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Can childhood diets lead to diabetes?


Long-term consumption, early in life, of foods that quickly digest into simple sugars may program the body to make excess insulin--and abdominal fat. These findings, from an Australian study in rats, suggest how diet might foster an individual's susceptibility to obesity and diabetes.

Dorota B. Pawlak and her group at the University of Sydney The University of Sydney, established in Sydney in 1850, is the oldest university in Australia. It is a member of Australia's "Group of Eight" Australian universities that are highly ranked in terms of their research performance.  fed 2-month-old rats diets that nutritionally resembled what most people now eat--about 20 percent protein, 35 percent fat, and 45 percent carbohydrates, which are sugars and starches starch  
n.
1. A naturally abundant nutrient carbohydrate, (C6H10O5)n, found chiefly in the seeds, fruits, tubers, roots, and stem pith of plants, notably in corn, potatoes, wheat, and rice, and
. However, half of the animals received carbohydrates with a low glycemic index gly·ce·mic index
n.
An index that measures the ability of a given food to elevate blood sugar.


glycemic index,
n
 (GO, which signifies foods that digest slowly. The rest got high-GI carbs (SN: 4/8/00, p. 236). These break down rapidly, releasing the simple sugar glucose into the blood.

By the trial's end, after 7 weeks, the animals all weighed about the same. However, those that had dined on the high-GI foods had more fat--for example, 15 percent more fat at a site that's a model for abdominal fat in people--the scientists report in the January JOURNAL OF NUTRITION.

Animals from the two groups also had begun responding differently to carbohydrates. Rats that had been getting a high-GI diet showed blood concentrations of insulin--a hormone the body makes to move glucose into cells--that peaked more quickly after a meal and that stayed high longer than those in the rodents raised on the low-GI fare.

Jenny Brand-Miller, a coauthor co·au·thor or co-au·thor  
n.
A collaborating or joint author.

tr.v. co·au·thored, co·au·thor·ing, co·au·thors
To be a collaborating or joint author of: "He and a colleague . . .
 of the study, suspects that oversecretion of insulin produced the extra fat in the high-GI animals. She also notes that these rats ended up making excessive insulin in response to every sugar and starch starch, white, odorless, tasteless, carbohydrate powder. It plays a vital role in the biochemistry of both plants and animals and has important commercial uses.  they consumed--not just high-GI ones. "It's as if they'd become hypersensitized, making overkill overkill Vox populi An excess of anything  amounts of insulin every time," she says.

Such oversecretion is a hallmark of insulin resistance Insulin Resistance Definition

Insulin resistance is not a disease as such but rather a state or condition in which a person's body tissues have a lowered level of response to insulin, a hormone secreted by the pancreas that helps to regulate the level
, a metabolic change that precedes adult-onset diabetes. Brand Miller says her findings suggest that childhood diets might make the body vulnerable to this disease.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:J.R.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:8AUST
Date:Feb 17, 2001
Words:318
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