| Literature DB >> 32973226 |
Chanmo Park1, Francesco Pagnini2,3, Ellen Langer2.
Abstract
The authors examine study participants who have Type 2 diabetes to determine whether cognition affects glucose levels in contrast to widely held suppositions. Thirty participants who have type 2 diabetes consume beverages that have identical ingredients but have deceptive nutrition facts labels. Blood glucose levels measured four times before and after beverage consumption show that blood glucose levels increase when participants believe the beverage has high sugar content as portrayed on the labels. Also, individual eating behaviors and nutritional satisfaction are linked to changes in blood glucose levels. The study results support the concept of anticipatory budgeting on glucose metabolism. The findings provide pressing evidence for the psychobiological model of chronic disease, suggesting that psychological intervention programs may be important for diabetes management, beyond current programs in which type 2 diabetes is managed through diet, exercise, and medications only.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32973226 PMCID: PMC7515886 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-72501-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Two labels used in the study (left) and actual nutrition contained in the beverage (right).
Figure 2The effect of the label manipulation on perceived sugar intake.
Figure 3Average blood glucose levels over time.
Figure 4Average blood glucose levels over time as a function of beverage type.
Figure 5Path diagram illustrating how perceived sugar and nutritional satisfaction serially mediate the relationship between beverage type and changes in blood glucose levels and how nutritional satisfaction mediates the relationship between external eating behaviors and change in blood glucose levels. All presented path coefficients were unstandardized. The unit for the change rate of blood glucose level used in the mediation analysis was mg/dL per minute.