Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Vinegar as a Sweet Solution?

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Vinegar as a Sweet Solution?Janet Raloff On Dec. 7, Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy G. Thompson unveiled a national plan to combat the growing incidence of type 2 diabetes. It's the most common form of this disease, characterized by a growing resistance to the normal effects of the hormone insulin. A primary goal of the new federal program is to increase people's awareness of what they can do to prevent or manage this disorder, which costs the United States some $132 billion a year. Research by nutritionist Carol S. Johnston of Arizona State University East in Mesa suggests one easy measure that might have a notable impact: Consume more vinegar. A few tablespoons of vinegar prior to a meal—such as part of an oil-and-vinegar salad dressing—could benefit people with diabetes or at high risk of developing the disease.PhotoDisc Her studies indicate that 2 tablespoons of vinegar before a meal—perhaps, as part of a vinaigrette salad dressing—will dramatically reduce the spike in blood concentrations of insulin and glucose that come after a meal. In people with type 2 diabetes, these spikes can be excessive and can foster complications, including heart disease In Johnston's initial study, about one-third of the 29 volunteers had been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, another third had signs that they could become diabetic, and the rest were healthy. The scientists gave each participant the vinegar dose or a placebo to drink immediately before they ate a high-carbohydrate breakfast consisting of orange juice, a bagel, and butter. A week later, each volunteer came back for the opposite premeal treatment and then the same breakfast. After both meals, the researchers sampled blood from the participants. Once ingested, carbohydrates—sugars and starches—can quickly break down into glucose that builds up in a person's blood (see _The New GI Tracts_ (http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20000408/bob9.asp) ). That's why people with diabetes frequently have to severely curb their carb intake. High-carbohydrate meals also prompt hunger to return earlier than low-carb meals do. Indeed, such observations spawned the low-carb diet craze (see _Counting Carbs_ (http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20040717/bob8.asp) ). Although all three groups in the study had better blood readings after meals begun with vinegar cocktails, the people with signs of future diabetes— prediabetic symptoms—reaped the biggest gains. For instance, vinegar cut their blood-glucose rise in the first hour after a meal by about half, compared with readings after a placebo premeal drink. In contrast, blood-glucose concentrations were only about 25 percent better after people with diabetes drank vinegar. In addition, people with prediabetic symptoms ended up with lower blood glucose than even healthy volunteers, after both groups drank vinegar. In these tests, vinegar had an effect on volunteers' blood comparable to what might be expected from antidiabetes drugs, such as metformin, the researchers reported last January in Diabetes Care. A follow-up study has now turned up an added—and totally unexpected—benefit from vinegar: moderate weight loss. Both findings should come as welcome news during this season when sweet and caloric treats taunt diabetics, who face true health risks from indulging in too many carbs. In a pickle Why vinegar? A nutritionist, Johnston was looking for possible diet modifications that would make meals less risky for people with diabetes. While reviewing research published earlier by others, she ran across reports from about 2 decades ago that suggesting that vinegar limits glucose and insulin spikes in a person's blood after a meal. A few research groups had conducted limited follow-up trials. For instance, Johnston points to a 2001 paper in which researchers at Lund University in Sweden evaluated pickles—cucumbers preserved in vinegar—as a dietary supplement to lower the blood-sugar rise in healthy people after a meal. The Swedish team, led by Elin M. Östman, reported that pickles dramatically blunted the blood-sugar spike after a high-carb breakfast. Fresh cukes didn't. "I became really intrigued," Johnston says, because adding vinegar to the diet would be simple "and wouldn't require counting how many carbs you ate." t first, she attempted to replicate findings by others, focusing specifically on people with diabetes or prediabetic symptoms. When these individuals showed clear benefits from vinegar after a single meal, Johnston' group initiated a trial to evaluate longer-term effects. It also explored vinegar' effect on cholesterol concentrations in blood. The Arizona State scientists had hypothesized that by preventing digestion of carbs in the stomach, vinegar might cause carbohydrate molecules to instead ferment in the colon, a process that signals the liver to synthesize less cholesterol. So, in one trial, Johnston had half of the volunteers take a 2-tablespoon dose of vinegar prior to each of two meals daily for 4 weeks. The others were told to avoid vinegar. All were weighed before and after the trial. As it turns out, cholesterol values didn' change in either group. To Johnston' surprise, however, "here was actually about a 2-pound weight loss, on average, over the 4 weeks in the vinegar group." In fact, unlike the control group, none in the vinegar cohort gained any weight, and a few people lost up to 4 pounds. Average weight remained constant in the group not drinking vinegar. Johnston would now like to repeat the trial in a larger group of individuals to confirm the finding, but that study is currently on hold. Why? To no one's astonishment, the study volunteers didn't like drinking vinegar straight—even flavored, apple-cider vinegar. Indeed, Johnston says, "I would prefer eating pickled foods or getting . . . vinegar in a salad dressing." Now, the scientists are developing a less objectionable, encapsulated form of vinegar and testing its efficacy. Although there are commercially available vinegar dietary supplements, Johnston notes that they "don't appear to contain acetic acid," and based on studies by others, she suspects that's the antidiabetic ingredient in the vinegar. Sources: Carol S. JohnstonDepartment of NutritionArizona State University East7001 E. Williams Field RoadMesa, AZ 85212

 

 

 

"If God only gave me a clear sign; like making a large deposit in my name at a Swiss Bank"

-Woody Allen

/

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I really appreciate the posts you send to the list, but it's really hard for

me to read with that dark background. Just thought you might want to know.

 

 

Stacy in AZ

 

" The grand essentials of happiness are: something to do, something to love,

and something to hope for. "

-Allan K. Chalmers

 

 

 

 

 

Jose and Diana Gonzalez [joseanddiana]

Tuesday, February 15, 2005 8:00 AM

 

Vinegar as a Sweet Solution?

 

 

Vinegar as a Sweet Solution?

Janet Raloff

On Dec. 7, Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy G. Thompson unveiled a

 

national plan to combat the growing incidence of type 2 diabetes. It's the

most common form of this disease, characterized by a growing resistance to

the

normal effects of the hormone insulin. A primary goal of the new federal

program is to increase people's awareness of what they can do to prevent or

 

manage this disorder, which costs the United States some $132 billion a

year.

Research by nutritionist Carol S. Johnston of Arizona State University East

 

in Mesa suggests one easy measure that might have a notable impact: Consume

 

more vinegar.

 

A few tablespoons of vinegar prior to a meal—such as part of an

oil-and-vinegar salad dressing—could benefit people with diabetes or at

high risk of

developing the disease.

PhotoDisc

Her studies indicate that 2 tablespoons of vinegar before a meal—perhaps,

as

part of a vinaigrette salad dressing—will dramatically reduce the spike in

blood concentrations of insulin and glucose that come after a meal. In

people

with type 2 diabetes, these spikes can be excessive and can foster

complications, including heart disease

In Johnston's initial study, about one-third of the 29 volunteers had been

diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, another third had signs that they could

become

diabetic, and the rest were healthy. The scientists gave each participant

the vinegar dose or a placebo to drink immediately before they ate a

high-carbohydrate breakfast consisting of orange juice, a bagel, and

butter. A week

later, each volunteer came back for the opposite premeal treatment and then

the

same breakfast. After both meals, the researchers sampled blood from the

participants.

Once ingested, carbohydrates—sugars and starches—can quickly break down

into glucose that builds up in a person's blood (see _The New GI Tracts_

(http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20000408/bob9.asp) ). That's why people

with

diabetes frequently have to severely curb their carb intake.

High-carbohydrate

meals also prompt hunger to return earlier than low-carb meals do. Indeed,

such observations spawned the low-carb diet craze (see _Counting Carbs_

(http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20040717/bob8.asp) ).

Although all three groups in the study had better blood readings after

meals

begun with vinegar cocktails, the people with signs of future diabetes—

prediabetic symptoms—reaped the biggest gains. For instance, vinegar cut

their

blood-glucose rise in the first hour after a meal by about half, compared

with

readings after a placebo premeal drink. In contrast, blood-glucose

concentrations were only about 25 percent better after people with diabetes

drank

vinegar. In addition, people with prediabetic symptoms ended up with lower

blood

glucose than even healthy volunteers, after both groups drank vinegar.

In these tests, vinegar had an effect on volunteers' blood comparable to

what might be expected from antidiabetes drugs, such as metformin, the

researchers reported last January in Diabetes Care. A follow-up study has

now turned

up an added—and totally unexpected—benefit from vinegar: moderate weight

loss.

Both findings should come as welcome news during this season when sweet and

 

caloric treats taunt diabetics, who face true health risks from indulging

in

too many carbs.

In a pickle

Why vinegar? A nutritionist, Johnston was looking for possible diet

modifications that would make meals less risky for people with diabetes.

While

reviewing research published earlier by others, she ran across reports from

about 2

decades ago that suggesting that vinegar limits glucose and insulin spikes

in a person's blood after a meal.

A few research groups had conducted limited follow-up trials. For instance,

 

Johnston points to a 2001 paper in which researchers at Lund University in

Sweden evaluated pickles—cucumbers preserved in vinegar—as a dietary

supplement to lower the blood-sugar rise in healthy people after a meal.

The Swedish

team, led by Elin M. Östman, reported that pickles dramatically blunted the

 

blood-sugar spike after a high-carb breakfast. Fresh cukes didn't.

" I became really intrigued, " Johnston says, because adding vinegar to the

diet would be simple " and wouldn't require counting how many carbs you

ate. " t

first, she attempted to replicate findings by others, focusing specifically

 

on people with diabetes or prediabetic symptoms.

When these individuals showed clear benefits from vinegar after a single

meal, Johnston' group initiated a trial to evaluate longer-term effects. It

also

explored vinegar' effect on cholesterol concentrations in blood. The

Arizona

State scientists had hypothesized that by preventing digestion of carbs in

the stomach, vinegar might cause carbohydrate molecules to instead ferment

in

the colon, a process that signals the liver to synthesize less cholesterol.

 

So, in one trial, Johnston had half of the volunteers take a 2-tablespoon

dose of vinegar prior to each of two meals daily for 4 weeks. The others

were

told to avoid vinegar. All were weighed before and after the trial.

As it turns out, cholesterol values didn' change in either group. To

Johnston' surprise, however, " here was actually about a 2-pound weight

loss, on

average, over the 4 weeks in the vinegar group. " In fact, unlike the

control

group, none in the vinegar cohort gained any weight, and a few people lost

up to

4 pounds. Average weight remained constant in the group not drinking

vinegar.

 

Johnston would now like to repeat the trial in a larger group of

individuals

to confirm the finding, but that study is currently on hold.

Why? To no one's astonishment, the study volunteers didn't like drinking

vinegar straight—even flavored, apple-cider vinegar. Indeed, Johnston says,

" I

would prefer eating pickled foods or getting . . . vinegar in a salad

dressing. "

Now, the scientists are developing a less objectionable, encapsulated form

of vinegar and testing its efficacy. Although there are commercially

available

vinegar dietary supplements, Johnston notes that they " don't appear to

contain acetic acid, " and based on studies by others, she suspects that's

the

antidiabetic ingredient in the vinegar.

Sources:

 

Carol S. Johnston

Department of Nutrition

Arizona State University East

7001 E. Williams Field Road

Mesa, AZ 85212

 

 

 

" If God only gave me a clear sign; like making a large deposit in my name at

a Swiss Bank "

-Woody Allen

/

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...