Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10609/152176
Title: Diet and meal pattern determinants of glucose levels and variability in adults with and without prediabetes or early-onset type 2 diabetes: a pilot study
Author: Santos Baez, Leinys S  
Díaz Rizzolo, Diana A  
Popp, Collin  
Shaw, Delaney
Fine, Keenan S.
Altomare, Annemarie
St-Onge, Marie-Pierre  
Manoogian, Emily Nicole  
Panda, Satchidananda  
Cheng, Bin  
Laferrère, Blandine  
Citation: Santos Báez, L.S.[Leiny S.], Díaz-Rizzolo, D.A. [Diana A.], Popp, C.P. [Collin J.], Shaw, D. [Delaney], Fine, K.S. [Keenan S.], Altomare, A. [Annemarie], St-Onge, M.P. [Marie-Pierre], Manoogian, E.N.C. [Emily N.C.], Panda, S. [Satchidananda], Cheng, B. [Bin] & Laferrère, B. [Blandine]. (2024). Diet and meal pattern determinants of glucose levels and variability in adults with and without prediabetes or early-onset type 2 diabetes: a pilot study. Nutrients, 16(9), 1-12. doi: 10.3390/nu16091295
Abstract: This observational pilot study examined the association between diet, meal pattern and glucose over a 2-week period under free-living conditions in 26 adults with dysglycemia (D-GLYC) and 14 with normoglycemia (N-GLYC). We hypothesized that a prolonged eating window and late eating occasions (EOs), along with a higher dietary carbohydrate intake, would result in higher glucose levels and glucose variability (GV). General linear models were run with meal timing with time-stamped photographs in real time, and diet composition by dietary recalls, and their variability (SD), as predictors and glucose variables (mean glucose, mean amplitude of glucose excursions [MAGE], largest amplitude of glucose excursions [LAGE] and GV) as dependent variables. After adjusting for calories and nutrients, a later eating midpoint predicted a lower GV (β = −2.3, SE = 1.0, p = 0.03) in D-GLYC, while a later last EO predicted a higher GV (β = 1.5, SE = 0.6, p = 0.04) in N-GLYC. A higher carbohydrate intake predicted a higher MAGE (β = 0.9, SE = 0.4, p = 0.02) and GV (β = 0.4, SE = 0.2, p = 0.04) in N-GLYC, but not D-GLYC. In summary, our data suggest that meal patterns interact with dietary composition and should be evaluated as potential modifiable determinants of glucose in adults with and without dysglycemia. Future research should evaluate causality with controlled diets.
Keywords: continuous glucose monitoring
diet composition
meal timing
normoglycemic
dysglycemic
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16091295
Document type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Version: info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Issue Date: 26-Apr-2024
Publication license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/  
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