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Here's a controlled study on human subjects and high fructose corn syrup (HFC).
From below: "Within just two weeks, their blood chemistry was out of
whack. In one striking change, the volunteers had elevated levels of LDL
cholesterol, a risk factor for heart disease." Who would
think that HFC would raise the LDL? It obviously does.
HFC is in everything from bread to yogurt (Youplait in particular) and
numerous processed foods in between.
If you are obese or even overweight, this study could be of interest for you.
http://www.cnn.com/2012/04/27/health/soda-obesity/index.html?hpt=hp_c2
Soft drinks: Public enemy No.1 in obesity fight?
Fri April 27, 2012
(CNN) -- Pushing her meal cart into the hospital room, a
research assistant hands out tall glasses of reddish-pink liquid, along with a
gentle warning: "Remember, you guys have to finish all your Kool-Aid."
One by one, young volunteers chug
down their drinks, each carefully calibrated to contain a mix of water,
flavoring and a precisely calibrated solution of high fructose corn syrup: 55%
fructose, 45% glucose.
The participants are part of an
ongoing study run by Kimber Stanhope, a nutritional biologist at the University
of California, Davis. Volunteers agree to spend several weeks as lab rats: their
food carefully measured, their bodies subjected to a steady dose of scans and
blood tests. At first, each volunteer receives meals with no added sugars. But
then, the sweetened drinks start showing up.
For the final two weeks of the
study, volunteers drank three of the sweet concoctions daily -- about 500
calories of added sugar, or 25% of all calories for the adult women in the
study. Within just two weeks, their blood chemistry was out of whack. In one
striking change, the volunteers had elevated levels of LDL cholesterol, a risk
factor for heart disease.
While force-feeding junk food may
sound extreme, this controlled diet is not so far from the real world. A
20-ounce regular soda contains 227 calories, according to the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA). That single drink is more than 10% of the total calories an
adult woman needs to maintain a healthy weight, according to USDA diet
guidelines. Meanwhile, about 1 in 4 Americans gets at least 200 calories a day
from sugary drinks. These numbers, along with work like Stanhope's, gives
ammunition to doctors and public health officials who say soda should be treated
as public health enemy No. 1.
"Soft drinks and
sugar-containing beverages are the low hanging fruit in public health
today," says Dr. David Ludwig, director of the New Balance Foundation
Obesity Prevention Center, at Children's Hospital in Boston. "Many children
are consuming 300 calories per day or more, just in sugar-containing beverages.
Compare the challenge of giving up three glasses of sugary beverages, versus
getting them to do two hours of moderate physical activity."
"If you switch from Coke to
water, that's easy," says Elizabeth Mayer-Davis, a professor at the
University of North Carolina and a recent president of the American Diabetes
Association. "You don't have to make big complicated changes in how you
cook, and shop, and all that. And the number of calories you can save, can be
substantial."
Some in the soft drink business
say their product has been unfairly singled out. "Consumption of added
sugars is going down," says Karen Hanretty, Vice-President of Public
Affairs for the American Beverage Association. "Soda consumption has
declined, even as obesity has increased. To say that sugar is solely responsible
for obesity, doesn't make sense."
Coca-Cola has adapted to meet
consumer demand, says Rhona Applebaum, the company's Vice President and Chief
Scientific Regulatory Officer. More than ever, she says, those consumers choose
low-sugar products. Today, Diet Coke and Coke Zero make up 41% of Coke's soda
sales, up from 32% a decade ago. "Our products are part of a balanced,
sensible diet, and they can be enjoyed as a valuable part of any meal, including
snacks," says Applebaum.
Buried in the flood of horror
stories about America's obesity crisis, are a few hopeful signs. Not only is
sugar consumption going down, but obesity rates among girls and women have
actually stayed flat since 1999, according to Cynthia Ogden, a scientist with
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). For boys and men, those
levels have increased only modestly since around 2006, Ogden says.
Coincidentally or not, the
leveling off of obesity coincides with a drop in the amount of soda that
Americans consume. Consumption of soda -- both regular and diet -- has fallen by
17.3% since 1998, according to Beverage Digest.
Of course soda isn't the only
concern. An 8-ounce glass of fruit punch or apple juice has nearly 130 calories.
The same glass of chocolate milk has more than 200 -- a solid 20 percent of all
recommended daily calories. Overall, added sugars -- which includes both natural
sugar, and high fructose corn syrup -- make up about a sixth of all calories
taken in, according to USDA figures. Somewhat more than a third of those sugars
come from soda and other drinks.
That's why most people who take
a hard look at American diets say that cutting out sweetened drinks, is the
first step for anyone struggling with weight or diabetes.
"If we create the
assumption that doing one thing will reduce the epidemic [of obesity], we're
making a mistake," says Dr. William Dietz, director of the CDC's Division
of Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity. "But within the dietary side,
we have to focus on where the biggest action is."
The action, says Dietz and
others, lies with sugar and its close cousin, high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS).
Most sweet drinks, including nearly all soda in the United States, use HFCS.
Not everyone agrees they're
equivalent. While most studies show that table sugar and HFCS play an equal role
in weight gain, some research suggests that HFCS -- which usually contains 10%
more fructose than sucrose -- is more likely to change the body's metabolism, in
ways that can increase risk for cardiovascular disease and diabetes.
But most scientists say the
differences are subtle. That includes even Stanhope, whose work has focused on
comparing the effects of fructose and other sugars. In terms of advising
patients or making public health policy, she says, there isn't much difference.
"I think we really, at this point, need to treat them all alike."
"Are sweetened drinks the
only reason we have epidemics of obesity and diabetes? No, they're not,"
says Mayer-Davis, the past ADA president. "But sometimes the easy answer,
is the answer."
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