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Get Keto score, insulin index and nutrient density of every food you need

nutrita.app

28 points by gpalayer 7 years ago · 8 comments

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heh 7 years ago

What's your privacy policy? What data do you collect and how/where is it stored?

  • gpalayerOP 7 years ago

    We don't collect any data for now. Just random stuff to know if you unlock the unlimited search queries

parliament32 7 years ago

The search could use some tweaking (relevance sorting, specifically): searching "banana" gets me a bunch of baby food results with actual bananas being on the second page.

Lifeup 7 years ago

Do insulin index replace the Glycemic index of foods? What's the difference?

  • gpalayerOP 7 years ago

    Thanks for asking! The best answer I can give you is there: https://nutrita.app/insulin-index/

    • andreareina 7 years ago

      I'm not seeing any actual reason for me to believe the bald assertion that insulin is better to track than net carbs, glycemic index, glycemic load, etc. Or that it's relevant, absent its correlation to blood sugar. If fact from the white fish vs potato chips comparison, insulin index is at best an insufficient metric, and you don't expose the other information that would tell me that this insulin-raising food is ok, but this one isn't; it's devoid of actionable information.

      • raphaels7 7 years ago

        Hi, the insulin index Nutrita uses is a better predictor of the metabolic impact a food is likely to have because predictions based on blood sugar increases (GI) or the total carb load (GL) have many more false positive and false negative errors.

        Nutrita's Insulin index has been extensively refined to minimize these errors.

        The problems with GI and GL:

        For example, 100g of carbs from a potatoe increases blood glucose less than 100g of carbs from potatoe flour. the Glycemic Load cannot distinguish that.

        The Glycemic index looks at rises in blood sugar and suffers another problem, in that it can't tell you how much insulin it 'cost you' to maintain blood sugars. so you could be thinking "hey my blood sugars are normal this food is fine for me!" but in fact you're producing a tsunami of insulin to keep stable blood sugars. So the GI will miss prediabetes, basically.

        Check out these podcasts and studies which go through the science papers demonstrating this https://www.breaknutrition.com/episode-8-starch-digestibilit... and https://www.breaknutrition.com/episode-7-processed-starches-...

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