A Western-Style Diet Influences Ingestive Behavior and Glycemic Control in a Rat Model of Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass Surgery
C. Warner Hoornenborg, Edit Somogyi, Jan E. Bruggink, Christina N. Boyle, Thomas A. Lutz, Marloes Emous, André P. van Beek, Gertjan van Dijk

TL;DR
This study shows that diet after gastric bypass surgery affects weight loss, eating patterns, and blood sugar control in rats.
Contribution
The study reveals how diet type interacts with gastric bypass surgery to influence ingestive behavior and glycemic outcomes in rats.
Findings
Rats on a Western-style diet showed enhanced weight loss after surgery but had similar body weights to low-fat diet rats post-surgery.
Gastric bypass surgery improved glycemic control but its effects were influenced by diet, especially in high-fat diet groups.
Diet significantly impacted meal patterns, glucose regulation, and beta-cell sensitivity after surgery.
Abstract
Background: Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) surgery results in weight reduction and decreased energy intake and can ameliorate type 2 diabetes. These beneficial effects are usually attributed to changes in hunger and satiety and relatively rapid improvements in glycemic control, but these effects may depend on dietary adherence. The aim of this study is to investigate the relatively early effects of RYGB surgery on weight reduction (by focusing on eating patterns) and glycemic control in rats subjected to a healthy maintenance diet or an unhealthy Western-style diet. Methods: Rats were fed a high-fat diet with added sucrose (HF/S) or a low-fat (LF) diet. Body weight, high-resolution tracking of meal-related parameters, and glucose regulation after overnight fasting and during a mixed meal tolerance test (MMTT; 2 mL sweet/condensed milk) were measured before and after RYGB (RYGB+) or…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBariatric Surgery and Outcomes · Diet and metabolism studies · Diabetes Treatment and Management
