Mechanisms responsible for the second meal response to maize porridge
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North-West University (South-Africa)
Abstract
The short-term effect of a food on the carbohydrate metabolism
is reflected in post-prandial variations of blood glucose levels,
expressed as the glycaemic index (GI) of the food, as well as the
effect of the food on the glucose response of a subsequent meal.
The latter is referred to as the second meal response (SMR).
In South Africa, maize porridge is the staple in the diet of many
people from different ethnic groups. There is however, little
information available on the GI of maize porridge and none on the
SMR to maize porridge. The underlying mechanisms responsible for
the SMR are also unknown.
The main objective of this study was to examine the hypothesis
that a suppression of circulating free fatty acids, glucagon and
growth hormone secretion by a first meal containing carbohydrates
which are slowly digested and absorbed, are responsible for the
SMR. The GI of maize porridge, with and without added barley
fibre, and the effect of this addition on the SMR were also
examined.
Six healthy black women voluntarily participated in the study.
A Latin square design was used to randomly test three meals as
a first meal (glucose, maize porridge and maize porridge with
added barley fibre). After four hours, a second meal of glucose
was taken by the subjects. All meals contained 50g carbohydrate.
Serum levels of glucose, insulin, growth hormone and glucagon,
as well as plasma free fatty acids were measured at specific
intervals.
The results showed that the GI of maize porridge when eaten in
a precooked, frozen and reheated form, was 57.7 ± 25.6%. The
addition of barley fibre to the porridge did not change the GI:
57.5 ± 16.3%. The GI of glucose as second meal was
145.4 ± 33.3% when glucose was the first meal, 74.3 ± 38.1% with
maize porridge as first meal, and 77 . 6 + 26.4% with maize
porridge plus barley fibre as first meal. Therefore, a clear SMR
with the two porridges was observed.
The results further indicated that the levels in the blood of
glucose, insulin and free fatty acids, four hours after the first
meal just before the second meal was taken, had highly
significant correlations with the area under the glucose response
curve during the second meal (glucose: r = -o. 53, p = 0. 05;
insulin: r = -0.70, p = 0.005; free fatty acids: r = + 0.80,
p = 0.0005). Glucagon and growth hormone did not show these
correlations. The results therefore support the hypothesis that
a first meal with a low GI, which after four hours will be
associated with "relative" high levels of glucose and insulin,
but low levels of circulating free fatty acids, will elicit a
SMR.
Two factors are possibly responsible for the lack of effect of
the added barley fibre on the GI. Firstly, the amount of soluble
components in this fibre was probably too low to affect digestion
and absorption rates of carbohydrate. Secondly, the effect of
retrogradation and consequent development of resistant starch
during the cooling and freezing of maize porridge, probably
overrided the effect of fibre on the GI.
The results of this study have special applications in the
planning of meal frequency - especially in the diet of persons
with an abnormal glucose tolerance or with diabetes mellitus.
Description
MSc (Physiology), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus