What is the importance of Glycemic Index?
What is the significance of Glycemic Index?
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Low GI means a smaller rise in blood sugar and can help control established diabetes
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Low GI diets can help people lose weight and lower blood lipids
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Low GI diets can improve the body’s sensitivity to insulin
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High GI foods can help re-fuel carbohydrate stores after exercise
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Breakfast cereals based on wheat bran, barley and oats
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“Grainy” breads made with whole seeds
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Pasta and rice in place of potatoes
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Vinegar and lemon juice dressings
In short, the goal should be to build a good plan including the low Glycemic Index foods. This way, hunger is minimized, and there is less tendency to “cheat” or overeat. Consequently, you can continue to lose body fat or maintain your weight – once the excess pounds have been lost.
Even for those whose main objective is not fat loss, foods that are low on the glycemic index will help alleviate mood swings and regulate energy levels.
- Foods that stimulate insulin surges can cause people to eat 60 – 70% more calories at the following meal.
- People who consume foods relatively high in glucose (such as white bread, most commercial whole wheat bread, and raisins) eat an average of 200 calories more at the next meal than those who eat fructose (a sugar found in fruits).
Low glycemic index foods can be mixed with modest quantities of high glycemic foods without losing their hunger reducing effect.
The purpose of the chart is not to have you eliminate those nutritious choices from your diet. Instead, balance the foods that are “less desirable” by eating them with foods that are “desirable.”
- diabetics
- hypoglycemics
- persons with insulin resistance or Syndrome X
- dieters
- athletes
- elevate insulin and blood glucose
- stimulate fat-storage
- exacerbate hyperactivity
- reduce sports performance.
- low glycemic foods do not.
- helping balance blood glucose and insulin levels
- reducing excess body fat levels
- increasing sports performance.
Low glycemic food plans are not based on starvation or deprivation. Eating is a part of our lives and we should not have to sacrifice tasty foods in order to stay healthy.
Low glycemic food plans focus on reducing ingestion of foods that elevate insulin and stimulate fat-storage. We can’t totally eliminate high glycemic foods from our diet, but we can be aware of the glycemic reaction that foods have so we can make better choice.
Low glycemic food plans have been proven to reduce incidence of Type II diabetes and to help control Type I and II diabetes, hypoglycemia and hypertension. Low glycemic foods do not stimulate food-craving hormones like Neuropeptide Y and Lipoprotein Lipase. Stimulation of these hormones can cause chemically-triggered cravings for food and uncontrolled eating binges.
The Low Glycemic Food Plan for Women in the “Low Glycemic Food Plans and Recipes 2000″ book includes specific daily caloric recommendations based on caloric requirements of the average adult woman. Adult men may follow the plan by increasing the calories to a minimum of 1,650 per day. The selection of your total daily required calories is the responsibility of the reader and his/her health care professional (see the Daily Caloric Intake page). Caloric requirements vary greatly according to the needs and medical history of the individual. With some body types, switching from high glycemic foods to low glycemic foods can result in a significant loss of body fat without changing caloric intake.
It would be ideal for everyone to cook balanced meals at home, but the reality is that most families are too busy to make home cooked meals every day. The Low Glycemic Food Plan for Women is a sample of realistic food planning, which is why fast-foods are included. Though the Food Plan contains fast-foods, the daily fat calories still meet the heart healthy guidelines of the American Heart Association, Harvard University, the American Cancer Society, and the UDG (Unified Dietary Guidelines)
Obviously, low glycemic food plans can be followed for more than 7 days. You can create your own low glycemic food plan with many variations. Be sure to ingest enough calories per day to meet the needs of your own body.
For optimum health, select a wide variety of vegetables, fruits, and foods daily. This helps assure an adequate intake of Phytochemicals, vitamins, and minerals.
The GI of foods has important implications for the food industry. Terms such as complex carbohydrates and sugars, which commonly appear on food labels, are now recognised as having little nutritional or physiological significance. The WHO/FAO recommend that these terms be removed and replaced with the total carbohydrate content of the food and its GI value. However, the GI rating of a food must be tested physiologically and only a few nutrition research groups around the world currently provide a legitimate testing service. The Human Nutrition Unit at the University of Sydney has been at the forefront of glycemic index research for over a decade and has tested dozens of foods as an integral part of its program. Jennie Brand Miller (JBM) is the senior author of International Tables of Glycemic Index published by the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition in 1995.
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Desirable Foods
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Moderately Desirable
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Less Desirable Foods
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| Breads: Coarse European -Style, Whole Grain wheat or Rye Pita Bread, Cracked or Sprouted Whole wheat Cereals: Compact noodle-like high bran cereals (All-Bran, Fiber One) Coarse Oatmeal, Porridge, Coarse Whole Grain (Kashi) Cereal mixed with Psyllium (Fiberwise) Pasta, Grains and Starchy Vegetables: Pasta (all types) Barley, Bulgur, Buckwheat (kasha) Couscous, Kidney Beans dry, (Lentils, Black-eyed peas, Chick-peas Kidney beans, Lima beans, Peas, Sweet Potato, Yam (soybeans lowest) Most Vegetables. Milk Products: Skim, 1%, cottage cheese, (lowfat or regular), Buttermilk, Low-fat plain yogurt, Low-fat fruited yogurt, Low-fat frozen yogurt ( artificial sweetener) Fruit: Most fruit and natural fruit juices, including apple, berries, cantaloupe, grapefruit, honeydew, oranges, pears, grapes, peaches, applesauce, (Cherries, plums and grapefruit lowest). Meats: Shellfish, “white” fish (cod, flounder, trout, tuna in water), Chicken, turkey, cornish hen, venison (white meat no skin), Egg substitutes (cholesterol free) cottage cheese |
Breads: 100% Stone Ground whole Wheat, Pumpernickel, 100% whole grain Rye Crisp Cracker Cereals: Grape-nut cereal, medium-fine grain oatmeal, (5-minute variety) Pasta, Grains and Starchy Vegetables: Rice, Boiled Potato, Corn Navy beans, Kidney beans (canned), Baked beans. Beets. Milk Products: 2% milk, cheese, Regular plain yogurt Fruit: Banana, Kiwi, Mango, papaya, orange juice. Meats: Higher fat fish, (salmon, herring, lean cuts of Beef, Pork, Veal. Low-fat imitation luncheon meat, low-fat. cheese, Eggs. |
Breads: White bread, most commercial whole wheat breads, English muffins, bagel, French bread, most commercial matzoh Cereals: Corn flakes, puffed rice, puffed wheat, flaked cereals, instant “Quick” or pre-cooked cereals. Oatbran, rolled oats. Shredded wheat, Muesli.’ Pasta, Grains and Starchy Vegetables: Instant rice, Brown rice, instant precooked grains, Baked potato, micro-waved potato, instant potato, Winter squash (acorn, butternut), carrots, parsnips. Milk Products: Whole milk, ice milk, ice cream, Yogurt sweetened with sugar, Low-fat frozen desserts with sugar added, Low-fat and regular frozen yogurt with sugar added. Tofu ice cream. Fruit: Pineapple, raisins, watermelon, fruit juices sweetened with sugar. Meats: Most cuts of beef, pork, lamb, hot dogs (including “low-fat’ versions) cheese, luncheon meats, peanut butter. |
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Filed under: Nutrition • Shakeology
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