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Nutrition & supplements

Glycemic index and glycemic load

DEGlykämischer Index und glykämische Last

The glycemic index (GI) ranks foods by how rapidly their digestible carbohydrates raise blood glucose relative to pure glucose (GI = 100). GI ≤ 55 is low, 56–69 moderate, ≥ 70 high. Because GI ignores serving size, glycemic load (GL) captures real-world impact: GL = GI × available carbohydrate (g) ÷ 100. High-GI and high-GL meals trigger rapid glucose spikes and reactive insulin surges, promoting hyperinsulinemia, oxidative stress, and low-grade inflammation — processes associated with insulin resistance, β-cell dysfunction, and accelerated biological aging. The PURE prospective cohort (Jenkins et al., NEJM 2021; 137,851 participants across five continents) found the highest versus lowest GL quintile carried a hazard ratio of 1.34 (95% CI 1.08–1.67) for major cardiovascular events in participants with pre-existing cardiovascular disease; no significant GL association was observed in the primary-prevention group. A Weizmann Institute study (Zeevi et al., Cell 2015; n = 800) demonstrated that postprandial glucose responses to identical foods vary substantially across individuals — driven by gut microbiome, genetics, and metabolic state — and that algorithm-based personalized advice outperformed GI-based recommendations in a randomized follow-up. The 2015 ICQC consensus affirms low-GI/GL diets as evidence-based strategies for preventing type 2 diabetes and coronary heart disease, noting that food processing, ripeness, and meal composition can shift a food's effective GI by 20–30 points.

Sources

  1. Augustin LS, Kendall CW, Jenkins DJ, et al.. (2015). Glycemic index, glycemic load and glycemic response: An International Scientific Consensus Summit from the International Carbohydrate Quality Consortium (ICQC). *Nutrition, Metabolism and Cardiovascular Diseases*doi:10.1016/j.numecd.2015.05.005
  2. Jenkins DJ, Dehghan M, Mente A, et al.. (2021). Glycemic Index, Glycemic Load, and Cardiovascular Disease and Mortality. *New England Journal of Medicine*doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2007123
  3. Zeevi D, Korem T, Zmora N, et al.. (2015). Personalized Nutrition by Prediction of Glycemic Responses. *Cell*doi:10.1016/j.cell.2015.11.001