A low glycemic diet may prevent age related eye disease

A low glycemic diet may prevent age related eye disease
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Eating low glycemic foods such as starch found in whole grains, legumes, lentils, chickpeas, vegetables, leafy greens, may help prevent the development of age related eye disease that causes vision loss.

Eating low glycemic foods such as starch found in whole grains, legumes, lentils, chickpeas, vegetables, leafy greens, may help prevent the development of age related eye disease that causes vision loss.

In early stages, age related macular degeneration (AMD) results in blurred vision. However, in advanced stages, it can make life very challenging. High glycemic diets like potatoes, white rice, and white bread, release sugar into the blood stream more rapidly than low glycemic diets and thus increase the risk for type 2 diabetes, heart disease, as well as AMD.

It also results in the development of many AMD features, such as loss of function of cells at the back of the eye called retinal pigmented epithelial atrophy (RPE) of photoreceptors, precursors to dry AMD, the researchers observed.

"Our experimental results suggest that switching from a high glycemic diet to a low glycemic one is beneficial to eye health in people that are heading towards developing AMD," said lead author Sheldon Rowan, scientist at the Tufts University.

Using an aged mouse model, the researchers randomised 59 mice into two groups: 19 low glycemic fed mice and 40 high glycemic fed mice. The diets differed only in carbohydrate source.

"Our findings show an interaction between dietary carbohydrates, the gut microbiome, specific biochemical molecules, and AMD features," Rowan added.

According to estimates by the National Eye Institute, the number of people with AMD will double from 2.07 million to 5.44 million by 2050. The disease is typically diagnosed only when vision loss has already begun. Unfortunately, there is no cure.

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