Publication Date 30/04/2012         Volume. 4 No. 4   
Information to Pharmacists

Editorial

From the desk of the editor

Welcome to the May 2012 homepage edition of i2P-Information to Pharmacists. Rollo Manning has been having some time out having staples removed from the site of his open heart surgery.He is now at home recuperating in Darwin, having arrived home last Friday, beating a cold and hasty retreat from Canberra.We all wish him a speedy recovery and hopefully, he will be fit enough to contribute by next month.
This month, Pharmedia discusses the toll that is taken when someone complains about you to an authority without good cause. Well, the good news is that you can now take action to protect yourself if such a complaint is made, and that may even include action for defamation. Read about a recent case involving two doctors, with Mark Coleman drawing on personal experience to illustrate.

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Food as medicine - brown rice benefits diabetic patients

Staff Writer

articles by this author...

Editing and Researching news and stories about global and local Pharmacy Issues

Choosing your rice variety may provide an inexpensive support for a program to treat diabetes.
Menus involving varieties of brown rice may reduce glycation and the rate at which sugar is absorbed by the body.
Cinnamon is another food known to sensitise insulin and reduce sugar levels.
With a some thought it appears that a variety of foods that combat diabetes could be combined to create dishes that are not only functional, but delicious to eat as well.


Brown rice could aid diabetes control


By Anuradha Alahakoon

Source: SciDev.net

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[COLOMBO] Sri Lanka's traditional brown rice varieties are rich in a group of chemicals that could aid diabetes control, new research shows.

Scientists have found that bran — the outer covering of brown rice grains — contains chemicals that inhibit the enzyme responsible for the breakdown of complex sugars into glucose, and thus reduces the amount of sugar available to the body.

The scientists, from the Industrial Technology Institute (ITI) of Sri Lanka, Colombo, studied 23 traditional rice varieties between March 2008 and May 2009.

They found that brown rice inhibited the enzyme more than white rice. Brown varieties inhibited the enzyme from around 47 to 92 per cent, while white rice inhibited it by 14 to 32 per cent.

An additional benefit of brown rice, say the researchers, is that it reduces the frequency of a process called 'protein glycation' in which sugar molecules randomly attach themselves to proteins.

The process can cause side effects in diabetics such as retina damage — which eventually leads to blindness — and kidney disease, says Sirimal Premakumara, a senior scientist at ITI who co-ordinated the research. These occur in up to 80 per cent of patients who have had diabetes for ten years or more.

Kanchana Abeysekera, a PhD student at ITI who conducted the studies, told SciDev.Net that traditional rice varieties are being neglected in commercial rice cultivation because of their low yield.

Premakumara says the team now plans to study the potential nutritional value and health benefits of such rice.

Sagarika Ekanayake, a biochemist at the University of Sri Jayewardenepura, says that scientists need to conduct more studies to find a way to tap the benefits of brown rice — such as breeding rice crops with the useful traits or using rice bran as a food additive.

The findings are reported in the September 2009 issue of Chemistry in Ceylon and were presented at an annual meeting of the Colombo-based Institute of Biology last month (25 September).

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