Healthy Clinical Trial
Official title:
Gastrointestinal and Blood Glucose Responses to Breakfast Porridges Made From Different Grains: A Magnetic Resonance Imaging Pilot Study in Healthy Volunteers
Breakfast porridges are made from milled grains and are commonly eaten worldwide.
Traditionally different grains are used in different countries. For example, oats are more
common in the Anglo-Saxon countries; rye is favoured in the Scandinavian countries whilst
millet is very common in parts of India and Africa. However the nutritional value and
potential metabolic and health effects may vary dramatically between different grains. For
example what is the effect of the different grains on blood sugar or on how fast the stomach
empties after eating the porridge and how full people feel. All these physiological
responses may differ between these grains resulting in potential health benefits.
RESEARCH QUESTION: The investigators hypothesise that porridges made from different grains
will behave differently during the digestion and cause differences in blood glucose levels,
gastric emptying and appetite.
This study, which is a 4-way, randomized, cross over pilot study in healthy participants,
aims to answer this research question.
The participants will be asked to eat a porridge breakfasts made with oats, rye and millet
of different varieties (but containing the same amount of calories), in 4 morning studies
one week apart. MRI will be used to monitor the gastrointestinal fate of the breakfasts and
measure gastric emptying using MRI, blood glucose levels using a finger prick test and
self-reported appetite scores.
Background: Porridge breakfasts from various grains are a staple source of energy for many
populations worldwide. The grains used in the porridges differ between regions, mostly due
to the crops historically grown. For example, oats are more common in the Anglo-Saxon
countries; rye is traditional in the Scandinavian countries whilst millet is very common in
parts of India and Africa. Porridge consumption is very popular: 78% of South Africans eat
porridge; 49% of British people eat porridge with 23% doing so almost daily; 62% of U.S.
households buy hot cereal breakfast and the hot cereal segment is the best performer within
the breakfast cereals market in the UK. Consumption of whole grains has been associated with
a variety of health benefits ranging from lower blood glucose levels, improved insulin
responses, reduced cholesterol and increased diversity of the microbiota. Of particular
interest to this study are recent suggestions that different grains, and particularly millet
grains, may have enhanced health benefits on glucose and insulin metabolism. This may be due
to different rates of digestion and absorption, for example, because of grain specific
differences in starch digestibility. This could affect gastric emptying and, in turn, post
prandial glycaemia and impact on satiety. However little is known about possible differences
in gastric emptying between breakfast porridges from different grains and possible
relationship with glucose, insulin and appetite.
The hypothesis underlying this study is that porridges made from different grains (such as
oats, rye and different millets) will produce different postprandial glucose levels and that
these will correlate with gastric emptying and appetite in healthy volunteer participants.
Aims: 1. to collect pilot data on postprandial glucose levels of isoenergetic breakfast
porridges made from different grains, such as oats, rye and millets of different origin. 2.
to collect initial pilot data on their gastric emptying and satiety. 3. to compare
postprandial glucose levels, gastric emptying and satiety for the different treatments 4. to
explore relationships between glucose levels, gastric emptying and satiety.
Experimental protocol and methods: 16 healthy volunteers will participate in this 4-way
study. They will attend one morning for each study, with the studies separated by 1 week.
Before the test meal, and after that approximately every 15 min for 1 hour and after that
approximately every 20 minutes for 1 hour the level of glucose in their blood will be
measured using the finger prick method, as diabetics commonly do to monitor their blood
sugars. The participants will also be scanned at baseline, immediately after the test meal
and then every hour for 2 hours postprandially. Subjects will be scanned on a research
dedicated 1.5T MRI scanner. At baseline and every time the subjects provide a blood glucose
sample the participants will be asked to rate their feelings of fullness, hunger and
appetite on 100mm VAS scales.
The subject will be fed four isoenergetic breakfast porridges: Oat, Rye, Pearl (Bajra)
millet and Finger (Ragi) millet porridge sourced from supermarkets or food shops. These will
be cooked in water to avoid confounding factor with milk. The test breakfast will have 220
kcal.
Statistical power. This is only a pilot study.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Basic Science
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