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UnknownNCT02291250

Effect of Soft Fruit on Postprandial Blood Glucose

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
16 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Aberdeen · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
21 Years – 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Dietary strategies for alleviating health complications associated with type 2 diabetes (T2D) are being pursued as alternatives to pharmaceutical interventions. Berries such as blackcurrants that are rich in polyphenols may influence carbohydrate digestion and absorption and thus postprandial glycaemia. In addition berries have been reported to alter incretins as well as to have anti-oxidant and anti-inflammatory properties that may also affect postprandial glycaemia. This study investigated the acute affect blackcurrants on glucose metabolism in overweight/obese volunteers .

Detailed description

Sixteen overweight/obese volunteers from the Aberdeen area will be recruited into a randomised controlled study. Volunteers will be randomised into four groups matched for BMI and age and given 200 grams of blackcurrants (which contain anthocyanins) or greencurrants (which naturally contain no anthocyanins), followed by an OGTT. The consumption of the currants will be followed by an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) with Polycal (complex carbohydrate) or glucose (simple carbohydrate) as the carbohydrate load. There will be a one week minimum wash out period between each intervention. All interventions will be randomised and blinded as far as possible in a cross-over design where the volunteers are acting as their own control. The volunteers will be asked to consume a low phytochemical diet three days prior to taking the currants all occasions. In addition, they will be asked to record what they ate over the same period in a simple food diary. The following intervention will be carried out on 16 overweight/obese male/postmenopausal female non-smoker volunteers: 1. Control: sugar matched (matched to currant sugar content) water with polycal (complex carbohydrate load) 2. Blackcurrants (which contain anthocyanins; 200grams) with polycal (complex carbohydrate load) 3. Blackcurrants (which contain anthocyanins; 200grams) with glucose (simple carbohydrate load) 4. Greencurrants (which naturally contain no anthocyanins; 200grams) with polycal (complex carbohydrate load) Note: the polycal will contain the equivalent glucose load as given in intervention 3 assuming complete hydrolysis of all carbohydrates.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTBlackcurrants with polycal OGTTSixteen overweight/obese volunteers from the Aberdeen area will be recruited into a randomised controlled study. Volunteers will be randomised into four groups matched for BMI and age and given 200 grams of blackcurrants (which contain anthocyanins) or greencurrants (which naturally contain no anthocyanins), followed by an OGTT. The consumption of the currants will be followed by an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) with Polycal (complex carbohydrate) or glucose (simple carbohydrate) as the carbohydrate load. The equivalent carbohydrate load will be standardised across the groups
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTGreencurrants with polycal OGTTSixteen overweight/obese volunteers from the Aberdeen area will be recruited into a randomised controlled study. Volunteers will be randomised into four groups matched for BMI and age and given 200 grams of blackcurrants (which contain anthocyanins) or greencurrants (which naturally contain no anthocyanins), followed by an OGTT. The consumption of the currants will be followed by an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) with Polycal (complex carbohydrate) or glucose (simple carbohydrate) as the carbohydrate load. The equivalent carbohydrate load will be standardised across the groups
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTBlackcurrants with glucose OGTTSixteen overweight/obese volunteers from the Aberdeen area will be recruited into a randomised controlled study. Volunteers will be randomised into four groups matched for BMI and age and given 200 grams of blackcurrants (which contain anthocyanins) or greencurrants (which naturally contain no anthocyanins), followed by an OGTT. The consumption of the currants will be followed by an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) with Polycal (complex carbohydrate) or glucose (simple carbohydrate) as the carbohydrate load. The equivalent carbohydrate load will be standardised across the groups
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTSugar matched water with polycal OGTTSixteen overweight/obese volunteers from the Aberdeen area will be recruited into a randomised controlled study. Volunteers will be randomised into four groups matched for BMI and age and given 200 grams of blackcurrants (which contain anthocyanins) or greencurrants (which naturally contain no anthocyanins), followed by an OGTT. The consumption of the currants will be followed by an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) with Polycal (complex carbohydrate) or glucose (simple carbohydrate) as the carbohydrate load. The equivalent carbohydrate load will be standardised across the groups

Timeline

Start date
2014-11-01
Primary completion
2022-09-01
Completion
2022-09-01
First posted
2014-11-14
Last updated
2021-02-21

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02291250. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.