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      A high-protein diet enhances satiety without conditioned taste aversion in the rat.

      Physiology & Behavior
      Animals, Animals, Newborn, growth & development, psychology, Avoidance Learning, Behavior, Animal, drug effects, Choice Behavior, Conditioning (Psychology), Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Feeding Behavior, Food Preferences, Grooming, Male, Milk Proteins, administration & dosage, Motor Activity, Rats, Rats, Wistar, Rest, Satiety Response, Taste

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          Abstract

          In order to determine the respective roles of conditioned food aversion, satiety and palatability, we studied behavioral responses to a 50% total milk protein diet, compared with those to a normal protein diet containing 14% total milk protein. Different paradigms were employed, including meal pattern analysis, two-choice testing, flavor testing, a behavioral satiety sequence (BSS) and taste reactivity. Our experiments showed that only behavioral and food intake parameters were disturbed during the first day when an animal ate the high-protein (P50) diet, and that most parameters returned to baseline values as soon as the second day of P50. Rats adapted to P50 did not acquire a conditioned taste aversion (CTA) but exhibited satiety, and a normal BSS. The initial reduction in high-protein diet intake appeared to result from the lower palatability of the food combined with the satiety effect of the high-protein diet and the delay required for metabolic adaptation to the higher protein level.

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