View clinical trials related to Glycemic Index.
Filter by:The obesities were aimed at the effect of whole wheat (WWB), buckwheat (BWB), and cornbread (CB) on blood glucose by comparing the glycemic index values with reference bread (RB). Overall, WWB consumption had a positive effect on blood glucose in individuals with obesity, while BWB consumption caused an increase in blood glucose levels.
The objective of the study is to evaluate the glycemic index and glycemic load of 4 chocolate milk drinks.
This study choosed good health, aged 18 ~ 25, physical standard, the glucose tolerance test normal adults 12, oral glucose (reference) respectively in different periods, the valley of fiber powder upgrade formula, perfect meals, by extraction shu cereal bars, light appearance suits (by extraction shu compound dietary fiber powder, feeding combination 1:1) and 17 extraction enzyme 6 kinds of food, Venous blood was collected 15, 30, 45, 60, 90 and 120 min before and after oral administration respectively. Blood was collected for 7 times with 2mL each. The plasma is then separated to determine glucose levels. Blood glucose was measured within 3 h. With glucose as the reference, food glycemic index (GI) was calculated using the internationally used Wolever method. Time was taken as abscissa and blood glucose value at each time point was taken as ordinate to prepare the blood glucose response curve of each food tested after eating. The elevated glycemic area (AUC) under the glycemic curve was calculated geometrically, and the food GI and glycemic load (GL) values were calculated according to the following formula: GI value = (2 h post-meal blood glucose AUC of the tested food / 2 h post-meal glucose glucose AUC of the same amount of carbohydrate)×100, GL=GI*M(100g of the actual available carbohydrate of a food)/100.
Within the SWEET project (EU funded), in Work Package 2 there are two phases, this study refers to Phase 1 of the SWEET WP2 project, which will be a coordinated trial across 3 intervention centres, University of Navarra (UNAV), University of Liverpool (ULIV) and University of Copenhagen (UCPH). It will involve an acute intervention in 120 individuals to explore initial acceptance, safety and post-prandial effects of 3 S&SE blends delivered in beverage format. The main endpoints of the SWEET WP2 Phase 1 study will be glycaemic and lipaemic responses; eating behavior (subjective appetite, food preference, cravings, reward), and health effects (rebound hunger, G.I. side effects and metabolic effects). This phase will be exploratory and will not involve any specific primary hypotheses.
Compare the effects of whole orange, orange juice alone, and orange juice with added orange pomace fiber, and whole apple, apple juice alone, and apple juice with added apple pomace fiber, on 2h glycemic response.
The effect of content of barley beta-glucans in bread on postprandial blood sugar will be measured with open-label crossover study. Study will be conducted in Slovenia on 10-12 adult subjects who will test three barley beta-glucan containing bread formulations (food) in comparison with a reference white bread. Objective of the study is to investigate the influence of the content of barley beta-glucan in bread on glycaemic index (incremental area under the curve (IAUC) for the blood glucose response curve for barley beta-glucan containing breads in comparison to reference white bread.
This study is an open-label with a randomized, cross-over design using standard GI methodology.
The results of our in vitro studies strengthen the hypothesis that the contribution of salivary alpha-amylase to starch digestion has been underrated and that this enzyme can play an important role in this process. As a result, its inhibition could constitute an opportunity to reduce the glycemic response elicited by starch-rich foods. The main goal of this study is to verify whether inhibiting salivary alpha-amylase upon the consumption of starchy foods, can have an impact on the postprandial glycemic response, and/or satiety.
The study is open-label with a randomized, cross-over design using standard Gl methodology.
The purpose of the present study was to assess the influence of low vs moderate glycemic index of a 3-week diet on aerobic capacity, endurance performance and body mass and composition in endurance-trained athletes in a randomized, controlled crossover trial.