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Dietary recommendations for people with diabetes: an update for the 1990s Nutrition Subcommittee of the British Diabetic Association's Professional Advisory Committee
Author(s) -
Lean M. E. J.,
Brenchley S.,
Connor H.,
Elkeles R. S.,
Govindji A.,
Hartland B. V.,
Lord K.,
Southgate D. A. T.,
Thomas B. J.
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
journal of human nutrition and dietetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.951
H-Index - 70
eISSN - 1365-277X
pISSN - 0952-3871
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-277x.1991.tb00123.x
Subject(s) - medicine , saturated fat , overweight , diabetes mellitus , nutrient , weight loss , food science , blood lipids , obesity , cholesterol , endocrinology , biology , ecology
The broad principles of the 1982 British Diabetic Association recommendations remain valid. For the overweight, reduction in energy intake remains the most important aim. Carbohydrate should make up about 50–55% of the dietary energy intake, the majority of this coming from complex sources. preferably foods naturally high in dietary fibre or hydrolysis resistant starch. Up to 25 g of added sucrose may be allowed, provided it is part of a diet low in fat, high in fibre and that it substitutes for an isocaloric amount of fat or a high, glycaemic index food or other nutritive sweeteners. Some high carbohydrate diets have been shown to worsen glucose control and serum lipid abnormalities. Some previous recommendations for fibre intake have proved unrealistically high and of limited value. A modest increase to 30 g/d, concentrating on soluble fibre is recommended. Reduction of fat intake to 30–35% of energy intake remains an important goal which should help to reduce the incidence of cardiovascular disease in people with diabetes and aid weight loss. Of this, only 10% of total energy should be saturated, 10% polyunsaturated and 10–15% may be mono‐unsaturated fat. The latter has been shown to provide a useful alternative energy source which may have beneficial effects on glucose control and serum lipids. Cholesterol intake should not exceed 300 mg/day. Protein should comprise about 10–15% of energy intake. Reduction in protein intake and associated nutrients may help to slow down progression of nephropathy. Limitation of salt intake to 6 g/d is recommended Reduction in fat intake may be relatively more important in Type 2 diabetic patients, whereas limitation in protein intake more so in Type 1 diabetes.