1985
DOI: 10.2105/ajph.75.10.1190
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Multidisciplinary treatment of obesity with a protein-sparing modified fast: results in 668 outpatients.

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Cited by 72 publications
(50 citation statements)
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“…In one study [15], weight loss after 17 weeks of treatment was 21 kg versus 10.2 kg in 3.5 weeks in the present study. Another smaller study [34] found results are closer to ours: 15 patients lost 14.4 kg after 6 weeks of PSMF with lactalbumin-derived protein dosed at 60 g/day.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 39%
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“…In one study [15], weight loss after 17 weeks of treatment was 21 kg versus 10.2 kg in 3.5 weeks in the present study. Another smaller study [34] found results are closer to ours: 15 patients lost 14.4 kg after 6 weeks of PSMF with lactalbumin-derived protein dosed at 60 g/day.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 39%
“…With regard to the complications of KEN treatment including asthenia and mild lightheadedness, which have also been reported with the PSMF diet [15], the symptoms were easily relieved by increasing salt intake [15]. …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Additionally, enteral feeding often fails to provide an adequate amount of calories and nutrients in the critically ill population due to patient intolerance of appropriate tube feeding volumes; this is especially true among obese patients, who are at increased risk for having conditions (see above) predisposing to enteral feeding failure. These are examples of unintentional failure to provide adequate nutrition, whereas ‘hypocaloric feeding’, refers specifically to permissive underfeeding of a patient and is derived from the classical protein-sparing modified fast [58]. There is no standard method for hypocaloric feeding, but generally involves providing 30–70% estimated daily caloric needs in conjunction with a higher proportion of protein calories (often 50–60% of total calories) in order to minimize glucose loads while sparing lean body mass from catabolism.…”
Section: Hypocaloric Feedingmentioning
confidence: 99%