A recent study at the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and
Technology at the University of Illinois found that, matched calorie for
calorie with the simple sugar glucose, fructose causes significant
weight gain, physical inactivity, and body fat deposition.
"In the last 40 years, fructose, a simple carbohydrate derived from fruit
and vegetables, has been on the increase in American diets. Because of
the addition of high-fructose corn syrup to many soft drinks and
processed baked goods, fructose currently accounts for 10 percent of
caloric intake for U.S. citizens. Male adolescents are the top fructose
consumers, deriving between 15 to 23 percent of their calories from
fructose--three to four times more than the maximum levels recommended
by the American Heart Association."
Lab rats were fed two different diets: one, containing 18% fructose and one containing 18% glucose (the 18% number is reflective of the percent of an adolescent's diet that contains fructose). This was done for two and a-half months. Here's what the researchers found:
"The important thing to note is that animals in both experimental
groups had the usual intake of calories for a mouse," said Rendeiro.
"They were not eating more than they should, and both groups had exactly
the same amount of calories deriving from sugar, the only difference
was the type of sugar, either fructose or glucose."
The results showed that the fructose-fed mice displayed
significantly increased body weight, liver mass, and fat mass in
comparison to the glucose-fed mice.
Remarkably, the researchers also found that not only were the fructose-fed mice gaining weight, they were also less active.
"Biochemical factors could also come into play in how the mice
respond to the high fructose diet," explained Jonathan Mun, another
author on the study. "We know that contrary to glucose, fructose
bypasses certain metabolic steps that result in an increase in fat
formation, especially in adipose tissue and liver."
The precise mechanisms are still being investigated, but one thing is certain: high intake of fructose by itself adds pounds. Interesting, isn't it?
Dr. Esther
drkollars@gmail.com
fixdhealthcare.com
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