Tag Archives: Fibre

Didj You Get Your Fibre Mate?

Traditional diets may be beneficial to the health because they contain a high fibre to starch ratios. One of the main problems with adoption of the Western diet is that the fibre to starch ratio is low, which deleteriously affects … Continue reading

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Gums: Something to Get Your Teeth Into

Refined carbohydrates cause Western disease because they are stripped of their fibre and micronutrients during processing. In particular, fructose is particularly damaging when removed from the whole fruit and consumed as fruit juice or its crystalline form in processed foods. … Continue reading

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Fruit: Mostly Sugars, Some Starch

The glycaemic effects of food are of interest to nutritional scientists because excessive postprandial rises in blood sugar are thought to contribute to the disease process. The fibre to carbohydrate ratio is an important determinant of the glycaemic effect of … Continue reading

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The Fibre to Carbohydrate Ratio is Pivotal in Obesity

Many people consider fruit juice to be beneficial to the health. This is based on the evidence showing the health benefits of whole fruit. However, evidence shows fruit juices to be no better for he health than sugar sweetened soft … Continue reading

Posted in Abdominal Obesity, Carbohydrate, de Novo Lipogenesis, Fatty Acids, Fibre, Fruit, Insulin Resistance, Metabolic Syndrome, Obesity | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on The Fibre to Carbohydrate Ratio is Pivotal in Obesity

Sugar Sugar Everywhere

raditional diets are devoid of meaningful levels of refined carbohydrates, particularly sugar. However, changes to the composition of the typical human diet have occurred over the last 100 years in Western nations. The increasing intakes of sugar and other fructose … Continue reading

Posted in Abdominal Obesity, Body Fat, Caffeine, Cardiovascular Disease, Coffee, Diabetes, Insulin Resistance, Metabolic Syndrome, Obesity, Sucrose, Sugar, Tea | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on Sugar Sugar Everywhere

More on Berries and Lipoproteins

vidence suggests that consumption of berries may confer protection against cardiovascular disease. Berries such as blackberries (Rubus subgenus Rubus), raspberries (Rubus ideaus) and black currents (Ribes nigrumare) good sources of flavonoids, and some evidence suggest that these compounds may modulate … Continue reading

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More on the Complexity of the Glycaemic Index

he growing intakes of refined carbohydrates is worrying because they are though to contribute to the development of disease through detrimental blood sugar effects. For this reason it is recommended that refined carbohydrates are replaced in the diet with whole … Continue reading

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Too Sweet and Too Fat

ietary fructose is increasingly being seen as the cause of obesity. This is because fructose is the primary driver of mammalian insulin resistance that leads to abdominal fat accumulation and development of the metabolic syndrome. The most common fructose containing … Continue reading

Posted in Abdominal Obesity, Adipose Tissue, Berries, Fibre, Fructose, Fruit, Insulin, Insulin Resistance, Sucrose, Sugar | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Too Sweet and Too Fat

Beans and Oats: Cholesterol Control

igh plasma concentrations of cholesterol do not cause cardiovascular disease. Instead, both high levels of the small dense low density lipoprotein (LDL) particle and low concentrations of the high density lipoprotein (HDL) particle are associated with cardiovascular disease. This is … Continue reading

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More on the Benefits of Fibre: Pectin

Plants contain a variety of carbohydrates, some of which contain glycosidic bonds that are not able to be digested by humans. Such carbohydrates are classified as dietary fibre, and were once thought to be nutritionally significant only because they provided … Continue reading

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