| Literature DB >> 23349549 |
Janina Goletzke1, Christian Herder, Gesa Joslowski, Katja Bolzenius, Thomas Remer, Stefan A Wudy, Michael Roden, Wolfgang Rathmann, Anette E Buyken.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Carbohydrate nutrition during periods of physiological insulin resistance such as puberty may affect future risk of type 2 diabetes. This study examined whether the amount or the quality (dietary glycemic index [GI], glycemic load [GL], and added sugar, fiber, and whole-grain intake) of carbohydrates during puberty is associated with risk markers of type 2 diabetes in younger adulthood. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: The analysis was based on 226 participants (121 girls and 105 boys) from the Dortmund Nutritional and Anthropometric Longitudinally Designed Study (DONALD) with an average of five 3-day weighed dietary records (range 2-6) during puberty (girls, age 9-14 years; boys, age 10-15 years) and fasting blood samples in younger adulthood (age 18-36 years) (average duration of follow-up 12.6 years). Multivariable linear regression was used to analyze the associations between carbohydrate nutrition and homeostasis model assessment-insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) as well as the liver enzymes alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and γ-glutamyltransferase (GGT) (n = 214).Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23349549 PMCID: PMC3687320 DOI: 10.2337/dc12-2063
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Care ISSN: 0149-5992 Impact factor: 19.112
Demographic, anthropometric, birth, and socioeconomic characteristics by sex-specific tertiles of dietary glycemic index: DONALD, Germany
Baseline nutritional data by sex-specific tertiles of dietary glycemic index: DONALD, Germany
HOMA-IR in younger adulthood by tertiles of carbohydrate nutrition parameters during puberty
Figure 1ALT (units/L) (A) and GGT (units/L) (B) levels in younger adulthood by energy-adjusted tertiles of dietary glycemic (GI) (mean dietary GI across tertiles [T]: tertile 1, 53.5; 2, 56.2; and 3, 58.5) during puberty (baseline) for 214 subjects. Data are geometric means (95% CI) adjusted for sex, age (categorical ≤19, >19, ≤25, and >25 years), BMI SDs at baseline, socioeconomic factors (maternal overweight), energy (residuals), and protein and fiber intake. See the text for results from the conditional model additionally considering waist circumference in younger adulthood. Note that the slight U-shape in A results from illustration of least square means by GI tertiles, the association is linear, and all assumptions of linear regression modeling are met. (See the .)