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Is sugar making us fat?
TCPalm.com ^ | July 1, 2003 | Lance Gay and Lee Bowman Scripps

Posted on 07/02/2003 4:56:13 PM PDT by SamAdams76

Face it: we’re fat. Yes, we’ve taken low-fat and no-fat pledges, but government statistics and a trip to the beach show we’re just getting fatter. That has occurred even though many of us replaced bacon and eggs with a low-fat breakfast bar, traded in that roast beef luncheon sandwich for a can of Slim Fast and pick out fat-free dinners in the deep freeze.So why are 175 million Americans still classified as either overweight or obese? Some nutritionists argue that maybe we got bad advice, and they are rethinking the public fight against fats in food.

Instead, they are turning attention to an ancient dietary enemy — sugar.

There is absolutely no question that Americans have developed a very sweet tooth.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture reports that over the last 40 years, per capita consumption of sugars has increased an astonishing 32 percent — from 115 pounds of all sorts of sugars per year in 1966 to 152 pounds in 2000.

There is a bitter disagreement over what that data mean.

Some nutritionists say increased sugar consumption is alarming, clearly the cause of the obesity epidemic. Others argue that the modern couch potato lifestyle is responsible for the larding of America.

You don’t always know it, but there is added sugar in the processed foods you are eating today. McDonald’s acknowledges on its Web site that sugar is an ingredient in its french fries, and nutritional studies show a Burger King Whopper contains more than a teaspoon of sugar. Nutritionist Nancy Appleton, author of "Lick the Sugar Habit," calculates 3 1/2 teaspoons of sugar in a cup of Frosted Cheerios and about 10 teaspoons in a 12-ounce can of Coca-Cola. There are 15 calories in each teaspoon.

Products labeled low fat often have the highest levels of sugar. Sugar is a cheap ingredient, and food processors add it to other ingredients to keep the food tasty or to change the texture.

Dieters might be surprised to find there is more sugar in a can of strawberry Slim-Fast diet drink than in a quarter cup of M&M candies, and that low-fat and "healthy choice" breakfast bars with fruit filling have as much sugar as chocolate eclairs. Almost half of each teaspoon of ketchup is sugar, according to Appleton. Food companies label sugar content in grams: Every four grams translates into one teaspoon of sugar.

A 12-ounce Starbucks Grande Caramel Mocha coffee has the equivalent of almost 12 teaspoons of sugar, and if you have a Cinnabon Caramel Pecanbon with it, add another 12 teaspoons, according to the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a non-profit group.

Some scientists contend people have become so preoccupied with preaching about the dangers of fats and the wonders of low-fat diets that they haven’t paid sufficient attention to the amount of sugar dumped into food.

Food without sugar or fat doesn’t have much taste, and "we aren’t horses," noted Robert Keith, a professor of nutrition at Auburn University.

"People have become overzealous about taking out all the fats. There are essential fatty acids we need to have," Keith said. The fats, he said, give substance to food — what scientists call "satiety values" — a sense of fullness after eating that sugars do not provide.

So, he said, "Some fat should be there."

There is no agreement among scientists on how much sugar should be allowed in food.

The World Health Organization says adding sugar to food is making people fat and recommends that people limit sugar consumption to 10 percent of caloric intake each day. A panel of American scientists with the National Academy of Sciences earlier this year said there is no solid data to validate a recommended level, but concludes that daily diets containing more than 25 percent sugar are unhealthy because the sugar interferes with absorbing other nutrients.

Studies estimate that sugars currently account for 16 percent of the average U.S. diet — up from 12 percent 50 years ago — and reaching the World Health Organization recommendation would require many Americans to cut back sharply.

Some nutritionists say this could easily be accomplished by consuming fewer soft drinks, cookies and cakes. They plan to push the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to emphasize the need to cut back on sugars when the agency reviews its nutrition label policy this year.

The sugar industry is fighting any limitation.

David Lineback, director of the Joint Institute of Food Safety and Applied Nutrition at the University of Maryland, said sugar is being blamed for increases in obesity that could just as easily be linked to overeating, portion super-sizing and inactivity. "Sugar is an easy and convenient scapegoat," he said, noting how much the American diet has changed in recent years. "If you ask me as a scientist, there is very little evidence sugar is responsible."

Andrew Briscoe, president of the Sugar Association, says the World Health Organization report is based on flawed science. He said his association will lobby Congress to reduce the $400 million in U.S. contributions to the WHO because of its negative views on sugars.

But the World Health Organization also has strong defenders. Nutritionist Marion Nestle, chairwoman of the Department of Nutrition and Food at New York University, said the 10 percent recommendation is in line with current prevailing scientific and government opinion.

"This has been decided for decades," she said, noting the current food pyramid issued by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, recommends people limit consumption of sugars to 12 teaspoons a day. That translates to 180 calories out of an average 2,200 calories of daily consumption.

Nestle said she would back much lower levels of sugar intake — no more than six teaspoons a day of added sugars — and argues that people get sufficient sugar naturally in fruits and vegetables.

Adam Drewnowski of the University of Washington’s center for public health nutrition, said economics is driving food processors to use more sugar in manufactured food because sugar is so cheap.

"They have rigged the food — sugar is ubiquitous in everything," Drewnowski said. "Sugar and fat are the cheap calories, and we are evolutionarily driven to them."

Drewnowski also urges people to be cautious about the low-fat labels on food and watch out for sugars.

"Slim-Fast, one pound can, has 267 grams, 66 percent sugar. You can’t tell me that sugar in Coke makes you fat, but sugar in Slim-Fast is going to make you slim. There are just a few more nutrients in the Slim-Fast," he said.

Others scientists minimize the role of sugar in the obesity epidemic and contend the problem is that Americans aren’t exercising sufficiently for the amount of food they eat.

"We need to talk about calories," said Alison Kretser, nutritionist with the Grocery Manufacturers of America. "It’s the number of calories as well as an excess of inactivity."

Cathy Nonas, director of obesity and diabetes programs at North General Hospital in Harlem, N.Y., agrees.

"It’s a calorie game. Nobody has ever proven that sugar will make you fat unless you eat too much of it. Fat is still more easily stored," she said. "It’s not as if you feed people sugar, it will make them fatter on its own. Sugar is an empty calorie and those who eat a lot of it tend to eat a lot of fatty stuff. And people are eating bigger portions and eating more times a day than ever — and all that, along with inactivity, contributes to obesity."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News
KEYWORDS: health; obesity; sugar
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To: SamAdams76
Relayed thread:

Farmers' sweet deal makes for fat Americans [Corn syrup vs sugar]

121 posted on 07/03/2003 11:48:42 AM PDT by Incorrigible
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To: Dont Mention the War
OK, what about beer? How many beers a day can I have on the Atkins diet?
122 posted on 07/03/2003 11:49:42 AM PDT by Lee'sGhost (Crom!)
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To: Xenalyte
Hey,
Whatever works for you...

Most folks don't get enough calcium.
123 posted on 07/03/2003 11:50:21 AM PDT by najida (What handbasket? And where did you say we were going?)
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To: Xenalyte
"Number two, if that's the case, how would you explain the fact that I'm consuming more calories than I did six weeks ago, yet losing weight?"

You doing the Atkins diet?
124 posted on 07/03/2003 11:50:38 AM PDT by Lee'sGhost (Crom!)
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To: MadelineZapeezda
No longer have heartburn......no longer need prevacid.

I have experienced this same improvement (only with Prilosec). When I was in the induction phase, I realized that all the years I thought it was the "evil" bacon that was upsetting my stomach I was wrong. It was the toast that I was eating with it. I avoid bread since I have discovered that my stomach problems stem directly from eating the stuff.

125 posted on 07/03/2003 11:51:42 AM PDT by LibertarianLiz
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To: SamAdams76; TomB
Is sugar making us fat?

Neither sugar (sucrose, which is glucose and fructose in a 1:1 ratio) nor high fructose corn syrup (which has a greater than 1:1 ratio of fructose) is making us fat. A diet with an energy intake that exceeds an individual's energy output is what makes him fat.

The truth is relatively simple, but that won't stop this thread from being filled with outlandish nonsense. The following can be used to separate fact from nutzoid nutracrap.

Fructose* (a six carbon sugar) enters the glycolytic pathway and is used in exactly the same way as glucose (another isomer of the same molecular formula and known as dextrose, grape sugar, or corn sugar). In fact, glucose is phosphorylated on the 6 carbon to become fructose 6-phosphate. Fructose 6-phosphate is phosphorylated again on the 1 carbon to become fructose 1,6 diphosphate. Dietary fructose (whether it comes from sucrose or from honey or from fruit or from high fructose corn syrup) is phosphorylated on the 1 carbon and then on the 6 carbon, ending up as fructose 1,6-diphosphate, the same as glucose.

Neither glucose nor fructose is made into fat in the human body. Fat cannot be converted into glucose. The human body makes very, very little fat de novo. The way one gains fat is principally from fat in the diet that is stored in adipose tissue. If you took a sample of all the fats you ate over a year's period and compared their types and relative quantities to the fat in a tissue sample of your adipose tissue, you'd find they were almost exactly the same.

The way you accumulate such fat has to do with your body's storage capacity for the three macro-nutrients (proteins, carbohydrates, and fat) when faced with dietary excess. The body has no real storage form of protein. Protein intake in excess of physiological needs for protein synthesis results in the constituent amino acids being deaminated and catabolized either in the glycolytic or lipolytic pathways depending on the type of amino acid. Carbohydrate intake can be buffered through about three days worth of storage in the form of glycogen, a polymer of glucose molecules. Relative to proteins and carbohydrates, fat has almost unlimited storage capacity.

When ones energy intake exceeds output, the body compensates by prioritizing the catabolism of macronutrients. Proteins have most immediate priority, followed by glucose, followed by fats. If the continued excess of caloric intake threatens to overtax the glycogen storage capacity, the body shifts substrate usage away from fat oxidation (nearly all your resting metabolic rate is accounted for by fat oxidation) and toward glucose oxidation. The result is that energy intake that exceeds energy output is preferentially saved by the storage of dietary fat.


*So any time you have one unit of sucrose, 1/2 of that is fructose. And it is principally the fructose in sugar, not the glucose, that makes it taste sweet. This is why it takes much less fructose to sweeten something to the same degree as it does sucrose. Maltose is two molecules of glucose. Lactose is one molecule of glucose and one of galactose. All hexose dietary sugars (fructose, glucose, and galactose) are eventually converted into fructose 1,6-diphosphate.
126 posted on 07/03/2003 11:51:57 AM PDT by aruanan
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To: najida
How many fruits and veges do they eat a day?
How much fiber are they getting in their diets?
How many mg of calcium?
How much water?
How much activity? How much mono and omega-3 fat?

I think people on low-fat diets have these same deficiencies. Atkins recommends supplements in his book.

Personally, I do berries and salad. I use psyllium husks and fish oil supplements. I get calcium in my liberal use of cream. Don't know if it's enough, although I didn't drink any milk before. Don't drink much water though.

127 posted on 07/03/2003 11:52:18 AM PDT by Aquinasfan
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To: Xenalyte
"Damn. Does that mean I have to postpone my ice dancing lessons?"

No, but no more back flips and somersaults while kicking bad guy butt? (Sorry, that was too obvious. Won't do again.)
128 posted on 07/03/2003 11:53:05 AM PDT by Lee'sGhost (Crom!)
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To: Dont Mention the War
It's salt with citrus in it. I'm used to drinking Honey Brown, which has a good taste, and Michelob Ultra just isn't - what's the word? - I guess "beery" enough.

Also, my Conquistadors all drink Tecate and Corona with Twang, and they've gotten me used to it.
129 posted on 07/03/2003 11:55:17 AM PDT by Xenalyte (I may not agree with your bumper sticker, but I'll defend to the death your right to stick it)
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To: SamAdams76
Corn syrup is great for the food processing industry

The absolute key to losing weight is to avoid processed food as much as humanly possible. That means anything in a package and/or container. Bread is an obvious item; but so to are things like ketchup, BBQ sauce, salad dressing, etc.

Since I must have bread on my sandwich, I've gone back to horrible Wonderbread. The reason is because 2 slices of the small size is only 110 calories. Ditto for ketchup, BBQ, et al. Can't live without it, but be cognizant of what's in there.

Carbs aren't really that bad, and in fact are an essential part of any diet. Just don't load a potato/rice with too much butter/margarine, and defininitely do not eat anything like potato chips (*sniff/tears*).

If you grilled meat every night along with a small side of potato/rice and a big bowl of veggies, everyone would look pretty fit & trim.

130 posted on 07/03/2003 11:56:05 AM PDT by Snerfling
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To: Desdemona
I live for a glass or real cranberry juice every morning. I mean the world is out of balance if I don't get it, and studies show that it has great benefits (anti-cancer or something I don't remember right now.)

And what about caffine?
131 posted on 07/03/2003 11:57:05 AM PDT by Lee'sGhost (Crom!)
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To: aruanan
The truth is relatively simple, but that won't stop this thread from being filled with outlandish nonsense.

Like the two recent studies in the New England Journal of Medicine that support Atkins' diet? Sheesh.

132 posted on 07/03/2003 11:57:15 AM PDT by Aquinasfan
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To: Aquinasfan
I am not a big advocate of supplements for major nutrients.... God made us to eat food....

There is less than 10 mg of calcium in a tablespoon of cream....I recommend getting about 1000 mg (to females)....

As for fiber, that is another thing that best comes from foods sources (there are five kinds, each with a different purpose)....
133 posted on 07/03/2003 11:58:17 AM PDT by najida (What handbasket? And where did you say we were going?)
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To: kaktuskid
The three reasons why we are fat today...

1. Corn syrup in everything

But, but, but, but Warren Buffett swears by Tootsie rolls. And they're loaded with corn syrup (he's not fat).

2. Hydrogenated fats

What?

3. White carbs...flour,white bread

I need my bread. Not giving up toast for anything, ever.

134 posted on 07/03/2003 11:58:37 AM PDT by tuna_battle_slight_return (Sine waves.)
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To: SamAdams76
I still have my nightly two beers.

Do you make your own?

135 posted on 07/03/2003 11:59:03 AM PDT by js1138
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To: Senator Pardek
The human body is designed to spend its day running around to find enough to eat.

Yep. In addition, our bodies are designed to eat several small meal portions throughout the day as opposed to two or three large ones. Recent evolutionary history has gradually tended more and more to the latter.

The most amazing thing of all (which you'd never know just listening to the doomsayers) is that in spite of our fat epidemic, our American lifespan is higher than ever and still on the rise.

136 posted on 07/03/2003 12:00:06 PM PDT by jpl
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To: Lee'sGhost
You doing the Atkins diet?

A modified version - low carb, high protein.
137 posted on 07/03/2003 12:00:23 PM PDT by Xenalyte (I may not agree with your bumper sticker, but I'll defend to the death your right to stick it)
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To: Lee'sGhost
Caffiene?

They say to cut back. Atkins eliminates it. Frankly, I gave up coffee for tea about three weeks ago and it's made a difference. But, I've always taken it black.

If you have any doubts on calcium, Os-Cal. I've taken it for years due to lactose intolerance.
138 posted on 07/03/2003 12:03:37 PM PDT by Desdemona
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To: SamAdams76
Just imagine: If Karen Carpenter would have eaten a few Big-Macs or a couple of sugar coated jelly donuts, she might still have been making CDs today.
139 posted on 07/03/2003 12:06:21 PM PDT by scouse
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To: SamAdams76
I agree, I have been fluctuating between the "Induction phase" of the Atkins diet and a "modified Atkins" where I simply watch the carb content of what I eat. I was only 30 pounds overweight to begin with so my weight loss goals were fairly modest. So far, by going on induction for 2 weeks and then watching what I eat (as far as carbs are concerned) for a month or so, I have lost 20 pounds over the last 5 months. I haven't changed how I exercise over that time period so the weight loss is purely from diet. I also switched from beer to vodka for my daily two afterwork drinks (with sugar free mixer) and started drinking sugar free Pepsi. I generally have lost 10 pounds during the induction phase and maintained my weight afterwards except for my week of vacation when I went back to having a couple beers a day.
140 posted on 07/03/2003 12:08:50 PM PDT by Tailback
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