Exceptionally low blood glucose response to dried beans: Comparison with other carbohydrate foods

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Abstract

Normal volunteers took 50-g carbohydrate portions of eight varieties of dried legumes and 24 common foods drawn from grains, cereals and pasta, breakfast cereals, biscuits, and tuberous vegetables. Both the mean peak rise in blood glucose concentration and mean area under the glucose curve of the subjects who ate beans were at least 45% lower than those of subjects who ate the other foods. These results suggest a potentially valuable role for dried leguminous seeds in carbohydrate exchanges for individuals with impaired carbohydrate tolerance. © 1980, British Medical Journal Publishing Group. All rights reserved.

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A Jenkins, D. J., S Wolever, T. M., Taylor, R. H., Barker, H. M., & Fielden, H. (1980). Exceptionally low blood glucose response to dried beans: Comparison with other carbohydrate foods. British Medical Journal, 281(6240), 578–580. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.281.6240.578

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