread, consumption within a Mediterranean-style food pattern setting is associated with lower gains in weight and abdominal fat. It appears that the different composition between whole-grain bread and white bread varies in its effect on body weight and abdominal fat. However, the term whole-grain bread' needs to be defined for use in epidemiological studies. Finally, additional studies employing traditional ways of bread production should analyse this effect on body-weight and metabolic regulation.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/44618
ISSN: 0007-1145
DOI: 10.1017/S0007114514003249
Source: British Journal of Nutrition[ISSN 0007-1145],v. 113, p. S29-S35
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