Source: AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH SERVICE submitted to
THE SHINE STUDY: SUPPORTING HEALTH BY INTEGRATING NUTRITION AND EXERCISE
Sponsoring Institution
Agricultural Research Service/USDA
Project Status
ACTIVE
Funding Source
Reporting Frequency
Annual
Accession No.
0424437
Grant No.
(N/A)
Cumulative Award Amt.
(N/A)
Proposal No.
(N/A)
Multistate No.
(N/A)
Project Start Date
Feb 1, 2013
Project End Date
Mar 31, 2014
Grant Year
(N/A)
Program Code
[(N/A)]- (N/A)
Recipient Organization
AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH SERVICE
800 BUCHANAN ST, RM 2020
BERKELEY,CA 94710-1105
Performing Department
(N/A)
Non Technical Summary
(N/A)
Animal Health Component
60%
Research Effort Categories
Basic
30%
Applied
60%
Developmental
10%
Classification

Knowledge Area (KA)Subject of Investigation (SOI)Field of Science (FOS)Percent
70260101010100%
Goals / Objectives
Compared to a standard diet and exercise intervention, mindfulness based stress reduction and eating behavior in obese people will lead to improved eating patterns and metabolic health.
Project Methods
A randomized, controlled trial to compare a standard diet and exercise intervention for obesity (BMI 30 to 45) to an enhanced version will be conducted. The enhanced version includes mindfulness-based eating awareness and stress reduction components. The intervention period consists of 16, 2-2.5 hour weekly sessions over 22 weeks. Plasma and serum samples are obtained at baseline, 3, 6, 12, and 18 months. Additional measures include: questionnaires (stress, mood, eating behavior, 24 hour diet recall), diurnal salivary cortisol, pre-post intervention Trier Social Stress test for stress reactivity with Autonomic Nervous System and cortisol responses, gene expression in leukocytes, and fat distribution (by MRI). In order to address one of the primary questions, whether group assignment (standard diet & exercise vs. stress reduction + standard diet & exercise) and changes in stress and stress reactivity alter biomarkers of inflammation and insulin resistance, a series of selected assays, using batched serum/plasma specimens collected at the said times across the intervention, will be conducted to determine markers of metabolic (e.g., insulin; lipoprotein fractionation) and inflammatory (IL-6; IL-10; HS-CRP) status.

Progress 10/01/12 to 09/30/13

Outputs
Progress Report Objectives (from AD-416): Compared to a standard diet and exercise intervention, mindfulness based stress reduction and eating behavior in obese people will lead to improved eating patterns and metabolic health. Approach (from AD-416): A randomized, controlled trial to compare a standard diet and exercise intervention for obesity (BMI 30 to 45) to an enhanced version will be conducted. The enhanced version includes mindfulness-based eating awareness and stress reduction components. The intervention period consists of 16, 2-2.5 hour weekly sessions over 22 weeks. Plasma and serum samples are obtained at baseline, 3, 6, 12, and 18 months. Additional measures include: questionnaires (stress, mood, eating behavior, 24 hour diet recall), diurnal salivary cortisol, pre-post intervention Trier Social Stress test for stress reactivity with Autonomic Nervous System and cortisol responses, gene expression in leukocytes, and fat distribution (by MRI). In order to address one of the primary questions, whether group assignment (standard diet & exercise vs. stress reduction + standard diet & exercise) and changes in stress and stress reactivity alter biomarkers of inflammation and insulin resistance, a series of selected assays, using batched serum/plasma specimens collected at the said times across the intervention, will be conducted to determine markers of metabolic (e.g., insulin; lipoprotein fractionation) and inflammatory (IL-6; IL-10; HS-CRP) status. This research relates to objective 1 of the inhouse project, �Evaluate mediators of behavior change critical for adopting a healthy diet by investigating interrelationships between psychosocial stress, nutritional behavior and metabolism in humans and animal models". Biochemical assays have begun and are expected to be completed in September of 2013.

Impacts
(N/A)

Publications