I just watched a segment on 60 Minutes, which was an overview on the toxicity of sugar. This is such an important message I just had to post this. The link is below and you can watch the segment as long as it is still active, and the article is outlined below:
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-18560_162-57407128/preview-is-sugar-toxic/?tag=pop;stories
(CBS News) Dr. Robert Lustig, a pediatric endocrinologist at the
University of California, believes the high amount of sugar in the
American diet, much of it in processed foods, is killing us. And as Dr.
Sanjay Gupta reports, new scientific research seems to support his
theory that sugar is toxic, including some linking the excess ingestion
of sugars to heart disease. Gupta's report broadcasted on 60
Minutes Sunday, April 1 at 7 p.m. ET/PT.
Americans are
now consuming nearly 130 pounds of added sugars per person, per year.
Those include both sugar and high fructose corn syrup. And while many
vilify high fructose corn syrup and believe it is worse than sugar, Dr.
Lustig says metabolically there is no difference. "They are basically
equivalent. The problem is they're both bad. They're both equally
toxic," he says.
Dr. Lustig treats sick, obese children,
who he believes are primarily sick because of the amount of sugar they
ingest. He says this sugar not only leads to obesity, but to "Type 2
diabetes, hypertension and heart disease itself." Something needs to be
done says Dr. Lustig. "Ultimately, this is a public health crisis...you
have to do big things and you have to do them across the board," he
tells Gupta. "Tobacco and alcohol are perfect examples," he says,
referring to the regulations imposed on their consumption and the
warnings on their labels. "I think sugar belongs in this exact same
wastebasket."
A recent study supports the idea that
excess consumption of high fructose corn syrup is linked to an increase
in risk factors for heart disease by increasing a type of cholesterol
that can clog arteries. The University of California, Davis, study also
indicated that calories from added sugars are different than those from
other foods. Subjects had 25 percent of their caloric intake replaced
with sweetened drinks. Nutritional biologist Kimber Stanhope was
surprised to see that after only two weeks, "We found that the subjects
who consumed high fructose corn syrup had increased levels of LDL
cholesterol and other risk factors for cardiovascular disease," she
tells Gupta. "I started eating and drinking a whole lot less sugar."
What
happens says Stanhope, is the liver gets overloaded with fructose and
converts come of it into fat, which gets into the bloodstream to create
"small dense LDL," the kind of LDL that forms plaque in arteries. The
irony here is that for precisely that reason - avoiding heart disease - a
government commission in the 1970s mandated that we lower our fat
consumption. "When you take the fat out of food, it tastes like
cardboard," says Dr. Lustig. "And the food industry knew that, so they
replaced it with sugar...and guess what? Heart disease, metabolic
syndrome, diabetes and death are skyrocketing," he tells Gupta.
And
other scientific work shows that sugar could also be helping some
cancer tumors to grow because sugar stimulates the production of the
hormone insulin. Nearly a third of common cancers such as some breast
and colon cancers, contain insulin receptors that eventually signal the
tumor to consume glucose. Lewis Cantley, a Harvard professor and head of
the Beth Israel Deaconess Cancer Center, says some of those cancers
have learned to adapt to an insulin-rich environment. "They have evolved
the ability to hijack that flow of glucose that's going by in the
bloodstream into the tumor itself."
What does the sugar
industry have to say about this? Gupta spoke with Jim Simon, a member of
the board of the Sugar Association. "To say that the American consuming
public is going to omit, eliminate sweeteners out of their diet, I
don't think gets us there," he says. Simon points out that the science
is "not completely clear" and it's wrong to single out one food because
the real emphasis should be on long-term reduction of calories, balanced
diet and exercise.
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