Eating bananas and potatoes helps improve gut health

Consumption of resistant starch foods can aid blood sugar control

Update: 2017-01-06 05:17 GMT
Resistant starch is a type of dietary fibre that increases the production of short chain fatty acids. (Photo: Pixabay)

Eating bananas, potatoes, grains and legumes, foods that are rich in resistant starch support gut health and enhance satiety, reports a study.The study was published in the journal of Nutrition Bulletin.

Researchers examined the potential health benefits of resistant starch, a form of starch that is not digested in the small intestine and is therefore considered a type of dietary fibre.Some forms of resistant starch occur naturally in foods such as bananas, potatoes, grains and legumes and some are produced or modified commercially and incorporated into food products.

"We know that adequate fibre intake -- at least 30 g per day -- is important for achieving a healthy, balanced diet, which reduces the risk of developing a range of chronic diseases," said Dr. Stacey Lockyer co-author of the Nutrition Bulletin review."Resistant starch is a type of dietary fibre that increases the production of short chain fatty acids in the gut and there have been numerous human studies reporting its impact on different health outcomes," Lockyer added.

There has been increasing research interest in resistant starch, with a large number of human studies published over the last 10 years looking at a variety of different health outcomes such as postprandial glycaemia, satiety and gut health. The review summarises reported effects and explores the potential mechanisms of action that underpin them. For example, there is consistent evidence that consumption of resistant starch can aid blood sugar control.

The findings showed that that resistant starch can support gut health and enhance satiety via increased production of short chain fatty acids."Whilst findings support positive effects on some markers, further research is needed in most areas to establish whether consuming resistant starch can confer significant benefits that are relevant to the general population; however this is definitely an exciting area of nutritional research for the future," Lockyer concluded.

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