Dec. 13 - Too Much Fructose Could Leave Dieters Sugar Shocked
Here’s one tip for how to eat at the holidays:
Don’t take your cues from Santa. The sugary cookies and
fat-laden fruitcakes the mythical North Pole resident eats are
a no-no. But you don’t have to go no-carb to stay fit
at the holidays, either, University of Florida researchers say.
In fact, many dieters may actually be cutting
out the wrong foods altogether, according to findings from a
UF paper published recently in the European Journal
of Nutrition. Dieters should focus on limiting
the amount of fructose they eat instead of cutting out starchy
foods such as bread, rice and potatoes, report the researchers,
who propose using new dietary guidelines based on fructose to
gauge how healthy foods are.
“There’s a fair amount of evidence
that starch-based foods don’t cause weight gain like sugar-based
foods and don’t cause the metabolic syndrome like sugar-based
foods,” said Dr. Richard Johnson, the senior author of
the report, which reviewed several recent studies on fructose
and obesity. “Potatoes, pasta, rice may be relatively
safe compared to table sugar. A fructose index may be a better
way to assess the risk of carbohydrates related to obesity.”
Many diets — including the low-carb variety
— are based on the glycemic index, which measures how
foods affect blood glucose levels. Because starches convert
to glucose in the body, these diets tend to limit foods such
as rice and potatoes.
While table sugar is composed of both glucose
and fructose, fructose seems to be the more dangerous part of
the equation, UF researchers say. Eating too much fructose causes
uric acid levels to spike, which can block the ability of insulin
to regulate how body cells use and store sugar and other nutrients
for energy, leading to obesity, metabolic syndrome and type
2 diabetes, said Johnson, the division chief of nephrology and
the J. Robert Cade professor of nephrology in the UF College
of Medicine. UF researchers first detailed the role of uric
acid on insulin resistance and obesity in a 2005 study in rats.
“Certainly we don’t think fructose
is the only cause of the obesity epidemic,” Johnson said.
“Too many calories, too much junk food and too much high-fat
food are also part of the problem. But we think that fructose
may have the unique ability to induce insulin resistance and
features of the metabolic syndrome that other foods don’t
do so easily.”
About 33% of adults in the United States are
overweight or obese, according to the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention.
Studies at other institutions have shown that
following a low-glycemic diet can reduce the risk for diabetes
and heart disease, but the effect could occur because these
dieters often are unintentionally limiting fructose as well
by cutting out table sugar, Johnson said.
“Processed foods have a lot of sugar,”
Johnson said. “Probably the biggest source (of fructose)
is soft drinks.”
Johnson also noted that, in relation to obesity,
the type of fructose found in foods doesn’t seem to matter.
For example, the fructose in an apple is as problematic as the
high-fructose corn syrup in soda. The apple is much more nutritious
and contains far less sugar, but eating multiple apples in one
sitting could send the body over the fructose edge.
In another UF paper, published in October in
the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition,
Johnson and his collaborators tracked the rise of obesity and
diseases such as diabetes with the rise in sugar consumption.
The rates of hypertension, diabetes and childhood obesity have
risen steadily over the years.
“One of the things we have learned is
this whole epidemic brought on by Western diet and culture tracks
back to the 1800s,” he said. “Nowadays, fructose
and high-fructose corn syrup are in everything.”
Aside from soft drinks, fructose can be found
in pastries, ketchup, fruits, table sugar and jellies and in
many processed foods, including the sugar substitute high fructose
corn syrup.
UF researchers plan to test a low-fructose diet
in patients soon, Johnson said.
Kathleen Melanson, an associate professor of
nutrition and food sciences at the University of Rhode Island,
said establishing a fructose index for foods could “be
an appropriate approach,” depending on how foods are classified.
It makes sense to limit foods prepared with high fructose corn
syrup and table sugar, which often contain empty calories, but
fruits are an important part of a person’s diet, she added.
“One concern I have always had with the
glycemic index is the potential to pigeonhole foods as good
or bad,” she said.
Source: University of Florida Health Science
Center
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