Hi – if you are a regular reader of this blog you’ll know that one of my over riding themes is diabetes and poor understanding of the causes. Occasionally you get one of those ‘aha moments’ which just suggest further linkage. This article discusses the fructose-diabetes-High Fructose Corn Syrup-Sucrose linkage and surprisingly comes up with another item I’ve talked about Nitric Oxide (NO) and blood circulation. It would appear that NO and Diabetes are linked by the thread – Fructose leads to increased Uric Acid – high levels of Uric Acid – reduce Nitric Oxide levels – low levels of Nitric Oxide reduce the effectiveness of Insulin – and that leads to Insulin resistance and Metabolic Syndrome. OK – why is this interesting? I’ve just had a blood test with high levels of uric acid –in fact my Dr thinks it is why I’m getting some joint pain like Gout. I have been looking at ways of reducing the Uric acid levels by diet but never linked up all the above. Increase the NO levels in the blood by diet (see my article on NO and L-Arginnine), decrease the levels of high fructose corn syrup and decrease the amounts of glucose – see the article on Trehalose. Boy is this interesting. If you want an alternative to Glucose, Sucrose and Fructose - try Trehalose
This is so interesting I need to make a short video of the linkages.
Healthy Mentors - here to help you
Trehalose - the safe sugar
January 17, 2008
Fructose Called Most Dangerous Sugar
Corn syrup is Americans’ major dietary source; Findings add evidence to indictment of excess intake of all forms of sugar
by Craig Weatherby
This isn’t your usual story about the evils of high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS).
Many observers have blamed
This sweetener-shift was driven by the rising cost of cane sugar (pure sucrose) to American manufacturers in recent decades, and the falling cost of heavily subsidized corn and corn byproducts like HFCS.
But there have always been under-reported problems with the HFCS hypothesis of obesity and diabetes.
For one thing, we’re seeing the same sorts of increases in diabetes and obesity in countries where the price of cane sugar is not artificially high, and manufacturers of sweets and sodas never switched from cane sugar to HFCS.
If HFCS is the villain, then people overseas who eat sucrose-sweetened candy and soda shouldn’t be getting fat and diabetic as fast as Americans are.
Two years ago, a
And there is just as much fructose in cane sugar as in HFCS, so this would explain why people who eat too much sugar in either form – HFCS or cane sugar (sucrose) – would become more prone to obesity and diabetes at about the same rate.
Both HFCS and cane sugar are one-half glucose and one-half fructose.
One difference is that sucrose occurs naturally in cane syrup and most fruits, while the various forms of HFCS are synthetic combinations of fructose and glucose, none of which occur in nature.
Some argue that there is something about the structure of HFCS that makes its fructose worse than the fructose in sucrose, but so far, that hypothesis lacks evidence.
The
Here’s the scoop on the evidence they presented, which should make us all leery of enjoying sweets or sweetened foods and drinks in more than very small amounts.
Our story starts in 2006, with publication of an article by the
The
While suggestive, this correlation cannot prove cause and effect. But then a group led by kidney specialist Richard Johnson, M.D., built a persuasive case consisting of three logical steps (Heinig M, Johnson RJ 2006):
So, the Floridians proposed that the current epidemic of metabolic syndrome is due in part to fructose-induced rises in people’s blood levels of uric acid, which reduce endothelial NO levels and induce insulin resistance.
Their hypothesis is supported by the fact that, as they wrote, “… changes in average uric acid levels correlate with the increasing prevalence of metabolic syndrome in the
Researchers propose ranking foods on a “fructose index”
We’d not heard of the
As you probably know, the glycemic index is used by diabetics to rank foods by the amount by which they raise blood sugar levels. (The words glycemic and glucose both come from the Greek word glukus, meaning “sweet”.)
The glycemic index (GI) is a scale used to rank carbohydrates based on their ability to raise blood glucose levels.
And the GI index has been popularized in bestsellers as a way for selecting foods to reduce the risk for obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease, all of which are linked to chronic high blood sugar and its evil result: the near-diabetic metabolic disorder known as “insulin resistance”, which is an increasing failure of our cells to react to the signals sent by insulin.
Diabetes is always preceded by insulin resistance, which is the failure of our cells to be sensitive to insulin, and therefore fail to absorb glucose from the blood as they should, thus worsening blood sugar control.
The
And interestingly, low-glycemic diets have not proven particularly good at promoting weight loss, which suggests that they may not be as helpful at preventing diabetes as has been generally presumed.
The Floridians noted that the correlations observed between high GI diets on one hand and diabetes and cardiovascular disease on the other are related to high consumption of cane sugar or HFCS, because while both are one-half fructose, both also have high GI rankings due to their high glucose content.
Dr. Johnson’s research suggests that, compared with glucose content, the fructose contained in sugary foods is much more responsible for promoting diabetes and heart disease. (To be sure, excessive glucose consumption is not good, either.)
Last fall, their hypothesis led them to propose the use of a fructose index to categorize foods and to propose studies to determine the effectiveness of low fructose diets for reducing the risk of obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease.
These matters are complex, and time will tell, but the folks in
Sources
Obesity said...
1I searched for \’Article On Obesity\’ at google and found this your post (\’Fructose - Glucose - Sucrose = Villains?\’) in search results. Not very relevant result, but still interesting to read.
01/21/08 12:32 AM | Comment Link
geoff daum said...
2That is a really good point - I am was looking for some info in this and had not thought about checking out your site.
01/21/08 12:59 PM | Comment Link
Daniel said...
3I couldn’t understand some parts of this article e - Glucose - Sucrose = Villains?, but I guess I just need to check some more resources regarding this, because it sounds interesting.
03/21/08 7:37 AM | Comment Link