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Low
Glycemic Diets help Diabetics control Blood
Sugar
Newswise — A new Cochrane review finds that
following a low glycemic index diet helps
people with type 1 and type 2 diabetes to
improve their blood glucose (blood sugar)
control significantly.
"The glycemic index (GI) is a way of ranking
foods, particularly carbohydrates, according
to how quickly they affect the blood glucose
levels in the body when they are eaten,"
said lead review author Diana Thomas.
Clinicians measured hemoglobin A1c levels,
which give a picture of a person's blood
glucose control over several weeks or
months.
The reviewers found that levels decreased by
0.5 percent with a low GI diet, noting that
the findings were significant, both
statistically and clinically.
Thomas is with the Center for Evidence-Based
Pediatrics, Gastroenterology and Nutrition
at the Children's Hospital at Westmead at
the University of Sydney.
The GI food-ranking approach, which
originated in Canada, is popular in
Australia and gaining ground in Europe and
the United States.
The systematic review analyzed 11 randomized
controlled trials of either low GI or low
glycemic load (GL) diets, with interventions
lasting between four weeks and 12 months.
The studies comprised 402 participants.
The highest GI is 100, based on consuming
foods like white bread or straight glucose,
according to the American Diabetes
Association. Low GI foods have a score of 55
or less.
Glycemic load is a combined measure that
takes into account the amount of
carbohydrate in a food, as well as its GI
score, and represents the overall glycemic
effect of the diet.
"The participants were adults in most
studies; however, there were two studies in
children, all of whom had type 1 diabetes,"
Thomas said. "So, the results are relevant
to both adults and children, with either
type 1 or type 2 diabetes."
The review appears in the latest issue of
The Cochrane Library, a publication of The
Cochrane Collaboration, an international
organization that evaluates medical
research.
Systematic reviews like this one draw
evidence-based conclusions about medical
practice after considering both the content
and quality of existing medical trials on a
topic.
Dietary approaches to diabetes prevention
and treatment can be confusing - and
controversial - but Thomas said the review
provides support for the effectiveness of
low GI diets in diabetes management.
Now that the principles of eating low GI
foods are clear, she said, "The idea is that
this way of eating should be incorporated
into daily living."
The point for people "is to lower the GI or
GL of the diet, rather than to follow
specific diet plans, which over the longer
term can be very difficult to maintain,"
Thomas said.
By knowing which foods to eat and which to
avoid, "low GI rye bread instead of high GI
white bread, or basmati rice instead of
white rice - a person can gradually adapt
their diet to become more low GI," she said.
"It goes back to making healthier choices,
watching portions and getting active," said
registered dietitian Angela Ginn-Meadow, a
certified diabetes educator at the Joslin
Diabetes Center in Baltimore and an American
Dietetic Association spokesperson.
"This study says, 'maybe it is time to start
using this tool more than we currently use
it.'"
Since childhood obesity and long-term
obesity are also strong risk factors,
keeping weight down is also important in
diabetes prevention and management.
"Using glycemic index as a goal really
helps, because people with diabetes can feel
hungrier and using glycemic index helps with
satiety," Ginn-Meadow said.
"Using glycemic index as a tool could be one
thing people can do to stay satisfied
longer."
According to the review, the aim of diabetes
management is to normalize blood glucose
levels, since individuals with improved
blood glucose control have fewer
complications and less disease progression.
Although diabetes has a strong genetic
basis, developing type 2 diabetes depends
far more on lifestyle than genes, according
to the American Diabetes Association, and
maintaining a stable blood glucose level
with diet is important for both types of
diabetes.
The Cochrane Collaboration is an
international nonprofit, independent
organization that produces and disseminates
systematic reviews of health care
interventions and promotes the search for
evidence in the form of clinical trials and
other studies of interventions. Visit
http://www.cochrane.org for more
information.
Thomas D, Elliott EJ. Low glycaemic index,
or low glycaemic load, diets for diabetes
mellitus (Review). Cochrane Database of
Systematic Reviews 2009, Issue 1.
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