Effects of White Potato Consumption on Measures of Cardiometabolic Health in Individuals With Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus
Type2 Diabetes, Cardiometabolic Syndrome, Arterial Stiffness
About this trial
This is an interventional other trial for Type2 Diabetes focused on measuring Functional Foods, Chronic Diseases, Carbohydrates, Endothelial Dysfunction, Cardiometabolic Health
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Men and postmenopausal women
- Overweight or obese individuals (BMI of 25-40 kg/m2),
- Individuals diagnosed type 2 diabetes.
- Individuals considered non-frequent potato consumers (< 2 serving of potatoes a week).
Exclusion Criteria:
- Individuals taking insulin
- Individuals diagnosed with CVD
- Individuals with uncontrolled hypertension (≥ 160/100 mmHg)
- Individuals with other active chronic diseases (cancer, asthma, glaucoma, thyroid, kidney, liver and pancreatic disease)
- Women who are pregnant/pre/perimenopausal, or on hormone replacement therapy
- Individuals with fasting blood glucose levels ≥ 200 mg/dL and HbA1c ≥ 9.0 %.
- Individuals participating in a weight loss program
- Individuals who are heavy smokers (> 20 cigarettes per day)
- Individuals who are heavy drinkers (> 12 alcoholic drinks per week)
Sites / Locations
- Sandels Building, Florida State University
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Other
Other
Potato Regimen Arm
Refined Grain Regimen Arm
All participants will be randomly assigned to receive the potato regimen daily for the 12-week treatment period, separated by a 2-week washout.The potato regimen (75 grams of baked white russet potato with the skin) and refined grain (100 grams of long grain white rice) regimen will be matched for calories, carbohydrate and fat content and will both contribute to approximately 100 kilocalories, 22g carbohydrates, and 0.2g of fat. In order to increase participants' compliance, they will be informed of a variety of ways to consume their regimen. The rationale for choosing this amount of potato and rice regimen is based on the common practice of carbohydrate counting practiced by dietitians and diabetes educators in clinical settings, where 45-60 g of carbohydrates should be consumed at each meal and 15-20 g of carbohydrates can be consumed at each snack throughout the day.
All participants will be randomly assigned to the calorie-matched refined grain daily for the 12-week treatment period, separated by a 2-week washout.The refined grain (100 grams of long grain white rice) regimen will be matched to the potato regimen for calories, carbohydrate and fat content and will both contribute to approximately 100 kilocalories, 22g carbohydrates, and 0.2g of fat. In order to increase participants' compliance, they will be informed of a variety of ways to consume their regimen. The rationale for choosing this amount of potato and rice regimen is based on the common practice of carbohydrate counting practiced by dietitians and diabetes educators in clinical settings, where 45-60 g of carbohydrates should be consumed at each meal and 15-20 g of carbohydrates can be consumed at each snack throughout the day. Long-grain boiled white rice also has a similar glycemic index to that of a baked white potato.