Abstract

The maintenance of a stable body weight and composition over time depends, amongst other factors, on the equilibrium in the balance between the intake and metabolic utilisation of the macronutrients in the diet. The organism appears to give greater priority to the adjustment of the oxidation of glucose and amino acids in relation to their ingestion than to the maintenance of the balance of fats. The system of homeostatic self-regulation of the lipid balance is not very efficient, besides which the capacity of storing of energy reserves in the adipose tissue is almost unlimited. Besides, fat appears to confer palatability and flavour on foodstuffs, which could lead to greater consumption. Excessive ingestion of fat is one of the factors that is most frequently associated with a high prevalence of obesity. Some studies indicate that some obese subjects show a reduced capacity for oxidising fatty acids. In this context, the reduction of lipid ingestion is one of the strategies most frequently recommended in the prevention of the epidemic of obesity. However, the role of the lipid intake of the diet in the prevalence and subsequent treatment of obesity is nowadays the subject of scientific controversy.

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