| Literature DB >> 29061658 |
Adrian Vella1, Michael Camilleri2.
Abstract
Glucose tolerance after meal ingestion in vivo is the result of multiple processes that occur in parallel. Insulin secretion together with reciprocal inhibition of glucagon secretion contributes to glucose tolerance. However, other factors beyond glucose effectiveness and insulin action require consideration. The absorption of ingested nutrients and their subsequent systemic rate of appearance largely depend on the rate of delivery of nutrients to the proximal small intestine. This is determined by the integrated response of the upper gastrointestinal tract to a meal. While gastric emptying is probably the most significant component, other factors need to be considered. This review will examine all processes that could potentially alter the fraction and rate of appearance of ingested nutrients in the peripheral circulation. Several of these processes may be potential therapeutic targets for the prevention and treatment of diabetes. Indeed, there is increased interest in gastrointestinal contributions to nutritional homeostasis, as demonstrated by the advent of antidiabetes therapies that alter gastrointestinal motility, the effect of bariatric surgery on diabetes remission, and the potential of the intestinal microbiome as a modulator of human metabolism. The overall goal of this review is to examine current knowledge of the gastrointestinal contributions to metabolic control.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29061658 PMCID: PMC5652608 DOI: 10.2337/dbi17-0021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes ISSN: 0012-1797 Impact factor: 9.461
Summary of dietary fiber effects on gastric emptying, satiety, glucose homeostasis, intestinal hormones, and body weight regulation
| Dietary fiber type | Gastric emptying | Satiety | Glucose homeostasis | Intestinal hormones | Body weight/regulation of energy balance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guar gum | Delayed in most studies; possible threshold at 5 g | Enhanced in most studies; effect is viscosity dependent, abolished by partial hydrolysis of guar, and modulated by meal fat content | Decreased postprandial glucose levels in most studies; GE delay is main factor; delayed absorption contributes | ↓GIP, ↑GLP-1, ↑CCK postprandially | WMD: −0.04 kg (95% CI −2.2, 2.1); gastrointestinal adverse effects limit guar use for weight loss |
| Psyllium | Minor effect | Enhanced in most studies; threshold in the range 5.2–8.5 g | Variable | ↔GLP-1 | BMI reduction of –2.0 ± 0.3 kg/m2 at 6 months; no effect |
| Pectin | Delayed with >10 g | Enhanced possibly through direct gastric effect | Decreased postprandial glucose when >10 g; possible dose-response relationship | ↔CCK, PP ↔CCK, GIP | No effect when supplemented to ad libitum diet; reduced energy intake (alginate-pectin combination) |
| Alginate | Unaffected in healthy normal-weight individuals; delayed in those with stable diabetes | Enhanced only by strong-gelling form independent to GE | Decrease in correlation to GE effect | Not reported | Strong-gelling form: 135 kcal (7%) reduction in mean daily energy intake over 7 weeks; reduced energy intake (alginate-pectin combination) |
| Glucomannan | No effect | Enhanced satiety, combination with psyllium | No effect | ↔GIP | WMD: −0.79 (95 % CI −1.53, −0.05); weight loss 2.5 kg more than with placebo in 8 weeks; 3.8 ± 0.9 kg weight loss more than with hypocaloric diet alone over 5 weeks in healthy overweight individuals |
| CM3 | No effect | No effect | Not reported | Not reported | 3–4 kg weight loss more than with placebo |
| Cellulose | Minor effects (unmodified); delayed (water-soluble) | Enhanced (EHEC) | “Second meal effect” in combination with amylopectin/amylose | ↔PP, CCK (EHEC) | No effect (methylcellulose) on ad libitum diet |
| Wheat fiber | Unaltered in most studies; delayed by undiluted and coarse bran | Enhanced in most studies; inverse correlation with degree of refinement | Variable effects | ↑GIP, ↔GLP-1 | Modest reductions; interpretation of results difficult as wheat grain coadministered with other dietary fiber sources in most studies |
Literature is limited for glucomannan, CM3, and cellulose. EHEC: ethyl-hydroxyethyl-cellulose (“liquid fiber”); GE, gastric emptying; PP, pancreatic polypeptide; WMD, weighted mean difference relative to placebo in meta-analysis. See also Papathanasopoulos and Camilleri (6).
Figure 1GLP-1 increases gastric fasting and postprandial volume. However, in the presence of cardiovagal dysfunction, GLP-1 does not alter fasting or postprandial gastric volume. Reprinted with permission from Delgado-Aros et al. Effects of glucagon-like peptide-1 and feeding on gastric volumes in diabetes mellitus with cardio-vagal dysfunction. Neurogastroenterol Motil 2003;15:435–443.
Figure 2Interaction of nutrient intake and neurohormonal responses. AAs, amino acids; CHO, carbohydrates. Reprinted with permission from Camilleri. Peripheral mechanisms in appetite regulation. Gastroenterology 2015;148:1219–1233.
Figure 3Patterns of gastric emptying of liquids and solids in health and in gastroparesis (reprinted with permission from Camilleri and Shin [59]).