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Ares
3rd January 2015, 09:47 PM
Is sugar making us sick? A team of scientists at the University of California in San Francisco believes so, and they're doing something about it. They launched an initiative to bring information on food and drink and added sugar to the public by reviewing more than 8,000 scientific papers that show a strong link between the consumption of added sugar and chronic diseases.

The common belief until now was that sugar just makes us fat, but it's become clear through research that it's making us sick. For example, there's the rise in fatty-liver disease, the emergence of Type 2 diabetes as an epidemic in children and the dramatic increase in metabolic disorders.

Laura Schmidt, a UCSF professor at the School of Medicine and the lead investigator on the project, SugarScience, said the idea is to make the findings comprehensible and clear to everyone. The results will be available to all on a website (SugarScience.org) and social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter.

Added sugars, Schmidt said, are sugars that don't occur naturally in foods. They are found in 74 percent of all packaged foods, have 61 names and often are difficult to decipher on food labels. Although the U.S. Food and Drug Administration requires food companies to list ingredients on packaging, the suggested daily values of natural and added sugars can't be found.

The FDA is considering a proposal to require food manufacturers to list information on sugars in the same way they do for fats, cholesterol, sodium, carbohydrates and protein. But because so much added sugar is dumped into so many products, one average American breakfast of cereal would likely exceed a reasonable daily limit.

"SugarScience shows that a calorie is not a calorie but rather that the source of a calorie determines how it's metabolized," said pediatric endocrinologist Robert Lustig, a member of the SugarScience team and the author of "Fat Chance: Beating the Odds Against Sugar, Processed Food, Obesity, and Disease." Lustig said that more than half of the U.S. population is sick with metabolic syndrome, a group of risk factors for chronic diseases such as heart disease, diabetes and liver disease that are directly related to the excessive consumption of added sugars in the Western diet.

Figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show the category of heart attack/stroke as the leading cause of death in the United States. Every day, 2,200 Americans die of cardiovascular disease. That's about 800,000 a year, or one in three deaths.

The latest statistics from the American Diabetes Association show that 29.1 million Americans, or 9.3 percent, have diabetes. Of that number, 21 million have been diagnosed and 8.1 million have not, and the numbers continue to grow, according to the association.

It doesn't stop there. The American Liver Foundation says at least 30 million Americans, or 1 in 10, has one of 100 kinds of liver disease.

Clinicians widely believe that obesity is the cause of metabolic disease. Although it is a marker for these diseases, Lustig said, it's not the cause. "Too much sugar causes chronic metabolic disease in both fat and thin people," he said, "and instead of focusing on obesity as the problem, we should be focusing on our processed-food supply."

The average American consumes 19.5 teaspoons (78 grams) of sugar a day, substantially more than the amount recommended by the American Heart Association. The association sets these limits: 6 teaspoons (24 grams) for women, 9 teaspoons (36 grams) for men, and 3-6 teaspoons (12-24 grams) for children, depending on age. Just one 12-ounce soda contains 8 to 9 teaspoons (32-36 grams) of sugar.

Liquid sugar in sodas, energy drinks and sports drinks is the leading source of added sugar in the American diet. That represents 36 percent of all added sugars consumed, according to the Department of Health and Human Services. And because liquid does not include fiber, the body processes it quickly. That causes more sugar to be sent to the pancreas and liver than either can process properly, and the resulting buildup of sugar leads to heart disease, diabetes and liver disease.

Consuming too much sugar causes the level of glucose sugar in the bloodstream to increase. That, in turn, causes the pancreas to release high levels of insulin that cause the body to store extra calories as fat.

Too much insulin also affects the hormone leptin, a natural appetite suppressant that signals the brain to stop eating when full. But the imbalance of insulin levels caused by the intake of too much sugar causes lipid resistance, and the brain no longer gets that signal.

Another member of the SugarScience team, Dean Schillinger, is a professor of medicine at UCSF and a practicing primary care doctor at San Francisco General Hospital. He believes the overconsumption of added sugars is a social problem, not a problem of individual choice and freedom.

"People are becoming literate about the toxic effects of sugar," Schillinger said, "and have more understanding of the idea that high doses are bad for one's health." He sees evidence that those in a higher socioeconomic bracket are taking steps to limit intake of sugar when compared with poorer, less literate people.

Healthy food is expensive and less readily accessible in poorer neighborhoods, and because corn is so abundant and cheap, it is added to many food products. "Dumping high fructose corn syrup into cheap foods, sodas, sports drinks and energy drinks is toxic to the body, causing epidemic metabolic diseases and a serious health crisis," Schillinger said.

To underscore the scope of the problem, he pointed out that during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, 1,500 American soldiers lost a limb in combat. In that same period, 1.5 million people in the U.S. lost limbs to amputations from Type 2 diabetes, a preventable disease. "We have yet to mobilize for a public health war," he said, "but the time has come to do so."

Such a war would have to take on the root causes of the problem. As a nation, Schillinger added, we would need to look at our food policies, food pricing, availability of healthy foods, and the marketing being carried out by food and beverage industries to hook the public on unhealthy choices loaded with added sugar.

Frank Hu, a professor of nutrition and epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health, is not a SugarScience researcher, but he agreed that the amount of sugar consumed by the American public is too high. SugarScience, he said, is being helpful by bringing the information about added sugar to public attention.

"It's just about impossible," Hu said, "to know from food labels what kinds and amounts of sugars are in a product." That's why he thinks the FDA should require food companies to list those amounts on all food labels so people know what they're eating, in what amounts they're eating it, and what amounts are safe.

Food labels are important, Schillinger said, and they need to be revised, but the most important change needed is to make the healthier choice the easier choice.

http://medicalxpress.com/news/2015-01-scientific-team-alarm-sugar-source.html

Ponce
3rd January 2015, 10:36 PM
If all this was the truth I should have been dead ages ago......I was born in a sugar mill in Cuba and eat about 15 to 20 table spoons per day in different forms, coffee, tea, donut, cereal, candy, chocolate, and in many other ways.......now then......maybe is the NEW sugar with all the extra ingredients that is making everyone sick.....the old pure cane sugar is pure and with nothing added to it.

All the sugar that I have in stock is pure (I made sure of that) that I bought about 10 to 12 years ago....... ask your grandparents, or even your parents, how many people do they know that are now dead because of sugar, the answer will probably be NONE.

I smell a rat, for some reason they don't want us to eat sugar........maybe it is a preventive medecine or maybe they are traying to find a new way to charge more taxes.....who knows.

V

crimethink
4th January 2015, 12:33 AM
If all this was the truth I should have been dead ages ago......I was born in a sugar mill in Cuba and eat about 15 to 20 table spoons per day in different forms, coffee, tea, donut, cereal, candy, chocolate, and in many other ways.......now then......maybe is the NEW sugar with all the extra ingredients that is making everyone sick.....the old pure cane sugar is pure and with nothing added to it.

All the sugar that I have in stock is pure (I made sure of that) that I bought about 10 to 12 years ago....... ask your grandparents, or even your parents, how many people do they know that are now dead because of sugar, the answer will probably be NONE.

I smell a rat, for some reason they don't want us to eat sugar........maybe it is a preventive medecine or maybe they are traying to find a new way to charge more taxes.....who knows.

V

The specific problem is highly-processed sugars...corn syrup, in particular. Sugar is like salt...whole sugar (cane) and whole salt (pure rock salt/sea salt) will not kill you.

Glass
4th January 2015, 01:08 AM
yes I guess it's mostly the sugar that is not actually sugar.

As a kid, I remember the summer onslaught of ants to the pantry. My Grandmothers personal war. Keeping the sugar ant free was a battle back then. I noticed at some point that ants no longer go near processed sugar. I don't bother sealing the bag away now. No need. Maybe we have different ants now. Possible they drove out the ants I remember from childhood. Certainly don't think I've seen anything but argentine ants and these tiny fat lover ones that are funny to watch. They will haul the hugest things, across bench tops, up walls, shove them in holes way smaller than possible. They will scurry away and hide if you disturb them. They are like little cleaner-uppers.

But nobody touches the sugar.

singular_me
4th January 2015, 10:57 AM
there is that one doc I have watched years ago, "sugar, the bitter truth". On youtube

when I need a sugar kick I eat dry dates and figs, mangoes, pineapples, etc... and I have a self made lemonade with maple syrup unrefined, lime and a pinch or cayenne pepper. :)

stevia and coconut sugar are my 2nd choice sweeteners


moreover, the OP merely means that "the experts" didnt see it coming and help induce diabetes and other illnesses in people ... so much for college degrees again.. ROFLOL

crimethink
4th January 2015, 11:41 AM
there is that one doc I have watched years ago, "sugar, the bitter truth". On youtube

when I need sugar kick I eat dry dates and figs, mangoes, pineapples, etc... and I have a self made lemonade with maple syrup unrefined, lime and a pinch or cayenne pepper. :)

stevia and coconut sugar are my 2nd choice sweeteners


moreover, the OP merely means that "the experts" didnt see it coming and help induce diabetes and other illnesses in people ... so much for college degrees again.. ROFLOL

Fruit is "loaded" with sugar, and the "experts" would try to tell us that "it's the 'same'" as industrial fructose. :rolleyes:

singular_me
4th January 2015, 11:53 AM
there is a big difference... fruits do not give you cravings at all. You eat til you feel satiated then you are done for a few days.

industrial sugar is just good for junk food industry as people are addicted to their stuff. I work at a gas station 2 afternoons weekly and when I see what people buy, it just makes me sick. They must be rotting from the inside.

I prefer my 4 mangoes over ice cream.



Fruit is "loaded" with sugar, and the "experts" would try to tell us that "it's the 'same'" as industrial fructose. :rolleyes:

mick silver
4th January 2015, 06:13 PM
I used 25 pounds of cane sugar today making some juice and 20 small jars of cherries

JohnQPublic
4th January 2015, 08:49 PM
Good to hear word is getting out on this. The OP is from UCSF, same university where Dr. Robert Lustig works, who created the Youtube 'Sugar the Bitter Truth'. Here is a link back to an older thread with the youtube.

http://gold-silver.us/forum/showthread.php?67895-Sugar-The-Bitter-Truth-%28excellent%29&highlight=sugar+bitter+truth
<br>
http://youtu.be/dBnniua6-oM

Shami-Amourae
4th January 2015, 08:53 PM
I'm waiting for them to say Saturated Animal Fat is healthy though. The problem with the Western Diet is we removed Saturated Animal Fats and replaced it with Sugar.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fvKdYUCUca8

crimethink
4th January 2015, 08:57 PM
I'm waiting for them to say Saturated Animal Fat is healthy though. The problem with the Western Diet is we removed Saturated Animal Fats and replaced it with Sugar.

And "healthy" [sic] fats like pesticidal Rapeseed ("Canola") oil.

JohnQPublic
4th January 2015, 08:59 PM
Remember glucose=good
fructose = bad

Sucrose = 1/2 glucose, 1/2 fructose
HFCS = ~1/2 glucose, 1/2 fructose
Agave syrup >= 1/2 fructose, balance glucose

To your body, fructose acts more like a fat then a sugar (though chemically it is called a sugar).

Fructose follows a metabolic pathway through the liver the same as alcohol, and causes similar diseases as alcohol.

Frucotse is not recognized by your body as a sugar, does not trigger insulin, and can only be processed by the liver.

Frucotse is used for some diabetic patients since it does not trigger insulin, but is very sweet. This is why fructose has a low glycemic index. Some agave syrups have lower glycemic indiexes since they are high in fructose- higher than high fructose corn syrup (stay away from agave sweetener)! I would only play with fructose under the guidance of a good nutritionist, and if I could not handle not eating something really sweet (I generally can get by without sweet stuff, and am not diabetic, so do avoid all fructose other than whole fruit).

Fructose in fruit is a much smaller amount, and not readily available. It needs to be leached out of the fruit's fibers. Consequently, the concentration of fructose in the bloodstream reaching the liver with whole fruit is minimal, while for soda, fruit juice, etc. it probably 10-100x higher, and this is the issue. Fruit smooties, juices, etc. release the sugar and make it immediately available. Want to juice? Juice non-sweet veggies.

Serpo
4th January 2015, 09:11 PM
take your pick..............




10 Disturbing Reasons Why Sugar is Bad For You (http://www.google.com.au/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CB0QFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fauthoritynutrition.com%2F10-disturbing-reasons-why-sugar-is-bad%2F&ei=uA6qVPy8McLk8AXvsIKgBg&usg=AFQjCNEssxhmg1vNL1QMmwWXv3NHfBhITQ&bvm=bv.82001339,d.dGc)authoritynutrition.com/10-disturbing-reasons-why-sugar-is-bad/
Added sugar can cause harmful effects on metabolism and contribute to many ... You've probably heard this a million times before… but it's worth repeating. ... People who are healthy and active can tolerate more sugar than people who are ...



The Harmful Effects of Sugar & Why You Shouldn't Eat It (http://wellnessmama.com/15/harmful-effects-of-sugars/)wellnessmama.com › Health
Honey is about 53 percent fructose2, but is completely natural in its raw form and has many health benefits when used in moderation, including as many ...



Eating too much added sugar increases the risk of dying ... (http://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/eating-too-much-added-sugar-increases-the-risk-of-dying-with-heart-disease-201402067021)www.health.harvard.edu › Harvard Health Blog
Feb 6, 2014 - “Regardless of their Healthy Eating Index scores, people who ate more ... before the data about sugar's potentially dangerous health effects ...



Sweet poison: why sugar is ruining our health - Telegraph (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/foodanddrink/healthyeating/9987825/Sweet-poison-why-sugar-is-ruining-our-health.html)www.telegraph.co.uk › Food and Drink › Healthy Eating
Dec 11, 2014 - Look online and you'll see fructose described as “fruit sugar” – it's the .... Then about eight years ago, I started to have serious health problems.



The 76 Dangers of Sugar to Your Health - Mercola (http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2010/04/20/sugar-dangers.aspx)articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2010/04/.../sugar-dangers.aspx
Apr 20, 2010 - Sucralose (Splenda) is NOT a sugar, despite its sugar-like name and ... with aspartame and saccharin, with detrimental health effects to match.



141 Reasons Sugar Ruins Your Health | Nancy Appleton ... (http://nancyappleton.com/141-reasons-sugar-ruins-your-health/)nancyappleton.com/141-reasons-sugar-ruins-your-health/
(Just Kidding, it's 143) By Nancy Appleton PhD & G.N. Jacobs Excerpted from Suicide ... “Deleterious Effects of Sugar and Protective Effects of Starch on Cardiac ...



Weird Effects Sugar's Having On Your Body - Prevention.com (http://www.prevention.com/food/healthy-eating-tips/weird-effects-sugars-having-your-body)www.prevention.com/.../healthy.../weird-effects-sugars-having-your-bod...
Dec 3, 2013 - The new Sugar Smart Diet shows what the sweet stuff's doing to your skin, kidney's, and more. ... Sugar Smart Tip: It's easy to recommend giving up sugar-sweetened ..... Great article on how sugar impacts your health. A must ...



Sugar | Better Health Channel (http://www.betterhealth.vic.gov.au/bhcv2/bhcarticles.nsf/pages/Sugar)www.betterhealth.vic.gov.au › Healthy living › Food and nutrition - Foods
Too much sugar in the diet can contribute to health problems including obesity and ... It's easy to overindulge in foods, especially drinks, with high sugar content.



Sugar Health Effects: Is Refined Sugar Bad For You? (http://www.webmd.com/food-recipes/features/health-effects-of-sugar)www.webmd.com/food-recipes/features/health-effects-of-sugar
Her sugar cleanse diet inspired many viewers to embark on their own sugar ... We don't need to go cold turkey on sugar, health experts tell WebMD. But most of ...



10 Things You Don't Know About Sugar - Huffington Post (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kristin-kirkpatrick-ms-rd-ld/dangers-of-sugar_b_3658061.html)www.huffingtonpost.com/kristin.../dangers-of-sugar_b_3658061.html
Jul 30, 2013 - Perhaps it's sugar's lack of sodium or fat that make it the "lesser of several .... health effects that we see in the literature when reviewing sugar's ...

JohnQPublic
4th January 2015, 10:29 PM
From Mercola's site:


http://www.cnn.com/video/data/2.0/video/bestoftv/2014/09/16/exp-ns-lustig-sugar-fat.cnn.html