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-   -   White rice consumption and risk of type 2 diabetes (https://www.neurotalk.org/diabetes-insulin-resistance-metabolic-syndrome/166633-white-rice-consumption-risk-type-2-diabetes.html)

Chemar 03-16-2012 09:24 AM

White rice consumption and risk of type 2 diabetes
 
Quote:

White rice consumption and risk of type 2 diabetes: meta-analysis and systematic review
BMJ 2012; 344 doi: 10.1136/bmj.e1454 (Published 15 March 2012)
Cite this as: BMJ 2012;344:e1454

Conclusion Higher consumption of white rice is associated with a significantly increased risk of type 2 diabetes, especially in Asian (Chinese and Japanese) populations.
for more please go to
http://www.bmj.com/content/344/bmj.e1454

Lara 03-16-2012 06:13 PM

Thanks for posting the full article. That's very interesting research.

When I read the conclusion that you posted, I thought to myself "why"? Asian populations have been eating rice forever, but I guess they weren't eating over-refined or processed white rice as they do now. Actually many Australians eat a lot of rice too, but the generation before mine did not. I eat brown rice and basmati rice. Occasionally jasmine rice. Oh yes, sushi rice. (added later- which is basically short grain white rice I guess). :o Gosh, maybe I caused my daughter's insulin resistance.

I was under the assumption that basmati rice was better for us than white rice, but I don't know anymore. Maybe someone reading this will know???

There were several points in the research that I found stood out for me.
Quote:

Among Asian populations, which consume white rice as a staple food, white rice is the predominant contributor to dietary glycaemic load. For example, in women living in Shanghai, white rice accounted for 73.9% of dietary glycaemic load7; in Japanese women, white rice explained 58.5% of dietary glycaemic load.25 In a meta-analysis that pooled data from cohort studies primarily done in Western populations, dietary glycaemic load was consistently associated with increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes.26
Quote:

Compared with minimally processed whole grains such as brown rice, white rice has a lower content of many nutrients including insoluble fibre, magnesium, vitamins, lignans, phytoestrogens, and phytic acid, which are lost during the refining process.31
Quote:

Thus, a high consumption of white rice may lead to increased risk of diabetes because of the low intake of beneficial nutrients, in addition to its higher glycaemic load. Meanwhile, more data are needed to shed light on whether the interaction by ethnicity is due simply to substantially different white rice intake levels or to other mechanisms.
Quote:

The recent transition in nutrition characterised by dramatically decreased physical activity levels and much improved security and variety of food has led to increased prevalence of obesity and insulin resistance in Asian countries

anon20160311 04-17-2012 11:08 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chemar (Post 861505)


But type 2 diabetes is not characterized by glycemic load. It is characterized by insulin resistance. Reducing intake of sugars, such as the amylose in rice, reduces the accumulation of blood glucose, but it does not reduce the insulin resistance which causes the buildup of blood glucose. Insulin resistance is more tied to carbohydrates like wheat which introduce dangerous opioid proteins.

Glycemic load is merely the study author's opinion of a marker. Reducing rice would reduce glycemic load, but would do nothing about insulin resistance.

....meaning rice in moderation is a lot healthier than 99% of alternative carbohydrates.

Lara 07-17-2014 04:26 PM

arsenic and rice
 
Speaking of RICE...

from the News Forum here today
http://neurotalk.psychcentral.com/thread206985.html

I only buy rice from Asia. :eek:

Just an aside, but I stopped eating all fish many years ago now,
but back when I used to buy it, I noticed that most of the fish
in take away fish shops was fish imported from Vietnam (despite
the fact we are an island continent!) and I wouldn't buy it because
I was concerned about the water quality/contamination from
decades past.

funnylegs4 06-25-2020 10:12 PM

I read a study in 2016 that people from India or of Indian decent have a higher diabetes risk and I'v been told by people I know from India that they also have a ton of rice in the diet so I wonder if there's a connection...and yes I heard about the Arsenic in Rice.

Lara 11-12-2020 07:08 PM

Old post, but I saw it in passing. I've cut out rice altogether in recent years but I've also been a vegetarian now for about 4 years or more. I found that eating rice made me hungry no matter what I ate but probably because I don't use animal protein in curries or anything like that anymore. I use the brocolli and cauliflower "riced" and find that very good.


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