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Clinical
Trial confirms effectiveness of simple
Appetite Control Method
Newswise, August 2010 — Has the long-sought
magic potion in society’s “battle with the
bulge” finally arrived? An appetite-control
agent that requires no prescription, has no
common side effects, and costs almost
nothing? Scientists today reported results
of a new clinical trial confirming that just
two 8-ounce glasses of the stuff, taken
before meals, enables people to shed pounds.
The weight-loss elixir, they told the 240th
National Meeting of the American Chemical
Society (ACS), is ordinary water.
“We are presenting results of the first
randomized controlled intervention trial
demonstrating that increased water
consumption is an effective weight loss
strategy,” said Brenda Davy, Ph.D., senior
author on the study. “We found in earlier
studies that middle aged and older people
who drank two cups of water right before
eating a meal ate between 75 and 90 fewer
calories during that meal. In this recent
study, we found that over the course of 12
weeks, dieters who drank water before meals,
three times per day, lost about 5 pounds
more than dieters who did not increase their
water intake.”
“People should drink more water and less
sugary, high-calorie drinks. It’s a simple
way to facilitate weight management.”
Davy pointed out that folklore and everyday
experience long have suggested that water
can help promote weight loss. But there has
been surprisingly little scientific
information on the topic. Previous studies
hinted that drinking water before meals
reduces intake of calories. Lacking until
now, however, has been the “gold-standard”
evidence from a randomized, controlled
clinical trial that compares weight loss
among dieters who drink water before meals
with those who do not.
The study included 48 adults aged 55-75
years, divided into two groups. One group
drank 2 cups of water prior to their meals
and the other did not. All of the subjects
ate a low-calorie diet during the study.
Over the course of 12 weeks, water drinkers
lost about 15.5 pounds, while the non-water
drinkers lost about 11 pounds.
Davy said water may be so effective simply
because it fills up the stomach with a
substance that has zero calories. People
feel fuller as a result, and eat less
calorie-containing food during the meal.
Increased water consumption may also help
people lose weight if they drink it in place
of sweetened calorie-containing beverages,
said Davy, who is with Virginia Tech in
Blacksburg, Va.
Diet soda pop and other beverages with
artificial sweeteners may also help people
reduce their calorie intake and lose weight,
Davy said. However, she advised against
using beverages sweetened with sugar and
high-fructose corn syrup because they are
high in calories. A 12-ounce can of regular
soda pop, for instance, contains about 10
teaspoons of sugar.
Davy noted that that nobody knows exactly
how much water people should drink daily.
The Institute of Medicine, an agency of The
National Academies, which advises the
Federal Government on science, says that
most healthy people can simply let thirst be
their guide. It does not specify exact
requirements for water, but set general
recommendations for women at about 9 cups of
fluids — from all beverages including water
— each day, and men at about 13 cups of
fluids.
And it is possible to drink too much water,
a situation that can lead to a rare, but
serious, condition known as water
intoxication, Davy pointed out.
The Institute for Public Health and Water
Research, a non -profit, independent science
and education organization whose mission is
to improve public health through the
consumption of quality drinking water,
funded the study.
The American Chemical Society is a
non-profit organization chartered by the
U.S. Congress. With more than 161,000
members, ACS is the world’s largest
scientific society and a global leader in
providing access to chemistry-related
research through its multiple databases,
peer-reviewed journals and scientific
conferences. Its main offices are in
Washington, D.C., and Columbus, Ohio.