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OKRA

AngelSprings

Well-Known Member
Relationship to Diabetes
At risk of diabetes
Hi

Currently, there's many web sites and You Tube promoting the vegetable Okra for health, and is said to be of significant benefit in reducing blood glucose levels, blood pressure, cholestrol, etc. And I understand its health properties have been known for a long time. Has anyone put it to the test and found it beneficial?
 
Okra is a low carb green veg, so it will not substantially increase your BG levels but claims of it lowering you BG should be taken with a pinch of salt. It you ate almost entirely okra and stopped eating higher carb foods then yes your levels will likely reduce but this would also happen if you ate more cabbage or broccoli or cauliflower. I don't believe okra grow in this country so there are better choices like cabbage which is grown locally. Okra will also be reasonably high in fibre which can be beneficial for cholesterol, but so is cabbage.

To my mind, this information is a marketing ploy to encourage more consumption of okra. I am not knocking okra and I am happy to eat it occasionally but I don't expect it to work miracles on my diabetes management and it is not worth buying it regularly for that purpose, when there are other locally produced vegetables which are just as good with less air miles.
 
Okra is one of several plants that have been traditionally used for health benefits. And there are many who are not latching onto them (and in some cases combining them in untested ways) in order to create a product. Cinnamon, Apple Cider Vinegar, Bitter Gourd and many others frequently come around, and are picked up by the media to fill column inches.

Some have small amounts of clinical data around them, eg this placebo-controlled trial of concentrated Okra capsules

I am dubious of the often extravagant claims that are made for these natural products (and especially combination tablets) which are often sold at a premium to people in an anxious state.

I think the bottom line is that if these vegetables/spices etc had real potential, labs would be identifying the active ingredient, concentrating it, trialling it, and marketing it - just as they did with morphine, ephedrine, quinine, aspirin etc.
 
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