Markus C Rob, Rogers Peter J
University Maastricht, Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience; Dept of Neuropsychology & Psychopharmacology, Maastricht, Netherlands..
Nutrition and Behaviour Unit, School of Psychological Science, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Physiol Behav. 2020 Aug 1;222:112916. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2020.112916. Epub 2020 May 13.
There is this intriguing but not yet well-explored suggestion that highly absorbable sucrose-sweetened drinks might exacerbate hunger by promoting temporal hypoglycemia-like responses already in non-diabetic healthy individuals. This might provide a possible additional explanatory mechanism for previous reported associations between consumption of sugar-sweetened drinks and body weight gain. The current study involves two separate and independently conducted human experiments exploring the effects of two different single-doses of sugar-sweetened beverages on temporal blood glucose nadir and possible related behavioral hypoglycemic-like symptoms in healthy participants.
By way of two separately conducted between-subjects experiments, effects of 1) a low (29 g) sugar-containing beverage compared to a sweetened zero-energy drink and a milk drink (experiment-1) or 2) a high (80 g) sugar-sweetened beverage compared to a zero-energy and a non-sweetened colored water drink (experiment-2) were measured on changes in blood glucose, behavioral hypoglycemia, appetite and mood.
Experiment-1: The 29 g sucrose containing beverage caused a high (37%) glycemic increase and a smaller response (15%) to the milk drink, which both peaked 30 min after consumption, whereas the sweetened zero-energy drink had very little effect on blood glucose. Regardless of the different magnitude of peak glycemic responses, both the sugar and milk drinks rather equally caused blood glucose concentrations to return to normal and stable baseline values 90 min later. There were no (different) effects of the beverages on behavioral hypoglycemic-like symptoms, appetite or mood. Experiment-2: the 80 g sucrose containing beverage caused a large (72%) glycemic peak response at +30 min after consumption, whereas neither the sweetened zero-energy nor the non-sweetened colored water drink had any meaningful effect on blood glucose. After intake of the 80 g sugar beverage, blood glucose concentrations remained elevated (13%) at +120 min and returned to lower baseline values in the direction of hypoglycemia levels at +165 min. There were no (differential) effects of the beverages on behavioral hypoglycemic symptoms, appetite or mood.
The current findings indicate that instead of a low (29 g) sugar-containing beverage, a high (80 g) sugar-containing beverage caused blood glucose concentrations to fall below baseline values almost reaching hypoglycemia levels at the end of measurements. There were no hypoglycemic-like behavioral symptoms including changes in appetite or mood: at least not at end of measurements +165 min after consumption. Since this might include that in particular consumption of high-glycemic index drinks could still promote symptoms in the longer run, further research is needed to explore possible hypoglycemic-like effects of high dosages of sugar-sweetened beverages across more extended/delayed time measurements.
有一个有趣但尚未得到充分探究的观点,即高吸收性的蔗糖甜味饮料可能通过在非糖尿病健康个体中引发类似短暂低血糖的反应来加剧饥饿感。这可能为先前报道的含糖饮料消费与体重增加之间的关联提供一种额外的解释机制。本研究包括两项独立进行的人体实验,探究两种不同单剂量的含糖饮料对健康参与者的血糖最低点以及可能相关的类似行为性低血糖症状的影响。
通过两项分别进行的受试者间实验,测量了1)与甜味零能量饮料和牛奶饮料相比,低(29克)含糖饮料(实验1)或2)与零能量饮料和无糖有色水饮料相比,高(80克)含糖饮料(实验2)对血糖变化、行为性低血糖、食欲和情绪的影响。
实验1:含29克蔗糖的饮料导致血糖大幅升高(37%),对牛奶饮料的反应较小(15%),两者在饮用后均于30分钟达到峰值,而甜味零能量饮料对血糖几乎没有影响。尽管血糖峰值反应的幅度不同,但含糖饮料和牛奶饮料均使血糖浓度在90分钟后相当程度地恢复到正常稳定的基线值。饮料对行为性低血糖样症状、食欲或情绪没有(差异)影响。实验2:含80克蔗糖的饮料在饮用后30分钟引起大幅(72%)的血糖峰值反应,而甜味零能量饮料和无糖有色水饮料对血糖均无显著影响。摄入80克含糖饮料后,血糖浓度在120分钟时仍升高(13%),并在165分钟时朝着低血糖水平方向恢复到较低的基线值。饮料对行为性低血糖症状、食欲或情绪没有(差异)影响。
目前的研究结果表明,导致血糖浓度降至基线值以下、在测量结束时几乎达到低血糖水平的是高(80克)含糖饮料,而非低(29克)含糖饮料。没有出现类似低血糖的行为症状,包括食欲或情绪变化:至少在饮用后165分钟测量结束时没有。由于从长远来看,这可能意味着特别是高血糖指数饮料的消费仍可能引发症状,因此需要进一步研究,以探究高剂量含糖饮料在更长时间/延迟测量中的可能低血糖样效应。