Posted on 06/20/2016 10:55:17 AM PDT by Red Badger
Replacing modern wheat with ancient grain khorasan can benefit consumers with type 2 diabetes, according to a new study.
(Excerpt) Read more at bakeryandsnacks.com ...
http://www.bakeryandsnacks.com/Ingredients/Diabetes-patients-could-benefit-from-Kamut-khorasan-wheat-finds-study
“Could benefit”
Yeah, right.
But trying something rarely hurts.
Unless it is liberalism.
That always hurts.
Now I’m glad I ordered some seed.
I don’t have any problems with blood sugar, but I do have trouble with various mineral deficiencies. I’ve had to structure my whole diet around the mineral contents of various foods, since I don’t tolerate supplements well. According to the article, Kamut made a huge difference in mineral levels. I might have to do more research on that.
ping.
But doesn’t it attract Tribbles?
How about just losing weight?
Cutting carbs and increasing protein is usually is good for that....................
My 5’ 105lb mother is a type 2 diabetic.
How much weight do you think she needs to lose?
We inwented it first!..............
Why would a diabetic want to eat a carbohydrate?
Its like giving an alcoholic a lite beer. Marginally better, but not really.
She’s an outlier for certain. Not usually the case for type 2s.
Because it is impossible to eliminate them from anyone's diet.
The Trouble with Tribbles.
There were a bunch of great lines in that episode
Is ancient wheat healthier than modern wheat? In some respects it may be, according to an Italian study published recently in the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
Scientists at Careggi University Hospital in Florence conducted a randomized crossover study including three eight-week periods: one in which subjects ate their normal diet but with all grain products bread, crackers, pasta and cookies made with Kamut® brand Khorasan wheat, a washout period of eight weeks, and eight weeks in which all grain products were made with modern Durum wheat and soft wheat.
The results? Following the Kamut® phase of the study, subjects total cholesterol decreased on average 4.0%, their LDL (bad) cholesterol decreased 7.8%, and certain markers of inflammation dropped 23 to 36%. At the same time, blood levels of potassium and magnesium two key minerals many of us are lacking rose 4.6% and 2.3% respectively. Following the control phase, total cholesterol dropped 2.1% and LDL dropped 2.8%, while potassium and magnesium actually decreased slightly; the three inflammatory markers were mixed with one almost neutral, another dropping 14% and one increasing 15%.
Lab analysis of the Kamut® and control wheat showed that the two products looked fairly similar on paper with similar fiber levels and similar resistant starch levels (though with more potassium and magnesium in the Kamut). And yet the health impacts were different, leading the researchers to conclude that dietary fibre and resistant starch alone were clearly not instrumental in improving these metabolic parameters. Its what weve been saying all along here at the WGC: fiber and resistant starch are both great, but whole grains health benefits derive from a lot more than simply fiber.
Before we go any further, we should mention some of the limitations of this interesting study. First of all, it was a very small study just 22 subjects. Second of all, both the Kamut® semolina and flour, and the control semolina and flour were semi-whole, not 100% whole. (Italians are new to the whole grain world; though Kamut® is very popular in Italy, researchers thought compliance would be better with foods more like everyday fare.)
It’s also very important to note that wheat — like all grains and in fact all whole foods — is a growing, living thing. The same variety of wheat grown in two different locations, or in two different years, may have different levels of nutrients and different impacts on health — before we even begin comparing varieties. Think about it: Although you can look up “apple” in a nutrient database and learn how much vitamin C or fiber is in “an apple” the values listed will not be the same for all varieties of apples, grown in all weather conditions, in all years. This is one factor that makes nutrition research so challenging.
Beyond these caveats, however, the study was carefully designed. Both the Kamut® wheat and the control wheat were ground at the same mill, and all grain products for the study were produced by the same artisan bakery and pasta maker. Subjects were given identical, controlled amounts of all grain products and instructed to eat no other grain products during the intervention and control periods; they did not know which grain they were consuming at any time.
We often see wild, unsubstantiated claims about the pros and cons of modern wheat vs. ancient varieties, but this is one of the first human clinical trials were aware of to explore this issue in a scientifically valid way. We would like to see more, and larger, studies like this.
Hats off to Kamut Enterprise of Europe, whose grant helped fund this independent research, and to Tara Blyth at WGC Member Kamut International, who provided us the journal article to review. (Cynthia)
http://wholegrainscouncil.org/newsroom/blog/2013/03/health-study-kamut-wheat-vs-modern-wheat
How about they just find a cure....instead of more treatment$?
KYPD
There is a cure, sort of. Gastric bypass surgery cures a significant portion of people with DM II independent of weight loss.
The cure is probably worse that the disease though, but the fact that the resolution of diabetes before weight loss points to intestinal hormone contribution to DM II which after research may lead to better treatments or even a cure.
You care to reconsider that?
What vital nutritional value does a carb provide?
Interesting. I had heard this about spelt and Einkorn wheat too. Something to do with difference in the gluten.
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