02-13-2007, 08:35 PM
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#2 (permalink)
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| SoulCyster #1
Join Date: Nov 2000 Location: USA
Posts: 21,800
My Mood: Points: 2,366,224.25 Bank: 0.00 Total Points: 2,366,224.25 | Vinegar to treat insulin resistance:
HIGHLIGHTS: Quote: - Subjects were also asked to rate feelings of hunger/satiety on a scale ranging from extreme hunger (-10) to extreme satiety (+10) before meal consumption and at 15-minute intervals after the meal. Bread consumption alone scored the lowest rating of satiety (calculated as area under the curve from time 0-120 minutes). Feelings of satiety increased when vinegar was ingested with the bread, and a linear relationship was observed between satiety and the acetic acid content of the test meals (r = 0.41, P = .004).[58]
- In a separate trial, healthy adult women consumed fewer total calories on days that vinegar was ingested at the morning meal.
http://www.soulcysters.net/1888067469-post421.html | Quote: - 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- To Johnston' surprise, however, "there 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 cohorts gained any weight, and a few people lost up to 4 pounds. Average weight remained constant in the group not drinking vinegar.
source: http://www.soulcysters.net/1887196435-post4.html |
VERY long threads: Vinegar and IR????? Vinegar, Insulin Resistance, Diabetes
More: Vinegar: Medicinal Uses and Antiglycemic Effect New Apple Cider Vinegar Thread Vinegals.....still out there? Vinegar for IR/Weight Question... Apple Cider Vinegar- A cure for almost everything? Vinegar Tablets Vinegar & Metformin
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Last edited by KatCarney; 04-21-2008 at 01:04 PM.
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