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      Impact of Starch Gelatinization on Digestibility and Human Health

      1 , 1
      Starch - Stärke
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          The availability of digestible energy from consumed starch depends on whether the starch is in an amorphous/digestible or ordered/less digestible form. The capacity of man to digest starch has been an evolutionary process where early hunter gatherers would have eaten crops with relatively low amounts of starch that is also not cooked. This requires a lot of digestive effort to extract calories and hence the efficiency in the body of the starch digestive process. Modern man, however, cooks (and has done for centuries) starchy crops. This, combined with the high starch contents of foods that are also readily available, has led to excess calories in the diet (from other nutrient sources too) and associated disease states. This article is designed to set the gelatinization of starch in the context of health and how starch processing needs to be regulated to control excess calories in the diet – many from starch. Key messages to gain from this review are that i) starch is a potential source of energy and depending on how and when it is processed and consumed it will impact on energy and health plus that ii) overall management of calories – including from digestible starch – is critical for optimal health.

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          Most cited references83

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          Is Open Access

          Glycemic index, glycemic load and glycemic response: An International Scientific Consensus Summit from the International Carbohydrate Quality Consortium (ICQC).

          The positive and negative health effects of dietary carbohydrates are of interest to both researchers and consumers.
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            Molecular disassembly of starch granules during gelatinization and its effect on starch digestibility: a review.

            Starch is the most important glycemic carbohydrate in foods. The relationship between the rate and extent of starch digestion to produce glucose for absorption into the bloodstream and risk factors for diet-related diseases is of considerable nutritional interest. Native starch is attacked slowly by enzymes, but after hydrothermal processing its susceptibility to enzymatic breakdown is greatly increased. Most starch consumed by humans has undergone some form of processing or cooking, which causes native starch granules to gelatinize, followed by retrogradation on cooling. The extent of gelatinization and retrogradation are major determinants of the susceptibility of starch to enzymatic digestion and its functional properties for food processing. The type and extent of changes that occur in starch as a result of gelatinization, pasting and retrogradation are determined by the type of the starch, processing and storage conditions. A mechanistic understanding of the molecular disassembly of starch granules during gelatinization is critical to explaining the effects of processing or cooking on starch digestibility. This review focuses on the molecular disassembly of starch granules during starch gelatinization over a wide range of water levels, and its consequential effect on in vitro starch digestibility and in vivo glycemic index.
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              Dietary carbohydrates: role of quality and quantity in chronic disease

              David S Ludwig and colleagues examine the links between different types of carbohydrates and health
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Starch - Stärke
                Starch Stärke
                Wiley
                0038-9056
                1521-379X
                May 2023
                February 25 2023
                May 2023
                : 75
                : 5-6
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Glycologic Limited Lambs Farm Business Park Basingstoke Road Reading RG7 1PQ UK
                Article
                10.1002/star.202200195
                98ff0aaa-95fe-4a11-a6eb-01f7bcf9fb7e
                © 2023

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

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