View clinical trials related to Carbohydrate Intolerance.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to investigate the safety of preoperative carbohydrate loading in diabetic patients undergoing general anesthesia
This study evaluates the effect of different methods of preparation (cooked and consumed hot vs cooked, cooled overnight and consumed cold) and variation in the activity of salivary amylase on the glycemic index and carbohydrate digestibility in healthy human subjects. The effect of genetic variation in small intestinal starch digesting enzymes on glycemic index and starch digestibility will also be assessed.
This is a large and comprehensively phenotyped cohort with fasting glycaemia where the predictive value of body composition and anthropometric measures of total and central fat distribution for postprandial carbohydrate intolerance are studied.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the validity of using a carbohydrate intolerance questionnaire (CIQ) and/or other health markers as a means of predicting response to insulin sensitivity as determined by an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT).
The objective of this study is to determine the glycemic index of 4 pulse-based breads in at least 10 normal healthy human volunteers. Participants will be studied in the morning on 6 separate days after overnight fasts. On the first and last days they will consume a test meal consisting of about 2 slices of white bread (50g carbohydrate) and on the other 4 days they will consume 2-3 slices (50g carbohydrate) from 4 different test breads containing starch obtained from pulses (beans and/or lentils). Blood glucose will be measured at intervals over 2 hours. Glycemic index is calculated as 0.71 times F/WB where F is the incremental area under the curve of blood glucose (AUC) after each test bread and WB is the mean AUC after white bread.