This may be the sort of claim by Aajonus that Actup90 was referring to:
"Unheated honey contains an insulin-like substance that is produced by bees when collecting nectar. That insulin-like substance converts 90% of the carbohydrate in nectar into enzymes that help digest, assimilate and utilize protein. Unheated honey is a wonderful sweet food that helps digest all types of meat."
The Recipe for Living Without Disease, 2nd edition, p. 31
AV may be talking about insulin-like polypeptides in royal jelly. In the silkworm Bombyx mori it has been named bombyxin. As far as I know, the form that is in bee royal jelly hasn't been given a name yet.
Perhaps AV doesn't think the BG spiking effects of honey are a problem if royal jelly is included? Current science supports that to a certain extent: "Serum glucose levels after 2 hours and the area under the curve for glucose were significantly lower (P=.041) after royal jelly administration. Substances originating from the pharyngeal glands of the honey bee with insulin-like activity are likely to have caused this effect and may thus be, at least partially, responsible for the lowering impact of honey on blood glucose levels." (Royal Jelly Reduces the Serum Glucose Levels in Healthy Subjects
by K Münstedt - 2009,
www.liebertonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1089/jmf.2008.0289)
However, for some reason AV only wrote of "unheated honey" and didn't say that you have to make sure that the honey you buy contains royal jelly. Since many of the unheated honey products sold by makers that he recommends aren't claimed by the makers to contain any royal jelly, this is puzzling.
I am currently using raw fermented honey of the Really Raw brand, which is one that AV appparently recommends, and while it nicely reduces the dry flakes on my scalp, eyebrows and forehead, it does spike my BG tremendously at 1 hour and 2 hours after intake and does so to about the same extent as centrifuged honeys. So there is little if any offsetting effect to the blood sugar spike from the absence of heating or by using one of the favored brands. However, I do notice that I feel much better after I eat the RR fermented hand-packed honey than when I eat centrifuged honeys and only the fermented honey is effective on the dry flakes. Not even a raw honey product I tried that was recommended in this forum and that claims to contain royal jelly provided me with these benefits. So there may be some other positive effect going on here.
As for why BG 1 and 2 hour postprandial BG spikes
MIGHT be a problem, here are excerpts from Glucomania, by Dr. William Davis, cardiologist, at
http://www.heartscanblog.org/2011/02/glucomania.html:
"[A] glucose meter is your best tool to:
1) Lose weight
2) Cure diabetes
3) Reduce or eliminate small LDL particles
4) Achieve anti-aging or age-slowing effects
[M]easure blood glucose to assess the immediate effects of food choices....
The concept is simple: Check a blood glucose just prior to a food or meal of interest, then one hour after finishing.
[A spike in 1-hr postprandial blood glucose] causes 1) glycation, the adverse effects of glucose modification of proteins that leads to cataracts, kidney disease, cartilage damage and arthritis, atherosclerosis, skin wrinkles, etc., 2) high insulin response that cascades into fat deposition, especially visceral fat ("wheat belly"), and 3) glucotoxicity, i.e., direct damage to the pancreas that can, over years, lead to diabetes.
[If] you fail to trigger glycation, you stop provoking insulin, and visceral fat mobilizes rather than accumulates: you lose weight, particularly around the middle.
We therefore aim to keep the one-hour blood glucose 100 mg/dl or less."
Sources on Royal Jelly:
Kramer K.J., Childs C.N., Spiers R.D., Jacobs R.M. (1982) Purification of insulinlike peptides from insects haemolynph and royal jelly. Insect Biochemistry 12(1):91-98.
Kramer KJ, Tager HS, Childs CN, Speirs RD. Insulin-like hypoglycemic and immunological activities in honeybee royal jelly. J Insect Physiol. 1977;23(2):293–295.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/853242Royal Jelly Reduces the Serum Glucose Levels in Healthy Subjects
by K Münstedt - 2009
www.liebertonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1089/jmf.2008.0289Preclinical and Clinical Study Results for Royal Jelly
(Case No. 8031-67-2)
http://www.explorepub.com/articles/inderst.htmlLucien Lavenseau
Immunofluorescent localization of a substance immunologically related to insulin in the protocerebral neurosecretory cells of the European corn borer
Accepted: 15 May 1984
http://www.springerlink.com/content/xv10560n8293127l/Summary A substance immunologically related to mammalian insulin was demonstrated by immunofluorescence in one of five types of neurosecretory cells in the protocerebrum of the European corn borer, Ostrinia nubilalis. This A2 cell type contains a secretory material stainable with paraldehyde fuchsin.
Royal Jelly Reduces the Serum Glucose Levels in Healthy Subjects
Karsten Münstedt, Matthias Bargello, Annette Hauenschild. Journal of Medicinal Food. October 2009, 12(5): 1170-1172. doi:10.1089/jmf.2008.0289.
Published in Volume: 12 Issue 5: October 26, 2009
http://www.liebertonline.com/doi/abs/10.1089/jmf.2008.0289?cookieSet=1&journalCode=jmf