Specially designed sweeteners and food for diabetics—a real need?
Open Access
- 1 July 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Elsevier in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
- Vol. 29 (7) , 726-733
- https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/29.7.726
Abstract
In the first part of this study, the effect of four isocaloric mixed breakfast meals on the blood glucose and urinary glucose losses was tested in nine adult diabetics and in three healthy subjects, ages 60 to 75. Three of the test meals consisted of a base diet supplemented with applesauce sweetened with sucrose, fructose, or sorbitol. In the fourth test meal, the starch was increased together with saccharine. In the second part of the study, analyses for free glucose and sucrose in several tinned food preparations, ordinary as well as food preparations specially designed for diabetics, were performed. The amount of sucrose equivalents (Seq) in one ordinary serving of the various products was estimated. No significant differences among sucrose, fructose, and sorbitol-containing meals with respect to the effect on the blood glucose level or on glucosuria were found. The saccharine-containing meal gave a significantly greater blood glucose increase at 60 min only. The amount of sucrose in ordinary marinated foods, such as herring, cucumber, and common beet was negligible. Water-packed fruits supplied one-half of the amount of Seq or less, compared with fruits packed in sorbitol-sweetened syrup. The amount of Seq in the latter products as well as in fruits packed in unsweetened juice equalled that of the fleshy substance of ordinary sucrose-sweetened products. It was concluded that fructose or sorbitol has no advantages over sucrose, as regards the effect on blood glucose in well-regulated adult dibetics, and that it seems unnecessary to have specially sweetened foods designed for diabetics.This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Studies of glycemia and glucosuria in diabetics after breakfast meals of different compositionThe American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 1976
- Glucose, fructose, lactate and pyruvate in blood and lactate and pyruvate in parotid saliva in response to sugars with and without other foodsThe American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 1974
- Insulin and Glucose Responses to Identical Oral Glucose Tolerance Tests Performed Forty-eight Hours ApartDiabetes, 1974
- Effect of Changes in the Proportions of the Dietary Carbohydrates and in Energy Intake on the Plasma Lipid Concentrations in Healthy Young MenAnnals of Nutrition and Metabolism, 1974
- DOES HYPERGLYCÆMIA OR HYPERINSULINÆMIA CHARACTERISE THE PATIENT WITH CHEMICAL DIABETES ?The Lancet, 1972
- Principles of Nutrition and Dietary Recommendations for Patients with Diabetes Mellitus: 1971Diabetes, 1971
- Fructose as sweetening agent in normal and diabetic nutritionActa Diabetologica, 1971
- Reproducibility of the Oral Glucose Tolerance TestDiabetes, 1965
- Evaluation of Sorbitol in the Diet of Diabetic Children at CampDiabetes, 1961
- Probability Tables for Individual Comparisons by Ranking MethodsBiometrics, 1947