Determination of glycaemic index; some methodological aspects related to the analysis of carbohydrate load and characteristics of the previous evening meal
- 5 October 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in European Journal of Clinical Nutrition
- Vol. 60 (1) , 104-112
- https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ejcn.1602273
Abstract
To determine the possible differences in glycaemic index (GI) depending on (1) the analytical method used to calculate the ‘available carbohydrate’ load, that is, using carbohydrates by difference (total carbohydrate by difference, minus dietary fibre (DF)) as available carbohydrates vs available starch basis (total starch minus resistant starch (RS)) of a food rich in intrinsic RS and (2) the effect of GI characteristics and/or the content of indigestible carbohydrates (RS and DF) of the evening meal prior to GI testing the following morning. Blood glucose and serum insulin responses were studied after subjects consuming (1) two levels of barley kernels rich in intrinsic RS (15.2%, total starch basis) and (2) after a standard breakfast following three different evening meals varying in GI and/or indigestible carbohydrates: pasta, barley kernels and white wheat bread, respectively. Healthy adults with normal body mass index. (1) Increasing the portion size of barley kernels from 79.6 g (50 g ‘available carbohydrates’) to 93.9 g (50 g available starch) to adjust for its RS content did not significantly affect the GI or insulin index (II). (2) The low GI barley evening meal, as opposed to white wheat bread and pasta evening meals, reduced the postprandial glycaemic and insulinaemic (23 and 29%, respectively, P<0.05) areas under the curve at a standardized white bread breakfast fed the following morning. (1) Increasing portion size to compensate for the considerable portion of RS in a low GI barley product had no significant impact on GI or II. However, for GI testing, it is recommended to base carbohydrate load on specific analyses of the available carbohydrate content. (2) A low GI barley evening meal containing high levels of indigestible carbohydrates (RS and DF) substantially reduced the GI and II of white wheat bread determined at a subsequent breakfast meal.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Glycaemic index methodologyNutrition Research Reviews, 2005
- Physiological Validation of the Concept of Glycemic Load in Lean Young AdultsJournal of Nutrition, 2003
- Efficacy and Safety of Low-Carbohydrate DietsJAMA, 2003
- International table of glycemic index and glycemic load values: 2002,The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2002
- Low glycaemic-index foodsBritish Journal of Nutrition, 2000
- An In Vitro Method, Based on Chewing, To Predict Resistant Starch Content in Foods Allows Parallel Determination of Potentially Available Starch and Dietary FiberJournal of Nutrition, 1998
- Effect of sustained physiologic hyperinsulinaemia and hyperglycaemia on insulin secretion and insulin sensitivity in manDiabetologia, 1994
- The Use of Low Glycaemic Index Foods Improves Metabolic Control of Diabetic Patients over Five WeeksDiabetic Medicine, 1992
- Low-Glycemic Index Foods Improve Long-Term Glycemic Control in NIDDMDiabetes Care, 1991
- Rapid enzymic assay of insoluble and soluble dietary fiberJournal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 1983