Nutrients (Mar 2023)

Indirect Calorimetry to Measure Metabolic Rate and Energy Expenditure in Psychiatric Populations: A Systematic Review

  • Joshua Daniel Di Vincenzo,
  • Liam O’Brien,
  • Ira Jacobs,
  • Muhammad Youshay Jawad,
  • Felicia Ceban,
  • Shakila Meshkat,
  • Hartej Gill,
  • Aniqa Tabassum,
  • Lee Phan,
  • Sebastian Badulescu,
  • Joshua Daniel Rosenblat,
  • Roger S. McIntyre,
  • Rodrigo B. Mansur

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15071686
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 7
p. 1686

Abstract

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Psychiatric and metabolic disorders are highly comorbid and the relationship between these disorders is bidirectional. The mechanisms underlying the association between psychiatric and metabolic disorders are presently unclear, which warrants investigation into the dynamics of the interplay between metabolism, substrate utilization, and energy expenditure in psychiatric populations, and how these constructs compare to those in healthy controls. Indirect calorimetry (IC) methods are a reliable, minimally invasive means for assessing metabolic rate and substrate utilization in humans. This review synthesizes the extant literature on the use of IC on resting metabolism in psychiatric populations to investigate the interaction between psychiatric and metabolic functioning. Consistently, resting energy expenditures and/or substrate utilization values were significantly different between psychiatric and healthy populations in the studies contained in this review. Furthermore, resting energy expenditure values were systematically overestimated when derived from predictive equations, compared to when measured by IC, in psychiatric populations. High heterogeneity between study populations (e.g., differing diagnoses and drug regimens) and methodologies (e.g., differing posture, time of day, and fasting status at measurement) impeded the synthesis of results. Standardized IC protocols would benefit this line of research by enabling meta-analyses, revealing trends within and between different psychiatric disorders.

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