Food & Nutrition Research (Feb 2013)

ILSI Brazil International Workshop on Functional Foods: a narrative review of the scientific evidence in the area of carbohydrates, microbiome, and health

  • Marie E. Latulippe,
  • Agnès Meheust,
  • Livia Augustin,
  • David Benton,
  • Přemysl Berčík,
  • Anne Birkett,
  • Alison L. Eldridge,
  • Joel Faintuch,
  • Christian Hoffmann,
  • Julie Miller Jones,
  • Cyril Kendall,
  • Franco Lajolo,
  • Gabriela Perdigon,
  • Pedro Antonio Prieto,
  • Robert A. Rastall,
  • John L. Sievenpiper,
  • Joanne Slavin,
  • Elizabete Wenzel de Menezes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3402/fnr.v57i0.19214
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 57, no. 0
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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To stimulate discussion around the topic of ‘carbohydrates’ and health, the Brazilian branch of the International Life Sciences Institute held the 11th International Functional Foods Workshop (1–2 December 2011) in which consolidated knowledge and recent scientific advances specific to the relationship between carbohydrates and health were presented. As part of this meeting, several key points related to dietary fiber, glycemic response, fructose, and impacts on satiety, cognition, mood, and gut microbiota were realized: 1) there is a need for global harmonization of a science-based fiber definition; 2) low-glycemic index foods can be used to modulate the postprandial glycemic response and may affect diabetes and cardiovascular outcomes; 3) carbohydrate type may influence satiety and satiation; glycemic load and glycemic index show links to memory, mood, and concentration; 4) validated biomarkers are needed to demonstrate the known prebiotic effect of carbohydrates; 5) negative effects of fructose are not evident when human data are systematically reviewed; 6) new research indicates that diet strongly influences the microbiome; and 7) there is mounting evidence that the intestinal microbiota has the ability to impact the gut–brain axis. Overall, there is much promise for development of functional foods that impact the microbiome and other factors relevant to health, including glycemic response (glycemic index/glycemic load), satiety, mood, cognition, and weight management.

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