Literature DB >> 12081850

Glycemic index: overview of implications in health and disease.

David J A Jenkins1, Cyril W C Kendall, Livia S A Augustin, Silvia Franceschi, Maryam Hamidi, Augustine Marchie, Alexandra L Jenkins, Mette Axelsen.   

Abstract

The glycemic index concept is an extension of the fiber hypothesis, suggesting that fiber consumption reduces the rate of nutrient influx from the gut. The glycemic index has particular relevance to those chronic Western diseases associated with central obesity and insulin resistance. Early studies showed that starchy carbohydrate foods have very different effects on postprandial blood glucose and insulin responses in healthy and diabetic subjects, depending on the rate of digestion. A range of factors associated with food consumption was later shown to alter the rate of glucose absorption and subsequent glycemia and insulinemia. At this stage, systematic documentation of the differences that exist among carbohydrate foods was considered essential. The resulting glycemic index classification of foods provided a numeric physiologic classification of relevant carbohydrate foods in the prevention and treatment of diseases such as diabetes. Since then, low-glycemic-index diets have been shown to lower urinary C-peptide excretion in healthy subjects, improve glycemic control in diabetic subjects, and reduce serum lipids in hyperlipidemic subjects. Furthermore, consumption of low-glycemicindex diets has been associated with higher HDL-cholesterol concentrations and, in large cohort studies, with decreased risk of developing diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Case-control studies have also shown positive associations between dietary glycemic index and the risk of colon and breast cancers. Despite inconsistencies in the data, sufficient, positive findings have emerged to suggest that the dietary glycemic index is of potential importance in the treatment and prevention of chronic diseases.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12081850     DOI: 10.1093/ajcn/76/1.266S

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Clin Nutr        ISSN: 0002-9165            Impact factor:   7.045


  138 in total

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8.  Methodological challenges in the application of the glycemic index in epidemiological studies using data from the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition.

Authors:  Marit M E van Bakel; Nadia Slimani; Edith J M Feskens; Huaidong Du; Joline W J Beulens; Yvonne T van der Schouw; Furio Brighenti; Jytte Halkjaer; Anne E Cust; Pietro Ferrari; Jennie Brand-Miller; H Bas Bueno-de-Mesquita; Petra Peeters; Eva Ardanaz; Miren Dorronsoro; Francesca L Crowe; Sheila Bingham; Sabine Rohrmann; Heiner Boeing; Ingegerd Johansson; Jonas Manjer; Anne Tjonneland; Kim Overvad; Eiliv Lund; Guri Skeie; Amalia Mattiello; Simonetta Salvini; Françoise Clavel-Chapelon; Rudolf Kaaks
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10.  Association of dietary glycemic index and glycemic load with endometrial cancer risk among Chinese women.

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