Ontbijtgranen
voor tieners om slank te blijven.*
Een
granenontbijt met veel vezels tijdens de tienerjaren voorkomt overgewicht.
Tieners
die minstens 3 keer in de week een granenontbijt nemen blijken als ze 20 zijn
geen overgewicht te hebben (BMI tot 25). Zij die niet ontbijten hebben een
duidelijk overgewicht met een BMI van 27 of meer.
Morning
Cereal Helps Girls Stay Slim
Study finds a high-fiber breakfast can benefit teens.
-- A bowl of high-fiber
cereal each morning may help weight-conscious girls stay slim, a new study finds.
Teenage girls who ate cereal for breakfast three times
a week or more were more likely to maintain a healthy body
mass index
(BMI, a ratio of weight to height) over a 10-year span, the researchers reported.
Among girls who didn't eat breakfast cereal frequently, the risk of being
overweight increased by 13 percent.
"This is a study of
girls during adolescence, from 9 to 19, which is an age range that has not been
well studied. This is an age range when a lot of girls put on a lot of weight,"
said lead researcher Bruce Barton, president of the Maryland Medical Research
Institute in Baltimore.
The study was funded by
the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), with support from General
Mills, the cereal manufacturer.
The findings appear in
the September issue of the Journal of the American Dietetic Association.
Using data from the
NHLBI's Growth Health Study, Barton and his team tracked the diets and weight of
nearly 2,400 girls beginning when they were between 9 and 10 years of age.
They asked the girls to
complete three-day food records -- including foods eaten at breakfast -- at
various times over the years and they recorded the girls' weight as measured by
BMI.
Breakfast cereal consumption predicted a lower body
mass index as the girls moved through adolescence. Those who ate breakfast
cereal three days a week or more had a BMI of under 25 -- considered healthy --
while those who never ate it averaged a BMI of 27. (For comparison, a 5-foot,
7-inch woman weighing 160 pounds has a BMI of about 25; obesity
is defined as a BMI of 30 or more.)
"Skipping breakfast
really came out [as a predictor] of weight gain," Barton said. "I
don't know if anyone realized the magnitude of breakfast skipping. By age 19
almost 45 percent were skipping breakfast."
What's the magic?
"Cereal is fairly
high in fiber," Barton said. "Fiber fills you up so you don't eat as
much at lunch. Probably the other foods you eat with cereal, such as milk and
orange juice, help."
"Milk drinking and calcium have been related to
more fat
burning," he added. "A lot of cereal is fortified with vitamins,
minerals, folic
acid, calcium and iron. So it creates a much healthier
nutrition profile."
The researchers also
found that the fat content in the girls' non-cereal breakfasts was 60 percent
higher, on average, than that of breakfasts that included cereal.
"Cereal eating is
almost a marker for a healthy lifestyle," Barton said. "It sets you up
for the day, so you don't overeat."
Another expert, Alicia
Moag-Stahlberg, a dietitian and executive director of Action for Healthy Kids, a
partnership of organizations focused on the childhood obesity epidemic,
applauded the study. "It's not showing cause and effect" between
cereal eating and weight control, she noted, "but there is synergy with
healthy behavior."
According to
Moag-Stahlberg, the study provides "good evidence to show girls, look, you
will do better if you eat better and even better if you have cereal."
But what kind of cereal?
"Choose high fiber
-- one with three or four grams or more of fiber per serving," advised Amy
Jamieson-Petonic, a Cleveland dietitian and a spokeswoman for the American
Dietetic Association.
If your teenager balks, preferring a sugary, low-fiber cereal, Jamieson-Petonic suggests small changes. "Mix the cereal half and half for a while," she said. ( Sept. 2005)