Journal article

Habitually Higher Dietary Glycemic Index During Puberty Is Prospectively Related to Increased Risk Markers of Type 2 Diabetes in Younger Adulthood


Authors listGoletzke, Janina; Herder, Christian; Joslowski, Gesa; Bolzenius, Katja; Remer, Thomas; Wudy, Stefan A.; Roden, Michael; Rathmann, Wolfgang; Buyken, Anette E.

Publication year2013

Pages1870-1876

JournalDiabetes Care

Volume number36

Issue number7

ISSN0149-5992

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.2337/dc12-2063

PublisherAmerican Diabetes Association


Abstract

OBJECTIVE-Carbohydrate nutrition during periods of physiological insulin resistance such as puberty may affect future risk of type 2 diabetes. This study examined whether the amount or the quality (dietary glycemic index [GI], glycemic load [GL], and added sugar, fiber, and whole-grain intake) of carbohydrates during puberty is associated with risk markers of type 2 diabetes in younger adulthood.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS-The analysis was based on 226 participants (121 girls and 105 boys) from the Dortmund Nutritional and Anthropometric Longitudinally Designed Study (DONALD) with an average of five 3-day weighed dietary records (range 2-6) during puberty (girls, age 9-14 years; boys, age 10-15 years) and fasting blood samples in younger adulthood (age 18-36 years) (average duration of follow-up 12.6 years). Multivariable linear regression was used to analyze the associations between carbohydrate nutrition and homeostasis model assessment insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) as well as the liver enzymes alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and gamma-glutamykransferase (GGT) (n = 214).

RESULTS-A higher dietary GI was prospectively related to greater values of HOMA-IR (P-trend = 0.03), ALT (P-trend = 0.02), and GGT (P-trend = 0.04). After adjustment for sex, adult age, baseline BMI, and early life and socioeconomic factors as well as protein and fiber intake, predicted mean HOMA-IR values in energy-adjusted tertiles of GI were 2.37 (95% Cl 2.16-2.60), 2.47 (2.26-2.71), and 2.59 (2.35-2.85). The amount of carbohydrates, GL, and added sugar, fiber, and whole-grain intake were not related to the analyzed markers.

CONCLUSIONS-Our data indicate that a habitually higher dietary GI during puberty may adversely affect risk markers of type 2 diabetes in younger adulthood.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleGoletzke, J., Herder, C., Joslowski, G., Bolzenius, K., Remer, T., Wudy, S., et al. (2013) Habitually Higher Dietary Glycemic Index During Puberty Is Prospectively Related to Increased Risk Markers of Type 2 Diabetes in Younger Adulthood, Diabetes Care, 36(7), pp. 1870-1876. https://doi.org/10.2337/dc12-2063

APA Citation styleGoletzke, J., Herder, C., Joslowski, G., Bolzenius, K., Remer, T., Wudy, S., Roden, M., Rathmann, W., & Buyken, A. (2013). Habitually Higher Dietary Glycemic Index During Puberty Is Prospectively Related to Increased Risk Markers of Type 2 Diabetes in Younger Adulthood. Diabetes Care. 36(7), 1870-1876. https://doi.org/10.2337/dc12-2063



Keywords


GERMANHEALTHYLIVER-ENZYMESLOAD

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 10:13