We provide an overview of studies on seafood intake in relation to obesity, insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes. Overweight and obesity development is for most individuals the result of years of positive energy balance. Evidence from intervention trials and animal studies suggests that frequent intake of lean seafood, as compared with intake of terrestrial meats, reduces energy intake by 4–9 %, sufficient to prevent a positive energy balance and obesity. At equal energy intake, lean seafood reduces fasting and postprandial risk markers of insulin resistance, and improves insulin sensitivity in insulin-resistant adults. Energy restriction combined with intake of lean and fatty seafood seems to increase weight loss. Marine n-3 PUFA are pro...
Background: The effects of fish consumption and n-3 fatty acids on type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) h...
Background Fish consumption may have a role in reducing the prevalence of metabolic ...
To access publisher full text version of this article. Please click on the hyperlink in Additional L...
Background: A Westernised lifestyle, which involves a high-energy diet and reduced physical activity...
OBJECTIVE — To investigate the association between fish and seafood intake and new-onset type 2 diab...
Seafood as a whole food is highly nutritious. Benefits to human health associated with the consumpti...
The effects of fish consumption and n-3 fatty acids on type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) have recently...
Background: Dietary interventions are critical in the prevention of metabolic diseases. Yet, the eff...
This article belongs to the Special Issue Fish and Meat Consumption: Risks and Benefits.The metaboli...
Pioneer research in the nineteen sixties and seventies indicated that the consumption of fish was as...
OBJECTIVE — To investigate the relation between total fish, type of fish (lean and fatty), and eicos...
In recent years, in developed countries and around the world, lifestyle-related diseases have become...
Objective: To investigate the relation between total fish, type of fish (lean and fatty), and EPA&am...
The metabolic effects associated with intake of different dietary protein sources are not well chara...
Metabolic syndrome (MetS) is a cluster of risk factors for cardiovascular disease that include abdom...
Background: The effects of fish consumption and n-3 fatty acids on type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) h...
Background Fish consumption may have a role in reducing the prevalence of metabolic ...
To access publisher full text version of this article. Please click on the hyperlink in Additional L...
Background: A Westernised lifestyle, which involves a high-energy diet and reduced physical activity...
OBJECTIVE — To investigate the association between fish and seafood intake and new-onset type 2 diab...
Seafood as a whole food is highly nutritious. Benefits to human health associated with the consumpti...
The effects of fish consumption and n-3 fatty acids on type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) have recently...
Background: Dietary interventions are critical in the prevention of metabolic diseases. Yet, the eff...
This article belongs to the Special Issue Fish and Meat Consumption: Risks and Benefits.The metaboli...
Pioneer research in the nineteen sixties and seventies indicated that the consumption of fish was as...
OBJECTIVE — To investigate the relation between total fish, type of fish (lean and fatty), and eicos...
In recent years, in developed countries and around the world, lifestyle-related diseases have become...
Objective: To investigate the relation between total fish, type of fish (lean and fatty), and EPA&am...
The metabolic effects associated with intake of different dietary protein sources are not well chara...
Metabolic syndrome (MetS) is a cluster of risk factors for cardiovascular disease that include abdom...
Background: The effects of fish consumption and n-3 fatty acids on type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) h...
Background Fish consumption may have a role in reducing the prevalence of metabolic ...
To access publisher full text version of this article. Please click on the hyperlink in Additional L...