Not so long ago now, a certain Doctor Carol
Johnston of Arizona
State University ’s
Nutrition Department came to present at my university. Doctor Johnston is a
highly accomplished nutrition researcher, and one whose work that I admit I
read from time to time. Perhaps her most notable accomplishment – that is, most
notable in that it has trickled down into the popular
press and actually helped some
people – is her investigation
into the attenuation of postprandial glycaemia by the simple presence of
vinegar taken prior to or concurrent with the meal. Obviously, such a simple
measure could be of use to those people suffering from the metabolic defects of
diabetes or who have generally sluggish metabolisms that prevent the rapid
disposal of glucose from the bloodstream – no need to go into detail on
mechanisms here, as I will treat those at a later time. My thesis advisor at
the time was a very well-known researcher in the field of starch science and
happened to inquire after the seminar whether the mechanism of complex
formation with acetic acid (i.e. a type of RS5) had been considered as a
plausible mechanism behind the observed metabolic effects of the vinegar doses in vivo employed by Johnston ’s group.
Well, no. Starch is an esoteric enough field that few people
think of that. And so, I volunteered for the task and designed an experiment to
test the proposition in vitro.
The long and the short of it is this: no, Virginia . No, it does not account for the
mechanism. However, the negative result was never published at my advisor’s
will and the matter was dropped. Because these data would otherwise die in a
notebook never to be opened again and I believe would be of benefit to this
field of investigation, I am putting up the original paper that I wrote at the
time for public viewing here, unaltered from its original state.
The result that we obtained at the time might have been a
definitely negative one, but I am not without an hypothesis as to how the
mechanism occurs. The paper is to be found below the break, and I shall address
what I believe to be a quite probable cause as to the lowering of postprandial
blood sugars by the mere imbibing of vinegar in the next post, for to the best
of my knowledge, the exact nature of the biomolecular interplay has never been
elucidated.