Skip to main content
. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2015 Aug 1.
Published in final edited form as: Clin Exp Metastasis. 2014 May 15;31(6):625–638. doi: 10.1007/s10585-014-9654-5

Figure 2.

Figure 2

Figure 2

Figure 2

Figure 2

Food intake and weight gain. (A) In the prevention experiment, the LF diet fed mice consumed the most kilocalories/day (0.99 kcal/day), followed by the ST diet mice (0.81 kcal/day), and then the CO diet ingesting mice (0.67 kcal/day) (* p<0.01, LFvs. other diet groups; # p<0.01, CO group vs. ST diet group). (B) Despite differences in food intake, there was no difference in weight gain among the diet groups. (C) In the treatment study, the LF diet mice consumed the most (0.91 kcal/day) as we saw in the prevention trial, while the mice on the CO diet plus chemotherapy (PTX) consumed the least (0.58 kcal/day). The mice in the other groups consumed 0.70–0.75 kcal/day. (* p<0.01, LF vs. other diet groups; # p<0.01, CO plus PTX vs. CO diet only group). (D) In the treatment study the weight of the mice from the LF group was higher than the mice from the other groups after diet therapy started (* p<0.01, LF vs. other diet groups).