Resistant Starch: Promise for Improving Human Health

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2013-11-01
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Jane, Jay-Lin
Hollis, James
Li, Li
Moore, Samuel
Phillips, Gregory
Rowling, Matthew
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Hendrich, Suzanne
University Professor Emeritus
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Schalinske, Kevin
Morrill Professor
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Hollis, James
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Scott, M. Paul
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Mechanical Engineering
The Department of Mechanical Engineering at Iowa State University is where innovation thrives and the impossible is made possible. This is where your passion for problem-solving and hands-on learning can make a real difference in our world. Whether you’re helping improve the environment, creating safer automobiles, or advancing medical technologies, and athletic performance, the Department of Mechanical Engineering gives you the tools and talent to blaze your own trail to an amazing career.
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Veterinary Pathology
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Ames National LaboratoryFood Science and Human NutritionMechanical EngineeringVeterinary PathologyAgronomyVeterinary Microbiology and Preventive Medicine
Abstract

Ongoing research to develop digestion-resistant starch for human health promotion integrates the disciplines of starch chemistry, agronomy, analytical chemistry, food science, nutrition, pathology, and microbiology. The objectives of this research include identifying components of starch structure that confer digestion resistance, developing novel plants and starches, and modifying foods to incorporate these starches. Furthermore, recent and ongoing studies address the impact of digestion-resistant starches on the prevention and control of chronic human diseases, including diabetes, colon cancer, and obesity. This review provides a transdisciplinary overview of this field, including a description of types of resistant starches; factors in plants that affect digestion resistance; methods for starch analysis; challenges in developing food products with resistant starches; mammalian intestinal and gut bacterial metabolism; potential effects on gut microbiota; and impacts and mechanisms for the prevention and control of colon cancer, diabetes, and obesity. Although this has been an active area of research and considerable progress has been made, many questions regarding how to best use digestion-resistant starches in human diets for disease prevention must be answered before the full potential of resistant starches can be realized.

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This article is from Advances in Nutrition 4 (2013): 587, doi: 10.3945/an.113.004325

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