Journal article

Consumption of rapeseed honey leads to higher serum fructose levels compared with analogue glucose/fructose solutions


Authors listMuenstedt, K.; Boehme, M.; Hauenschild, A.; Hrgovic, I.

Publication year2011

Pages77-80

JournalEuropean Journal of Clinical Nutrition

Volume number65

Issue number1

ISSN0954-3007

eISSN1476-5640

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1038/ejcn.2010.186

PublisherSpringer Nature [academic journals on nature.com]


Abstract

Background: Studies suggest that honey has less influence on serum glucose concentrations than monosaccharides and disaccharides. Previous studies, however, have only analysed glucose metabolism.

Methods: This study investigated the influence of two types of honey (rapeseed and acacia) on the serum levels of glucose, fructose, insulin and C-peptide values in healthy subjects. The results were compared with honey-comparable glucose-fructose solutions. All solutions contained 75 g of glucose and/or fructose.

Results: We found significantly higher fructose serum levels with rapeseed honey after 2 h but no such differences for acacia honey. C-peptide levels were significantly higher after administration of both honeys after 1 and 2 h.

Conclusions: For the first time it has been found out that honey ingestion leads to a rise of blood fructose concentration: in one case, this rise was lower than that achieved after fructose/glucose controls, in the other cases it was same as after the controls. Fructose metabolism may be inhibited by unidentified substances present in the rapeseed honey. Further study to elucidate underlying mechanisms may be worthwhile, as usually there is no differentiation between the different types of honey. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition (2011) 65, 77-80; doi:10.1038/ejcn.2010.186; published online 8 September 2010




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleMuenstedt, K., Boehme, M., Hauenschild, A. and Hrgovic, I. (2011) Consumption of rapeseed honey leads to higher serum fructose levels compared with analogue glucose/fructose solutions, European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 65(1), pp. 77-80. https://doi.org/10.1038/ejcn.2010.186

APA Citation styleMuenstedt, K., Boehme, M., Hauenschild, A., & Hrgovic, I. (2011). Consumption of rapeseed honey leads to higher serum fructose levels compared with analogue glucose/fructose solutions. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 65(1), 77-80. https://doi.org/10.1038/ejcn.2010.186



Keywords


C-peptideFRUCTOSEGLUCOSE-TOLERANCEHEALTHYHONEY

Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 18:42