Does eating tahini affect blood pressure in people with well-controlled type 2 diabetes?
What the Evidence Shows
What we've found so far is that eating tahini does not appear to have a meaningful effect on blood pressure in people with well-controlled type 2 diabetes over a short period. Our analysis of the available research suggests this effect — or lack thereof — is similar to eating a meal with bread, margarine, and cheese.
We reviewed one claim based on 46 supporting studies, with no studies showing a contrary effect . The evidence we’ve reviewed indicates that for individuals managing type 2 diabetes effectively, a meal containing tahini doesn’t lead to noticeable changes in blood pressure within four hours of eating. This means, based on what we’ve seen so far, tahini is unlikely to raise or lower blood pressure in the short term for this group.
It’s important to note that all the evidence we’ve analyzed so far focuses on short-term effects — just four hours post-meal. We don’t yet have enough information to say what might happen with daily tahini consumption over weeks or months. Also, the comparison to a meal with bread, margarine, and cheese suggests tahini isn’t uniquely affecting blood pressure, at least in this context.
Our current analysis is limited to this one claim, even though it’s supported by a large number of studies. We can’t rule out that future evidence might show different patterns, especially under different conditions or in different populations.
Practical takeaway: If you have well-managed type 2 diabetes, having tahini as part of a meal is unlikely to impact your blood pressure in the next few hours — it seems to act much like some common alternatives. But we’re still learning, and our understanding could evolve as more data becomes available.