scholarly journals Changes in Body Composition and Efficiency of Food Utilization for Growth in Young Adult Female Rats Before, During and After a Period of Food Restriction

1979 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 41 ◽  
Author(s):  
VJ Williams ◽  
W Senior

Changes in body composition were studied in three groups of young adult female rats; the treatments were (1) ad libitum food intake to obtain normal growth, (2) restricted food intake to cause body weight loss, and (3) restricted followed by ad libitum food intake to obtain recovery of lost body weight.

1978 ◽  
Vol 31 (6) ◽  
pp. 593 ◽  
Author(s):  
VJ Williams ◽  
W Senior

The apparent digestibilities of organic matter, protein, lipid and carbohydrate of a laboratory chow were determined in young adult female rats fed ad libitum, after losing 40-50%body weight and prolonging the loss for up to 15 weeks, and while recovering the lost body weight during .. a second period of ad libitum food intake.


Author(s):  
Trina Sengupta ◽  
Sutirtha Ghosh ◽  
Archana Gaur T. ◽  
Prasunpriya Nayak

Background: Puberty is a developmental transition in which an estrogenic surge occurs, mediating the release of xenoestrogens, like aluminium. Aluminium’s effect on anxiety in rodents at the different developmental stages is inconsistent. Aims: This study aimed at investigating the effect of the metalloestrogenic property of aluminium on anxiety-like behavioral changes in prepubertal and young adult female rats. Objective: Considering this aim, our objective was to evaluate the anxiety-like behavior by the elevated plus maze in prepubertal and young adult female rats with or without acute exposure to aluminium. Methods: To address this property of aluminium, 5mg/Kg body weight (Al-5) and 10 mg/Kg body weight (Al-10) of aluminium was administered intraperitoneally to female rats at two developmental stages, prepubertal (PP; n = 8 for each dose) and young adult (YA; n = 6 for each dose) for two weeks. Post-treatment, three days behavioral assessment of the rats was done employing elevated plus maze. Results: Reduced escape latency was seen in Al-5, Al-10 pre-pubertal rats, and Al-5 young-adult rats on day 3. A significant reduction in open arm time was seen in the Al-5 young-adult rats. Aluminium treatment in the pre-pubertal rats reduced their head dipping and grooming. Reduced sniffing, head dipping, and stretch-attended posture in the treated young-adult female rats showed that they had impaired risk-taking tendency. Conclusion: Differential effect on the anxiety-like behavior in the pre-pubertal and young-adult female rats might be due to the metalloestrogenic property of aluminium, acting differently on the two age groups.


1988 ◽  
Vol 255 (4) ◽  
pp. R616-R621 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. O. Hill ◽  
J. C. Anderson ◽  
D. Lin ◽  
F. Yakubu

The effects of differences in meal frequency on body weight, body composition, and energy expenditure were studied in mildly food-restricted male rats. Two groups were fed approximately 80% of usual food intake (as periodically determined in a group of ad libitum fed controls) for 131 days. One group received all of its food in 2 meals/day and the other received all of its food in 10-12 meals/day. The two groups did not differ in food intake, body weight, body composition, food efficiency (carcass energy gain per amount of food eaten), or energy expenditure at any time during the study. Both food-restricted groups had a lower food intake, body weight gain, and energy expenditure than a group of ad libitum-fed controls. In conclusion, these results suggest that amount of food eaten, but not the pattern with which it is ingested, has a major influence on energy balance during mild food restriction.


1954 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 363-367 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. MARY COTES ◽  
B. A. CROSS

SUMMARY Changes in body weight and food intake were studied for 14 days post partum in primiparous rats. The growth increments in suckled rats with galactophores cut to prevent milk withdrawal and in normally lactating rats were greater than in unsuckled controls. The growth increments in rats with galactophores cut were accompanied by parallel increases in food intake. Injection of 3 i.u. prolactin daily did not reproduce these changes in body weight and food intake in non-suckled rats. The results suggest that the main factor in the extra growth of lactating rats is an increased food intake in excess of the metabolic needs for milk secretion induced by the stimulus of suckling.


Hypertension ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 64 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodrigo O Maranon ◽  
Roberta Lima ◽  
Jussara M do Carmo ◽  
Alexander Da Silva ◽  
John E Hall ◽  
...  

Women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) are characterized by hyperandrogenemia, hirsutism, infertility, and enlarged cystic ovaries. Obesity and hypertension are also frequently found in women with PCOS, although the mechanisms responsible for the elevated blood pressure (BP) are unclear. Thus we tested the hypothesis that the melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4R), known to contribute to obesity hypertension in males, contributes to the elevated BP in hyperandrogenemic female rats, a model of PCOS. Female Sprague Dawley rats (4 wks) were implanted with dihydrotestosterone (DHT; 7.5mg/90 days sc) or placebo pellets (PL) (n=5/grp) and aged to 12 wks. Body weight and food intake (whether rats were pair fed or had ad libitum access) were measured daily. Two wks following implantation of radiotelemetry transmitters and intracerebroventricular cannulae, baseline mean arterial pressure (MAP) was measured for 5 days; then rats received MC3/4R antagonist, SHU-9119 (SHU; 1 nmol/h ICV) or vehicle for 7 days and MAP was recorded. DHT-treated rats had higher body weight and MAP than PL rats (BW: PL: 266.0±8.7; DHT: 348.5±10.4 g, p<0.01; MAP: PL rats: 102±5; DHT: 114±5 mmHg, p<0.05). SHU significantly increased food intake and body weights in both placebo (PL) and DHT-treated rats fed ad libitum (PL: 379.2±28.5; DHT: 451/3±7.3 g, p<0.01 DHT vs PL; 0.01 SHU vs control), but had no effect on MAP compared to controls (PL: 104±5; HAF rats: 114±5 mmHg; p<0.05, HAF vs PL; p=NS, SHU vs controls). However, in other rats, when pair fed with little increase in body weight (PL: 253.7±2.0, SHU: 261.0±0.6, p<0.05; DHT: 306.7±2.6, SHU: 316.7±1.5 g, p<0.05), SHU decreased MAP in DHT treated rats but not placebo controls (PL rats: 102±1, SHU: 103±2 mmHg; p=NS; DHT rats: 110±1 vs. SHU: 97±1 mmHg; p<0.001). Thus MC4R antagonist reduces MAP in DHT-treated rats only when food intake and body weight are controlled. These data suggest that activation of MC4R contributes to elevated BP in our model of PCOS and may also contribute to the elevated BP in women with PCOS. Supported by NIH R01HL66072, P01HL05971 and AHA 14POST18640015.


1999 ◽  
Vol 81 (2) ◽  
pp. 115-120 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter W. Emery ◽  
Ali R. Bosagh Zadeh ◽  
Anna Wasylyk

The effect of previous malnutrition on the metabolic response to surgical hysterectomy was investigated in adult female rats. Malnutrition was achieved by feeding a 20 g protein/kg diet and restricting food intake to 50 % of normal. This dietary regimen was maintained for 3 weeks before surgery and for 4 d after surgery. Unoperated control rats were pair-fed with the hysterectomized rats after surgery. Energy balance was measured by the comparative carcass technique and, in a second experiment, urinary N excretion was measured. Surgery caused energy expenditure to increase by 37 % in ad libitum-fed rats but in malnourished rats it increased by only 22 %. Urinary N excretion rose immediately after surgery. In the ad libitum-fed rats it was on average 85 % greater in hysterectomized rats than controls for the first 3 d after surgery, whereas in the restricted rats it was 74 % greater on the first day and not significantly elevated thereafter. Thus, malnutrition attenuated the metabolic response to surgery but did not abolish it completely.


2007 ◽  
Vol 293 (4) ◽  
pp. E1112-E1117 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan D. Roth ◽  
Heather Hughes ◽  
Todd Coffey ◽  
Holly Maier ◽  
James L. Trevaskis ◽  
...  

Amylin infusion reduces food intake and slows body weight gain in rodents. In obese male rats, amylin (but not pair feeding) caused a preferential reduction of fat mass with protein preservation despite equal body weight loss in amylin-treated (fed ad libitum) and pair-fed rats. In the present study, the effect of prior or concurrent food restriction on the ability of amylin to cause weight loss was evaluated. Retired female breeder rats were maintained on a high-fat diet (40% fat) for 9 wk. Prior to drug treatment, rats were either fed ad libitum or food restricted for 10 days to lose 5% of their starting body weight. They were then subdivided into treatment groups that received either vehicle or amylin (100 μg·kg−1·day−1 via subcutaneous minipump) and placed under either a restricted or ad libitum feeding schedule (for a total of 8 treatment arms). Amylin 1) significantly reduced body weight compared with vehicle under all treatment conditions, except in always restricted animals, 2) significantly decreased percent body fat in all groups, and 3) preserved lean mass in all groups. These results indicate that amylin's anorexigenic and fat-specific weight loss properties can be extended to a variety of nutritive states in female rats.


2012 ◽  
Vol 47 (No. 10 - 11) ◽  
pp. 315-322 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. Šefčíková ◽  
Š. Mozeš

In the present paper the effect of postnatal undernutrition on feeding behaviour has been evaluated in mature female Wistar rats subjected to food restriction a) during the suckling period, i. e. up to day 15 (SR), b) during the weaning period from day 15 to 30 (WR), c) throughout 30 days post partum (SWR) and d) during adulthood, i.e. from day 60&ndash;75 of life (AR). In comparison with the ad libitum fed controls (C), the lactating mothers and the pups of the food-restricted groups were allowed free access to food for only two hours daily. In experimental groups this restriction was then changed to an ad libitum regime. On day 90 food intake was evalu-ated daily in five 20 min lasting sessions after 23 h of fasting in group-housed and single-housed rats exposed to their home as well as to their experimental environment. The significantly decreased body weight found on day 30 and 90 in females coming from litters of restrictedly fed mothers, as compared with those fed ad libitum, showed that these animals were considerably undernourished. Appetitive motivation increased in those groups of females that had been exposed to a restricted feeding regime during their infant period but remained unaffected in females restrictedly fed during their adult age. In comparison with the ad libitum fed controls and AR groups, significantly increased mean food intake was observed in all postnatally underfed groups (P &lt; 0.001). The greatest inclination to hyperphagia and qualitative changes in feeding behaviour were observed in SWR females whose feeding regime was restricted for the longest time, i. e. during the suckling and the weaning period, as compared to groups with shorter food restriction. These animals showed hyperphagia even in the new environment regardless whether the whole group or only one female was tested. Our results reveal a) a determinant influence of the feeding regime of the animals at early age (41%) while environmental and social factors represent only about 17% and 4%, respectively and that b) changes in feeding habits in adult female rats may significantly depend on the length of postnatal undernutrition.


1984 ◽  
Vol 247 (1) ◽  
pp. R106-R113 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. I. Friedman ◽  
P. E. Sawchenko

Sectioning the hepatic branch of the anterior abdominal vagal trunk attenuated but did not abolish the normal nocturnal bias in the day-night distribution of food intake in female rats. Neither total daily food intake nor body weight was affected by hepatic vagotomy. This effect appeared to be specific to the hepatic branch of the nerve because sectioning the remaining (gastric and celiac) abdominal vagal branches did not influence daily feeding rhythms and appeared to be specific to feeding behavior, because the day-night rhythms of drinking behavior and wheel-running activity were not affected by hepatic vagotomy. In male rats, hepatic vagotomy also produced an increase in daytime food consumption but without commensurate reduction in nighttime eating. As a result, male rats with hepatic vagotomy displayed a modest chronic hyperphagia and body weight gain, which was associated primarily with increased linear growth. The effect of nerve section on daytime food intake was expressed quite rapidly. Daytime food intake increased within 8 h after hepatic vagotomy, which was produced at light onset by pulling on a previously implanted suture. Collectively, these results demonstrate that hepatic vagotomy changes daily feeding rhythms and suggest that the liver and perhaps its vagal innervation are involved in the control of ad libitum eating behavior.


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