The Glycemic Index: Good carb, bad carb
If you’re one
of those people who can’t stand all the counting and tracking and adding and
charting that some diets require, you could find a refuge in one simple
numerical scale: the glycemic index. On the other hand, you might find it
another maddening way to complicate the simple act of eating.
The glycemic index
is a measure of the quality of carbohydrate foods. It’s kind of a good
carbs/bad carbs thing, based on how they affect your blood sugar. Though it’s
not new, it did start getting a lot of press when the anti-carb movement took
hold.
It works like
this: in theglycemic index
, pure glucose is arbitrarily assigned the score of
100; it doesn’t mean anything in particular; it’s just a set reference point for
how it has affected the blood sugar by about two hours after eating. Then all
other foods in the index are given a number relative to glucose and its affect
on the blood sugar.
Foods with a
low index typically break down slowly and don’t cause drastic
fluctuations in blood sugar. Foods with a high index typically do. For instance,
green peas have an index of 39, while corn flakes have an index of
92.
Originally
developed to help folks—particularly diabetics—control their blood sugar, the
index includes mainly carbohydrate foods, because protein and fat don’t
have much immediate effect on blood sugar.
But assigning
numbers to different foods based on their glycemic effect just happens to create
a scaled list of foods that ends up being a very useful tool for people dealing
with obesity and other health issues, as well. That’s because simply maintaining
a low-glycemic index diet tends to guide people toward healthier eating and
weight loss, even when that is not their specific goal.
Consider: Type
II diabetes, as well as various cancers and cardiovascular disease, are all
highly correlated with high index diets. There’s abundant research that
shows that reducing the overall glycemic index also reduces the risks of those
problems.
That’s because
almost by default, a low-index diet will include more fresh fruits and
vegetables, more fiber, more dairy, all foods that offer essential nutrients,
that are more likely to be lower in calories and which tend to keep the body
sated longer, holding off the next hunger spell. All that usually adds up to
weight loss, no matter what the program.
Proponents of the index
say it’s more helpful than counting calories or grams of fats or carbs, and
actually offers a simplified approach to learning to eat better, but some
experts caution that people shouldn’t get too wrapped up in worrying about the
precise numbers. Instead, they urge that people pay attention to whether the
foods they’re eating have a low, medium or high index.
That’s
because, as with any rule, there are exceptions to the fairly consistent
physiological rules that underlie the index. For instance, watermelon
has a pretty high glycemic index, about 75, which is even higher than table
sugar. Does that make it bad for you? No. Because in spite of its high index,
watermelon actually has a pretty low glycemic load. That’s a measure based on
the amount of food you’d actually consume, not just an arbitrary quantity used
in testing, as with the index.
The glycemic
load of a food can be determined using the glycemic index number for a food,
divided by 100 and multiplied times the available carbohydrate you’d eat. With
most foods, low index is consistent with low load, but there are the quirky
exceptions. Of course, to find them, you’d be back to doing a bunch of math
again, and that’s just not the way people normally eat.
That’s why
doctors and nutritional experts encourage people who are trying to develop a
healthy diet to avoid getting caught up in the numbers game and look more
generally at the foods in the index, leaning toward those at the low end.
Anything over 70 is considered high index, 55 through 69 is medium and below 55
are foods with a low glycemic index.
And look
what’s in those groups: high index foods include most breakfast cereals, white
breads and other processed baked goods, most potatoes, ice cream, candies and
table sugar, your veritable Atkins nightmare.
Lower index
foods include cherries, grapefruit, broccoli, legumes like lentils and beans,
most whole grain baked goods and most dairy foods. So even without counting
calories or keeping track of specific index numbers, you can see that steering
your diet toward the low end of the index is bound to do you good.
We like to
encourage patients to think of glycemic index and glycemic load as just two more
tools that can be helpful in developing healthier thinking and planning about
dietary habits.
A final thing
to remember: there’s not one standardizedglycemic index
list and most indexes
include brand-name items that people buy on a typical shopping trip, as well as
the more generic items like vegetables and fruits. This is one of the more
helpful aspects of the lists, but only if you get one that relates to where you
live.
If your
average Southwest Florida resident looked at an index created in Australia, it
wouldn’t be much help, because really, when’s the last time you had a couple
Golden Pikelets with a nice glass of Milo?
THROUGH THICK & THIN
Fruits tend to
have a highglycemic index, so I recommend that people take their fruits with a
meal, or with some protein like cottage cheese or regular cheese. These protein
sources help mitigate the fruits glycemic effect. Don’t let a high index number
keep you away from your apple a day.
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