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The glycaemic index and insulinaemic index of commercially available breakfast and snack foods in an Asian population

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Version 2 2024-06-03, 06:47
Version 1 2018-06-12, 13:50
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-03, 06:47 authored by WSK Tan, WJK Tan, SDO Ponnalagu, K Koecher, R Menon, Sze Yen TanSze Yen Tan, CJ Henry
AbstractA low-glycaemic-index (GI) breakfast has been shown to lower blood glucose levels throughout the day. A wide variety of breakfast foods are consumed, but their GI values are largely unknown, hence limiting consumers’ ability to select healthier options. This study investigated the GI values of ten common breakfast (five Asian and five Western) foods in this region using a randomised, cross-over study design. Participants arrived after an overnight fast, and fasting blood sample was taken before participants consumed test foods. Next, blood samples were taken at fixed intervals for 180 min. Glycaemic and insulinaemic responses to test foods were calculated as incremental AUC over 120 min, which were subsequently reported as glycaemic and insulinaemic indices. In all, nineteen healthy men (nine Chinese and ten Indians) aged 24·7 (sem 0·4) years with a BMI of 21·7 (sem 0·4) kg/m2 completed the study. Asian breakfast foods were of medium (white bun filled with red bean paste=58 (sem 4); Chinese steamed white bun=58 (sem 3)) to high GI (rice idli=85 (sem 4); rice dosa=76 (sem 5); upma=71 (sem 6)), whereas Western breakfast foods were all of low GI (whole-grain biscuit=54 (sem 5); whole-grain biscuit filled with peanut butter=44 (sem 3); whole-grain oat muesli=55 (sem 4); whole-grain oat protein granola=51 (sem 4); whole-grain protein cereal=49 (sem 3)). The GI of test foods negatively correlated with protein (rs−0·366), fat (rs−0·268) and dietary fibre (rs−0·422) (all P<0·001). GI values from this study contribute to the worldwide GI database, and may assist healthcare professionals in recommending low-GI breakfast to assist in lower daily glycaemia among Asians who are susceptible to type 2 diabetes mellitus.

History

Journal

British Journal of Nutrition

Volume

119

Pagination

1151-1156

Location

England

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0007-1145

eISSN

1475-2662

Language

English

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal, C Journal article

Copyright notice

2018, The Authors

Issue

10

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS