Mr. Gallagher et al., THE INFLUENCE OF A BREAKFAST MEAL ON THE ASSESSMENT OF BODY-COMPOSITION USING BIOELECTRICAL-IMPEDANCE, European journal of clinical nutrition, 52(2), 1998, pp. 94-97
Objective: To investigate the effect of a breakfast meal on bioelectri
cal impedance (BI). Design: Three separate interventions. Setting: A u
niversity based study. Subjects: Young. healthy volunteers recruited f
rom staff. Twenty-nine subjects (ii men, IS women), ten subjects (two
men and eight women) and 13 subjects (2 men and 11 women) completed th
e first, second and third protocol, respectively. Interventions: Total
body BI (protocol 1) or both total body BI and segmental BI (namely a
rm, leg or torso BI); (protocol 3) was measured in the fasting state a
nd for up to 5 h after the consumption of a breakfast meal containing
28% energy from fat. In the second protocol, total body BI was measure
d in the same way on two occasions after subjects consumed isocaloric
meals containing either 28% energy or 4% energy from fat. Results: Con
sumption of a 2300 kJ meal was followed by a significant (P = 0.0002)
decrease in BI (95% confidence intervals 12.5 and 35.3), a change whic
h occurred 2 h after the meal and continued until 5 h, irrespective of
meal fat content. The fall in total body BI was accounted for primari
ly by a fall in the BI of the limbs. with virtually no contribution fr
om the torso. Conclusion: To ensure consistency in the interpretation
of BI for body composition analysis, it is important that measurements
are made in the fasting state.