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Dive into the research topics where Jacolene Kroff is active.

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Featured researches published by Jacolene Kroff.


Appetite | 2015

Electrophysiological indices of visual food cue-reactivity. Differences in obese, overweight and normal weight women

David John Hume; Fleur M. Howells; H. G. Laurie Rauch; Jacolene Kroff; Estelle V. Lambert

Heightened food cue-reactivity in overweight and obese individuals has been related to aberrant functioning of neural circuitry implicated in motivational behaviours and reward-seeking. Here we explore the neurophysiology of visual food cue-reactivity in overweight and obese women, as compared with normal weight women, by assessing differences in cortical arousal and attentional processing elicited by food and neutral image inserts in a Stroop task with record of EEG spectral band power and ERP responses. Results show excess right frontal (F8) and left central (C3) relative beta band activity in overweight women during food task performance (indicative of pronounced early visual cue-reactivity) and blunted prefrontal (Fp1 and Fp2) theta band activity in obese women during office task performance (suggestive of executive dysfunction). Moreover, as compared to normal weight women, food images elicited greater right parietal (P4) ERP P200 amplitude in overweight women (denoting pronounced early attentional processing) and shorter right parietal (P4) ERP P300 latency in obese women (signifying enhanced and efficient maintained attentional processing). Differential measures of cortical arousal and attentional processing showed significant correlations with self-reported eating behaviour and body shape dissatisfaction, as well as with objectively assessed percent fat mass. The findings of the present study suggest that heightened food cue-reactivity can be neurophysiologically measured, that different neural circuits are implicated in the pathogenesis of overweight and obesity, and that EEG techniques may serve useful in the identification of endophenotypic markers associated with an increased risk of externally mediated food consumption.


Nutrition & Metabolism | 2013

Fasting substrate oxidation in relation to habitual dietary fat intake and insulin resistance in non- diabetic women: a case for metabolic flexibility?

Madelaine Carstens; Julia H. Goedecke; Lara R. Dugas; Juliet Evans; Jacolene Kroff; Naomi S. Levitt; Estelle V. Lambert

BackgroundMetabolic flexibility described as “the capacity of the body to match fuel oxidation to fuel availability” has been implicated in insulin resistance. We examined fasting substrate oxidation in relation to dietary macronutrient intake, and markers of insulin resistance in otherwise healthy women, with and without a family history of diabetes mellitus (FH DM).MethodsWe measured body composition (dual x-ray absorptiometry), visceral and subcutaneous adipose tissue area (VAT, SAT, using Computerised Tomography), fasting [glucose], [insulin], [free fatty acids], [blood lipids], insulin resistance (HOMA-IR), resting energy expenditure (REE), respiratory exchange ratio(RER) and self-reported physical activity in a convenience sample of 180 women (18-45 yrs). A food frequency questionnaire was used to assess energy intake (EI) and calculate the RER: Food Quotient (FQ) ratio. Only those with EI:REE (1.05 -2.28) were included (N=140). Insulin resistance was defined HOMA-IR (>1.95).ResultsThe Insulin Resistant (IR) group had higher energy, carbohydrate and protein intakes (p < 0.05) and lower PA levels than Insulin Sensitive (IS) group (P < 0.001), but there were no differences in RER or RER:FQ between groups. However, nearly 50% of the variance in HOMA-IR was explained by age, body fat %, VAT, RER:FQ and FH DM (adjusted R2 = 0.50, p < 0.0001). Insulin-resistant women, and those with FH DM had a higher RER:FQ than their counterparts (p < 0.01), independent of body fat % or distribution.ConclusionIn these apparently healthy, weight-stable women, insulin resistance and FH DM were associated with lower fat oxidation in relation to dietary fat intake, suggesting lower metabolic flexibility.


European Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 2013

Prediction of fat-free mass using bioelectrical impedance analysis in young adults from five populations of African origin.

Amy Luke; Pascal Bovet; Terrence Forrester; Estelle V. Lambert; Jacob Plange-Rhule; Lara R. Dugas; Ramon Durazo-Arvizu; Jacolene Kroff; Whitney N. Richie; Dale A. Schoeller

Background/objectives:Bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) is used in population and clinical studies as a technique for estimating body composition. Because of significant under-representation in existing literature, we sought to develop and validate predictive equation(s) for BIA for studies in populations of African origin.Subjects/methods:Among five cohorts of the Modeling the Epidemiologic Transition Study, height, weight, waist circumference and body composition, using isotope dilution, were measured in 362 adults, ages 25–45 with mean body mass indexes ranging from 24 to 32. BIA measures of resistance and reactance were measured using tetrapolar placement of electrodes and the same model of analyzer across sites (BIA 101Q, RJL Systems). Multiple linear regression analysis was used to develop equations for predicting fat-free mass (FFM), as measured by isotope dilution; covariates included sex, age, waist, reactance and height2/resistance, along with dummy variables for each site. Developed equations were then tested in a validation sample; FFM predicted by previously published equations were tested in the total sample.Results:A site-combined equation and site-specific equations were developed. The mean differences between FFM (reference) and FFM predicted by the study-derived equations were between 0.4 and 0.6 kg (that is, 1% difference between the actual and predicted FFM), and the measured and predicted values were highly correlated. The site-combined equation performed slightly better than the site-specific equations and the previously published equations.Conclusions:Relatively small differences exist between BIA equations to estimate FFM, whether study-derived or published equations, although the site-combined equation performed slightly better than others. The study-derived equations provide an important tool for research in these understudied populations.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2017

The metabolic effects of a commercially available chicken peri-peri (African bird’s eye chilli) meal in overweight individuals

Jacolene Kroff; David John Hume; Paula R. Pienaar; Ross Tucker; Estelle V. Lambert; Dale E. Rae

A growing body of evidence suggests that capsaicin ingestion may lead to desirable metabolic outcomes; however, the results in humans are equivocal. Whether or not benefits may be gained from ingestion of capsaicin via a commercially available meal has not been determined. The objectives of this randomised, cross-over intervention study were to compare the 2 h postprandial effects of a standard commercially prepared meal containing chilli (HOT, 5·82 mg total capsaicinoids) with a similar meal with no chilli (CON, 25 kg/m2 and a waist circumference >94 cm (men) or 80 cm (women), were studied. Participants had normal glucose tolerance and were accustomed, but were not regular chilli eaters. A paired t test indicated that insulin AUC was smaller following the HOT meal (P=0·002). Similarly, there was a tendency for glucose AUC to be reduced following the HOT meal (P=0·056). No discernable effects of the HOT meal were observed on metabolic rate, core temperature, hs-CRP concentrations and endothelial-dependent microvascular reactivity. The results from this study indicate that a standard restaurant meal containing a relatively small dose of capsaicin delivered via African birds eye chilli, which is currently available to the public, results in lower postprandial insulin concentrations in overweight individuals, compared with the same meal without chilli.


Eating Behaviors | 2015

Cognitive control over visual food cue saliency is greater in reduced-overweight/obese but not in weight relapsed women: An EEG study.

David John Hume; Fleur M. Howells; David Karpul; H. G. Laurie Rauch; Jacolene Kroff; Estelle V. Lambert

OBJECTIVE Poor weight management may relate to a reduction in neurobehavioural control over food intake and heightened reactivity of the brains neural reward pathways. Here we explore the neurophysiology of food-related visual cue processing in weight reduced and weight relapsed women by assessing differences in cortical arousal and attentional processing using a food-Stroop paradigm. METHODS 51 women were recruited into 4 groups: reduced-weight participants (RED, n=14) compared to BMI matched low-weight controls (LW-CTL, n=18); and weight relapsed participants (REL, n=10) compared to BMI matched high-weight controls (HW-CTL, n=9). Eating behaviour and body image questionnaires were completed. Two Stroop tasks (one containing food images, the other containing neutral images) were completed with record of electroencephalography (EEG). RESULTS Differences in cortical arousal were found in RED versus LW-CTL women, and were seen during food task execution only. Compared to their controls, RED women exhibited lower relative delta band power (p=0.01) and higher relative beta band power (p=0.01) over the right frontal cortex (F4). Within the RED group, delta band oscillations correlated positively with self-reported habitual fat intake and with body shape dissatisfaction. CONCLUSIONS As compared to women matched for phenotype but with no history of weight reduction, reduced-overweight/obese women show increased neurobehavioural control over external food cues and the inhibition of reward-orientated feeding responses. Insight into these self-regulatory mechanisms which attenuate food cue saliency may aid in the development of cognitive remediation therapies which facilitate long-term weight loss.


Mental health in family medicine | 2016

Healthy Restrained Eaters Diminish Consummatory Food Reward and Inhibit Prepotent Feeding Responses: An EEG Study

David John Hume; Fleur M. Howells; H. G. Laurie Rauch; Jacolene Kroff; Estelle V. Lambert

Background: Some individuals with modest elevations in dietary restraint exhibit the ability to diminish consummatory and anticipatory food reward. In this paper we aim to identify the underlying mechanisms of food-specific cortical inhibition responses in restrained vs unrestrained eaters. Methods: Restrained (n = 43) and unrestrained eaters (n = 38) completed self-report surveys and a food- vs non-food Stroop task protocol with record of electroencephalography (EEG). Cortical rhythms and EEG ERPs were assessed. Results: Compared to their unrestrained peers, restrained eaters showed several differences in food task-related event-related potential (ERP) waveform presentation: ERP P300 component latency was significantly longer during food image viewing over the left parietal cortex (P3), and the amplitudes of the ERP P300 and LPP components were significantly greater over the right central electrode (C4) whilst responding to Stroop color-word cues. Food task-related conflict cue elicited ERP P300 amplitude correlated positively with eating restraint, and negatively with bioelectrical impedance assessed % body fat. Conclusions: Restrained eaters free of eating pathology attenuate conscious visual food cue processing and show enhanced executive brain functioning during late attentional processing despite the presence of distractor food cues. Our data propose robust executive governance as the primary underlying neurophysiological mechanism by which healthy restrained eaters diminish consummatory food reward and inhibit prepotent feeding responses.


Journal of Nutritional Science | 2018

Successful and unsuccessful weight-loss maintainers: strategies to counteract metabolic compensation following weight loss

Louise D. Clamp; David John Hume; Estelle V. Lambert; Jacolene Kroff

Adaptive thermogenesis and reduced fat oxidative capacity may accompany weight loss, continuing in weight maintenance. The present study aimed (1) to determine whether weight-reduced and weight-loss relapsed women are at greater metabolic risk for weight gain compared with BMI-matched controls with no weight-loss history, and (2) to identify protective strategies that might attenuate weight loss-associated adaptive thermogenesis and support successful weight-loss maintenance. Four groups of women were recruited: reduced-overweight/obese (RED, n 15), controls (low-weight stable weight; LSW, n 19) BMI <27 kg/m2; relapsed-overweight/obese (REL, n 11), controls (overweight/obese stable weight; OSW, n 11) BMI >27 kg/m2. Body composition (bioelectrical impedance), 75 g oral glucose tolerance test, fasting and postprandial metabolic rate (MR) and substrate utilisation (RER) and physical activity (accelerometer (7 d)) were measured. Sociobehavioural questionnaires and 3 × 24 h diet recalls were completed. Fasting and postprandial MR, RER and total daily energy intake (TDEI) were not different between RED and REL v. controls (P > 0·05). RED consumed less carbohydrate (44·8 (sd 10·3) v. 53·4 (sd 10·0) % TDEI, P = 0·020), more protein (19·2 (sd 6·0) v. 15·6 (sd 4·2) % TDEI, P = 0·049) and increased physical activity, but behaviourally reported greater dietary restraint (P = 0·002) compared with controls. TDEI, macronutrient intake and physical activity were similar between OSW and REL. REL reported higher subjective fasting and lower postprandial ratings of prospective food consumption compared with OSW. Weight-reduced women had similar RMR (adjusted for fat-free mass) compared with controls with no weight-loss history. Increased physical activity, higher protein intake and greater lean muscle mass may have counteracted weight loss-associated metabolic compensation and highlights their importance in weight-maintenance programmes.


BMC Public Health | 2014

Comparisons of intensity-duration patterns of physical activity in the US, Jamaica and 3 African countries

Lara R. Dugas; Pascal Bovet; Terrence Forrester; Estelle V. Lambert; Jacob Plange-Rhule; Ramon Durazo-Arvizu; David A. Shoham; Jacolene Kroff; Guichan Cao; Richard S. Cooper; Soren Brage; Ulf Ekelund; Amy Luke


European Journal of Applied Physiology | 2010

The kinanthropometric and pulmonary determinants of global respiratory muscle strength and endurance indices in an athletic population

Jacolene Kroff; Elmarie Terblanche


International Journal of Obesity | 2018

Sugar-sweetened beverage intake and relative weight gain among South African adults living in resource-poor communities: longitudinal data from the STOP-SA study

K. J. Okop; Estelle V. Lambert; O Alaba; Naomi Sharlene Levitt; Amy Luke; Lara R. Dugas; Dover Rvh; Jacolene Kroff; L. K. Micklesfield; T. L. Kolbe-Alexander; Smit Warren; H. Dugmore; K. Bobrow; F. A. Odunitan-Wayas; T. Puoane

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Lara R. Dugas

Loyola University Chicago

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Amy Luke

Loyola University Chicago

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Terrence Forrester

University of the West Indies

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