Hi Allen and All
As a fairly newly (8 months) diagnosed type II diabetic (and beekeeper!) this is
a topic of great interest. I had noticed that fructose has a lower GI
(glycaemic index) than other sugars and therefore that some honeys are better
(or worse) than others, and many might be better than sucrose or glucose. So
perhaps high fructose, low glucose honeys might be healthier.
The one issue that clouds this is the claim that although fructose might be
better in terms of GI it could have other deleterious effects. There is one
study that claims that replacing sucrose with fructose gives a 10% higher LDL
cholesterol level, something else most diabetics should be trying to bear down
on. A separate recent study points to a significant boost in plasma
triglycerides in men (and not women) on diets where glucose had been replaced by
fructose. Triglycerides are now regarded as a separate risk factor to
LDL-cholesterol in coronary vascular disease, a disease which diabetics need to
consider a major threat.
Worth remembering that many starchy foods are just as bad as sugar, and often
consumed in larger amounts.
Review on the evidence base for dietary advice for diabetics:
http://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/25/1/148.full.pdf+html
The recent study on fructose and triglycerides in men:
http://www.ajcn.org/content/72/5/1128.full.pdf+html
So this is far from simple. If there are inhibitors of blood sugar rise in some
honeys, it would be great to know more. But the simple partial replacement of
sucrose and glucose by fructose isn't something mainstream medical opinion would
turn to yet.
best wishes
Gavin
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