A systematic review and meta-analysis of all available clinical trials found that people felt 31 per cent fuller after eating on average 160 g of dietary pulses compared with a control diet, according to senior author Dr John Sievenpiper of Canada's St Michael's Hospital's Clinical Nutrition and Risk Factor Modification Centre.
Pulses have a low glycemic index (meaning that they are foods that break down slowly) and can be used to reduce or displace animal protein as well as "bad" fats such as trans fat in a dish or meal.
Knowing which foods make people feel fuller longer may help them lose weight and keep it off.
He said the finding that pulses make people feel fuller was true across various age categories and Body Mass Indexes.
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Although the analysis found pulses had little impact on "second meal food intake," the amount of food someone eats at his or her next meal, these findings support longer term clinical trials that have shown a weight loss benefit of dietary pulses.
Another recently published systematic review and meta-analysis by Sievenpiper's research group has found that eating on average one serving a day of beans, peas, chickpeas or lentils can also reduce "bad cholesterol" by five per cent and therefore lower the risk of cardiovascular disease.