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5 Reasons High Fructose Corn Syrup Will Kill You

Posted on 05/22/2011 11:11:23 AM PDT by DannyTN

IF YOU CAN’T CONVINCE THEM, CONFUSE THEM. —Harry Truman

The current media debate about the benefits (or lack of harm) of high fructose corn syrup (HFCS) in our diet misses the obvious. The average American increased their consumption of HFCS (mostly from sugar sweetened drinks and processed food) from zero to over 60 pounds per person per year. During that time period, obesity rates have more than tripled and diabetes incidence has increased more than seven fold. Not perhaps the only cause, but a fact that cannot be ignored.

Doubt and confusion are the currency of deception, and they sow the seeds of complacency. These are used skillfully through massive print and television advertising campaigns by the Corn Refiners Association’s attempt to dispel the “myth” that HFCS is harmful and assert through the opinion of “medical and nutrition experts” that it is no different than cane sugar. It is a “natural” product that is a healthy part of our diet when used in moderation.

Except for one problem. When used in moderation it is a major cause of heart disease, obesity, cancer, dementia, liver failure, tooth decay and more.

Why is the corn industry spending millions on misinformation campaigns to convince consumers and health care professionals of the safety of their product? Could it be that the food industry comprises 17 percent of our economy?

The Lengths the Corn Industry Will Go To

The goal of the corn industry is to call into question any claim of harm from consuming high fructose corn syrup, and to confuse and deflect by calling their product natural “corn sugar”. That’s like calling tobacco in cigarettes natural herbal medicine. Watch the slick ad where a caring father walks hand in hand with his four-year-old daughter through a big question mark carved in an idyllic cornfield.

In the ad, the father tells us:

“Like any parent I have questions about the food my daughter eats – like high fructose corn syrup. So I started looking for answers from medical and nutrition experts, and what I discovered whether it’s corn sugar or cane sugar your body can’t tell the difference. Sugar is sugar. Knowing that makes me feel better about what she eats and that’s one less thing to worry about.”

Physicians are also targeted directly. I received a 12-page color glossy monograph from the Corn Refiners Association reviewing the “science” that HFCS was safe and no different than cane sugar. I assume the other 700,000 physicians in America received the same propaganda at who knows what cost.

In addition to this, I received a special “personal” letter from the Corn Refiner’s Association outlining every mention of the problems with HCFS in our diet – whether in print, blogs, books, radio or television. They warned me of the errors of my ways and put me on “notice”. For what I am not sure. To think they are tracking this (and me) that closely gives me an Orwellian chill.

New websites like www.sweetsurprise.com and www.cornsugar.com help “set us straight” about HFCS with quotes from professors of nutrition and medicine and thought leaders from Harvard and other stellar institutions.

Why is the corn industry spending millions on misinformation campaigns to convince consumers and health care professionals of the safety of their product? Could it be that the food industry comprises 17 percent of our economy?

But are these twisted sweet lies or a sweet surprise, as the Corn Refiners Association websites claim?

What the Science Says about HFCS

Let’s examine the science and insert some common sense into the conversation. These facts may indeed come as a sweet surprise. The ads suggest getting your nutrition advice from your doctor (who, unfortunately, probably knows less about nutrition than most grandmothers). Having studied this for over a decade, and having read, interviewed or personally talked with most of the “medical and nutrition experts” used to bolster the claim that “corn sugar” and cane sugar are essentially the same, quite a different picture emerges and the role of HCFS in promoting obesity, disease and death across the globe becomes clear.

Last week over lunch with Dr. Bruce Ames, one of the foremost nutritional scientists in the world and Dr. Jeffrey Bland, a nutritional biochemist, a student of Linus Pauling and I reviewed the existing science, and Dr. Ames shared shocking new evidence from his research center on how HFCS can trigger body-wide inflammation and obesity.

Here are 5 reasons you should stay way from any product containing high fructose corn syrup and why it may kill you.

1. Sugar in any form causes obesity and disease when consumed in pharmacologic doses.

Cane sugar and high fructose corn syrup are indeed both harmful when consumed in pharmacologic doses of 140 pounds per person per year. When one 20 ounce HFCS sweetened soda, sports drink or tea has 17 teaspoons of sugar (and the average teenager often consumes two drinks a day) we are conducting a largely uncontrolled experiment on the human species. Our hunter gather ancestors consumed the equivalent of 20 teaspoons per year, not per day. In this sense, I would agree with the corn industry that sugar is sugar. Quantity matters. But there are some important differences.

2. HFCS and cane sugar are NOT biochemically identical or processed the same way by the body.

High fructose corn syrup is an industrial food product and far from “natural” or a naturally occurring substance. It is extracted from corn stalks through a process so secret that Archer Daniels Midland and Carghill would not allow the investigative journalist, Michael Pollan to observe it for his book, The Omnivore’s Dilemma. The sugars are extracted through a chemical enzymatic process resulting in a chemically and biologically novel compound called HFCS.

Some basic biochemistry will help you understand this. Regular cane sugar (sucrose) is made of two-sugar molecules bound tightly together – glucose and fructose in equal amounts. The enzymes in your digestive tract must break down the sucrose into glucose and fructose, which are then absorbed into the body.

HFCS also consists of glucose and fructose, not in a 50-50 ratio, but a 55-45 fructose to glucose ratio in an unbound form. Fructose is sweeter than glucose. And HCFS is cheaper than sugar because of the government farm bill corn subsidies. Products with HFCS are sweeter and cheaper than products made with cane sugar. This allowed for the average soda size to balloon from 8 ounces to 20 ounces with little financial costs to manufacturers but great human costs of increased obesity, diabetes and chronic disease.

Now back to biochemistry. Since there is there is no chemical bond between them, no digestion is required so they are more rapidly absorbed into your blood stream. Fructose goes right to the liver and triggers lipogenesis (the production of fats like triglycerides and cholesterol) this is why it is the major cause of liver damage in this country and causes a condition called “fatty liver” which affects 70 million people. The rapidly absorbed glucose triggers big spikes in insulin – our body’s major fat storage hormone. Both these features of HFCS lead to increased metabolic disturbances that drive increases in appetite, weight gain, diabetes, heart disease, cancer, dementia and more.

But there was one more thing I learned during lunch with Dr. Bruce Ames. Research done by his group at the Children’s Hospital Oakland Research Institute found that free fructose from HFCS requires more energy to be absorbed by the gut and soaks up two phosphorous molecules from ATP (our body’s energy source). This depletes the energy fuel source or ATP in our gut required to maintain the integrity of our intestinal lining. Little “tight junctions” cement each intestinal cell together preventing food and bacteria from “leaking” across the intestinal membrane and triggering an immune reaction and body wide inflammation.

High doses of free fructose have been proven to literally punch holes in the intestinal lining allowing nasty byproducts of toxic gut bacteria and partially digested food proteins to enter your blood stream and trigger the inflammation that we know is at the root of obesity, diabetes, cancer, heart disease, dementia and accelerated aging. Naturally occurring fructose in fruit is part of a complex of nutrients and fiber that doesn’t exhibit the same biological effects as the free high fructose doses found in “corn sugar”.

The takeaway: Cane sugar and the industrially produced, euphemistically named “corn sugar” are not biochemically or physiologically the same.

3. HFCS contains contaminants including mercury that are not regulated or measured by the FDA

An FDA researcher asked corn producers to ship a barrel of high fructose corn syrup in order to test for contaminants. Her repeated requests were refused until she claimed she represented a newly created soft drink company. She was then promptly shipped a big vat of HFCS that was used as part of the study that showed that HFCS often contains toxic levels of mercury because of chlor-alkali products used in its manufacturing.(i) Poisoned sugar is certainly not “natural”.

When HFCS is run through a chemical analyzer or a chromatograph, strange chemical peaks show up that are not glucose or fructose. What are they? Who knows? This certainly calls into question the purity of this processed form of super sugar. The exact nature, effects and toxicity of these funny compounds have not been fully explained, but shouldn’t we be protected from the presence of untested chemical compounds in our food supply, especially when the contaminated food product comprises up to 15-20 percent of the average American’s daily calorie intake?

4. Independent medical and nutrition experts DO NOT support the use of HCFS in our diet, despite the assertions of the corn industry.

The corn industry’s happy looking websites www.cornsugar.com and www.sweetsurprise.com bolster their position that cane sugar and corn sugar are the same by quoting experts, or should we say mis-quoting …

Barry M. Popkin, Ph.D., Professor, Department of Nutrition, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has published widely on the dangers of sugar-sweetened drinks and their contribution to the obesity epidemic. In a review of HFCS in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition,(ii) he explains the mechanism by which the free fructose may contribute to obesity. He states that:

“The digestion, absorption, and metabolism of fructose differ from those of glucose. Hepatic metabolism of fructose favors de novo lipogenesis [production of fat in the liver]. In addition, unlike glucose, fructose does not stimulate insulin secretion or enhance leptin production. Because insulin and leptin act as key afferent signals in the regulation of food intake and body weight [to control appetite], this suggests that dietary fructose may contribute to increased energy intake and weight gain. Furthermore, calorically sweetened beverages may enhance caloric overconsumption.”

He states that HFCS is absorbed more rapidly than regular sugar, and that it doesn’t stimulate insulin or leptin production. This prevents you from triggering the body’s signals for being full and may lead to overconsumption of total calories.

He concludes by saying that:

“… the increase in consumption of HFCS has a temporal relation to the epidemic of obesity, and the overconsumption of HFCS in calorically sweetened beverages may play a role in the epidemic of obesity.”

The corn industry takes his comments out of context to support their position. “All sugar you eat is the same.”

True pharmacologic doses of any kind of sugar are harmful, but the biochemistry of different kinds of sugar and their respective effects on absorption, appetite and metabolism are different, and Dr. Popkin knows that.

David S. Ludwig, M.D., Ph.D., Associate Professor of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, and a personal friend has published extensively on the dangers and the obesogenic properties of sugar-sweetened beverages. He was quoted as saying that “high fructose corn syrup is one of the most misunderstood products in the food industry.” When I asked him why he supported the corn industry, he told me he didn’t and that his comments were taken totally out of context.

Misrepresenting science is one thing, misrepresenting scientists who have been at the forefront of the fight against obesity and high fructose sugar sweetened beverages is quite another.

5. HCFS is almost always a marker of poor-quality, nutrient-poor disease creating industrial food products or “food-like substances”.

The last reason to avoid products that contain HFCS is that they are a marker for poor-quality, nutritionally depleted, processed industrial food full of empty calories and artificial ingredients. If you find “high fructose corn syrup” on the label you can be sure it is not a whole, real, fresh food full of fiber, vitamins, minerals, phytonutrients and antioxidants. Stay away if you want to stay healthy. We still must reduce our overall consumption of sugar, but with this one simple dietary change you can radically reduce your health risks and improve your health.

While debate may rage about the biochemistry and physiology of cane sugar vs. corn sugar, this is in fact beside the point (despite the finer points of my scientific analysis above). The conversation has been diverted to a simple assertion that cane sugar and corn sugar are not different.

The real issues are only two.

We are consuming HFCS and sugar in pharmacologic quantities never before experienced in human history — 140 pounds a year vs. 20 teaspoons a year 10,000 years ago.

High fructose corn syrup is always found in very poor quality foods that are nutritionally vacuous and filled with all sorts of other disease promoting compounds, fats, salt, chemicals and even mercury.

These critical ideas should be the heart of the national conversation, not the meaningless confusing ads and statements by the corn industry in the media and online that attempt to assure the public that the biochemistry of real sugar and industrially produced sugar from corn are the same.

Know I’d like to hear from you …

Do you think there is an association between the introduction of HFCS in our diet and the obesity epidemic?

What reason do you think the Corn Refiners Association has for running such ads and publishing websites like those listed in this article?

What do you think of the science presented here and the general effects of HFCS on the American diet?

Please leave your thoughts by adding a comment below.

To your good health,

Mark Hyman, MD

References

(i) Dufault, R., LeBlanc, B., Schnoll, R. et al. 2009. Mercury from chlor-alkali plants: Measured concentrations in food product sugar. Environ Health. 26(8):2.

(ii) Bray, G.A., Nielsen, S.J., and B.M. Popkin. 2004. Consumption of high-fructose corn syrup in beverages may play a role in the epidemic of obesity. Am J Clin Nutr. 79(4):537-43. Review.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: hfcs
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To: Mase

Good points.


141 posted on 05/23/2011 5:38:58 PM PDT by Mr. Silverback (Anyone who says we need illegals to do the jobs Americans won't do has never watched "Dirty Jobs.")
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To: SeeSac

I posted my clear recollection of an article announcing research findings about a year ago. My recollection be mistaken, though I am fairly sure I recalled by the research design and results as reported in that article correctly. The fact I cannot find working links to the study (maybe not surprising if it is forthcoming in The Journal of Hepatology as the online content referring to the study most like the one I recall suggest), does not make my posting “false propaganda”.


142 posted on 05/23/2011 9:08:17 PM PDT by The_Reader_David (And when they behead your own people in the wars which are to come, then you will know. . .)
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To: SeeSac

The word “may” should have been inserted before the word “be” in my reply. (That’s what I get for editing my own post for bevity. The longer version I had shortly before hitting send was worded correctly.)


143 posted on 05/23/2011 9:10:59 PM PDT by The_Reader_David (And when they behead your own people in the wars which are to come, then you will know. . .)
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To: DannyTN

HFCS is about 22% worse than sucrose. Both of them are bad.

Sucrose breaks down pretty readily into glucose and fructose so availability doesn’t make sucrose any better. The biggest problem is that both of them hit the blood stream pretty quickly after consumption and enter at a rate difficult to find in any natural food. That spike in blood sugar is hard on the body, as the body can’t use that much energy all at once, so it gets converted into triglycerides.

The only thing that makes HFCS worse than sucrose is the slightly higher concentration of fructose. Fructose being metabolized only in the liver means the rate and the quantity hitting the blood stream stresses the liver and disrupts how the liver does it’s many other jobs- including the regulation of cholesterol.

What make the fructose in HFCS and sucrose different from natural sources it that the fructose is typically bound up with fiber. The fiber slows the release of the fructose into the blood stream and also helps the liver clean up the toxins from breaking the fructose down. Fiber is critical to our function yet very few of us get anywhere near enough. By extension, fruit juice is just as bad as soft drinks since the sugars are floating free, without the fiber in concentrations not found in whole fruit.


144 posted on 05/24/2011 2:03:43 AM PDT by Flying Circus
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To: mlo

Fructose comes in all your fruit. Bound up with fiber, your body is very capable of handling it. I would agree that we really should avoid fructose in processed foods but consumed in whole fruit fructose is OK.


145 posted on 05/24/2011 2:07:47 AM PDT by Flying Circus
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To: The_Reader_David
The word “may” should have been inserted before the word “be” in my reply.

"was" should be inserted in place of "may be" ....

146 posted on 05/24/2011 6:40:43 AM PDT by SeeSac
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To: Flying Circus
"The only thing that makes HFCS worse than sucrose is the slightly higher concentration of fructose"

I'm more concerned about the stuff in HFCS that is not sugar, than I am about the relative mix of fructose to sucrose. The trace amount of mercury, the other chemicals identified on the spectragraph, and there is also a particle that has been found in the blood of diabetics that is found in HFCS, but I've lost the link on it.

147 posted on 05/24/2011 7:22:33 AM PDT by DannyTN
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To: Flying Circus
The biggest problem is that both of them hit the blood stream pretty quickly after consumption

The bodies absorption of sugar is independent of the dietary source. It is regulated by active transport on the surface of the small intestines.

What make the fructose in HFCS and sucrose different from natural sources it that the fructose is typically bound up with fiber.

The disaccharides and the polysaccharides are different entities. They are separated before they reach the intestines.

The fiber slows the release of the fructose into the blood stream

Fructose doesn't go into the blood stream. Where do you alarmists come up with this nonsense?

148 posted on 05/24/2011 8:52:24 AM PDT by death2tyrants
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To: DannyTN
I'm more concerned about the stuff in HFCS that is not sugar, than I am about the relative mix of fructose to sucrose. The trace amount of mercury...

The IATP study that found mercury in products using HFCS was, like so many others, seriously flawed. They never employed a control group so we really have no idea whether the mercury came from the HFCS or something else.

The highest concentration of mercury found was measured at 350 ppt - that's parts per trillion. Measuring in picograms is just plain silly. There is nothing to be worried about when an element is found in quantities in less than 400 parts per trillion. Good grief, you can find mercury in drinking water at 500 ppt and no one is running and screaming into the night about it.

As a matter of fact, higher concentrations of mercury can be found in many fruits and vegetables. Canned mushrooms were found to contain mercury - at least in one test - at 5,000 - 15,000 parts per trillion. Scary. You're probably exposed to thousands of times more mercury when you screw a fluorescent light bulb into a socket.

The compounds you are not remembering are called a reactive carbonyls. These carbonyls are found at high levels in the blood of diabetics. They are also found in drinks sweetened with HFCS. The guy conducting this reasearch (Dr. Ho @ Rutgers) is a top shelf researcher so there may be something to this. Or it may be much ado about nothing.

149 posted on 05/24/2011 9:04:17 AM PDT by Mase (Save me from the people who would save me from myself!)
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To: Mr. Silverback
Ver-Nize! (/borat)

I don't even bother getting into the specifics anymore, this whole thing is obviously another boogeyman hunt. What is most telling, for me, is the fact that sucrose is so similar to HFCS, and all the ills attributed to HFCS can be attributed to sucrose (table sugar), but they don't say a damn thing about it.. AT least the low-carb fanatics are consistent...

150 posted on 05/24/2011 12:05:10 PM PDT by Paradox (Obama gets Trumped.)
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To: DannyTN

My google alert for HFCS picked up your article.
Thank you for this informative article. I am so tired of reading articles that claim that HFCS=sugar just because the AMA says that they both contribute to obesity, and “once absorbed in to the bloodstream” are the same. (ADA). I firmly believe that the introduction of HFCS into our food supply has been a major contributor to our current health woes.
Now some specifics. The unknown “blip” that Dr. Hyman referred to in the GLC analysis of HFCS may be mold.
In my cybertravels I had come across a woman who is so allergic to corn that she cannot even walk by it in a supermarket. Not only can she not eat corn, drink HFCS-sweetened beverages, or eat any corn derived additive, she cannot take prescriptive medicine that uses cornstarch filler. The only substance that could ignite a rxn like that would be mold. If you go to ADM’s or Cargills product sheets you will see that there is mold (mycotoxin) contaminant present. It’s reported as “less than -—” but that just means they couldn’t remove it completely. Incidentally the woman I am referring to can drink Mexican
Coke made with real sugar. So much for the purity of HFCS.
Also, if you go back to the original literature about HFCS, you will note that HFCS-42 was given a sweetness rating of
100 = sucrose. In those early days, millions of dollars had been spent on outfitting their factories to enzymatically convert glucose to fructose. It was essesntial, therefore, to find the lowest fructose% that mimicked sugar. However, according to one retired corn refiner, HFCS-42 gummed up the works and it took too much energy to pump the stuff out. So the production engineers came up with a brilliant idea....add more fructose. Fructose is the more moisture retaining of the two simple sugars, glucose and fructose, and boosting the %fructose to HFCS-55 solved their problem. So they added 55/42 = 30% more fructose to keep their pipes running smoothly. Little did they know that variant HFCS-55 would start clogging our livers and arteries. Now the CRA claims that HFCS-55 has a rating of 100 = sucrose. That is patently deceptive.
The CRA has by design perverted the ratio of fructose: glucose in HFCS. ADM makes Cornsweet90, which is
HFCS-90. This extremely sweet industrial sweetener is used for low-cal, low fat foods. Why? Because the food manufacturer can impart the same sweetness with half the calories. Sounds like a caloric bargain until you realize that your liver is receiving a bolus of fructose it doesn’t need. Btw: ADM has removed the product sheet on Cornsweet90 ever since I starting spreading this info.

Cynthia Papierniak, M.S.


151 posted on 06/01/2011 8:14:12 PM PDT by Cynthia1770 (A little history on HFCS)
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To: Cynthia1770
If you go to ADM’s or Cargills product sheets you will see that there is mold (mycotoxin) contaminant present. It’s reported as “less than -—” but that just means they couldn’t remove it completely.

What utter nonsense. "Less than" on a product spec sheet means that the entity being tested for was not detectable by the test method employed. It doesn't mean that the entity being tested for was ever there in the first place, or not for that matter, simply that it was undetectable.

There will be a spec for heavy metals for example. The spec will be "less than X ppm". That doesn't mean that the material contains heavy metals at X-1 ppm. It means that the limit of detection is X ppm and the test result came back negative.

Your fanciful description of the development of HFCS is equally twisted but not worth a response.

152 posted on 06/01/2011 9:35:06 PM PDT by facedown (Armed in the Heartland)
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To: Cynthia1770

Welcome to Free Republic.


153 posted on 06/02/2011 10:28:48 AM PDT by DannyTN
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To: Cynthia1770

Interesting stuff Cynthia. Thanks for sharing this information.


154 posted on 06/21/2011 10:22:02 PM PDT by Auntie Mame (Fear not tomorrow. God is already there.)
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