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Food intake by brain-injured humans who are in the chronic phase of recovery
24
Citations
30
References
1993
Year
NutritionTraumatic Brain InjuryNeuropsychologyFood IntakeNeurological RehabilitationBrain NutritionCognitive RehabilitationBrain-injured SubjectsBrain Injury RehabilitationSocial SciencesObesityChronic PhaseBody CompositionBrain InjuryNeurologyNeurorehabilitationNeuropathologyAppetite ControlRehabilitationFunctional RecoveryNutritional NeuroscienceNeuroscienceConcussionBrain-injured HumansMedicine
This study examined whether survivors of traumatic brain injury differ from normal, non-injured controls in the regulation of food intake in their natural environment. Caregivers of 20 brain-injured subjects and 20 controls recorded in diaries: caloric intake, time of meals, subjective hunger ratings, and the number of persons present during meals for 7 consecutive days. Brain-injured subjects ate larger meals and more total (overall) calories per day compared with controls. In addition, the presence of other people during a meal, or social factor, was a significant predictor of meal size for the control subjects, but not for the brain-injured subjects. Brain-injured subjects also differed from control subjects in their response to pre-meal stomach content.
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