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Low-Glycemic Index Diet for Diabetes

来源:WebMD Medical News
摘要:WhatIsaLow-Glycemic-IndexDiet。“Wedon‘tthinkofcolaandSnicker‘sbarsashealthfood,eventhoughtheyarerelativelylow-glycemic-indexfoods,“AmericanDiabetesAssociationPresidentofMedicalScienceJohnBuse,MD,PhD,tellsWebMD。...

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Dec. 16, 2008 -- Following a diet designed to keep blood sugar from rising after meals helped diabetic people keep their disease under control in a new study published in the latest Journal of the American Medical Association.

People with type 2 diabetes who ate what is known as a low-glycemic-index diet for six months had greater blood sugar control and fewer heart disease risk factors than those who followed another eating plan.

Both diets were high in fiber and low in saturated fat, and both derived about 40% of their calories from carbohydrates.

But the low-glycemic-index diet emphasized carbohydrates that had less impact on blood sugar levels, such as beans, pasta, nuts, and certain whole grains.

"These are the basic foods that your grandparents probably ate but they are no longer staples of the American diet," lead author David Jenkins, MD, of Toronto's St. Michael's Hospital and the University of Toronto, tells WebMD.

What Is a Low-Glycemic-Index Diet?

The basic premise behind the low-glycemic-index diet is that all carbs are not created equal.

Some cause big spikes in blood sugar and others have little impact on blood sugar levels.

Specifically, the glycemic index measures how much a 50-gram portion of a carbohydrate raises blood sugar levels compared to pure glucose, which has a glycemic index score of 100.

Typically, foods that score higher than 70 are considered high-glycemic-index (GI) foods; those that score 55 and under are considered low-GI foods.

Many highly refined foods, including white bread, corn flakes, and instant potatoes have high GI scores; unprocessed, high-fiber foods tend to have lower GI scores.

But it isn't as simple as saying choose unprocessed high-fiber foods.

That's because:

"We don't think of cola and Snicker's bars as health food, even though they are relatively low-glycemic-index foods," American Diabetes Association President of Medical Science John Buse, MD, PhD, tells WebMD. "If the diets of the people in the study included a lot of unhealthy, low-glycemic-index foods, I don't think they would have gotten the benefits they did."

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