Think that all sugars are the same? They may all taste sweet
to the tongue, but it turns out your body can tell the difference
between glucose, fructose and sucrose,
and that one of these sugars is worse for your health than
the others.
In the first detailed analysis comparing how our systems
respond to glucose (which is made when the body breaks down
starches such as carbohydrates) and fructose,
(the type of sugar found naturally in fruits), researchers
at the University
of California Davis report in the Journal
of Clinical Investigation that consuming too much
fructose can actually put you at greater risk of developing
heart disease
and diabetes than ingesting similar amounts of glucose.
In the study, 32 overweight or obese men and women were randomly
assigned to drink 25% of their daily energy requirements in
either fructose- or glucose-sweetened drinks. The researchers
took pains to eliminate as many intruding factors as possible
by asking the volunteers to commit to a 12-week program; for
the first and last two weeks of the study, each subject lived
at UCD's Clinical and Translational Science Center, where
they underwent rigorous blood tests to determine their insulin
and lipid levels, among other metabolic measures.
Both groups gained similar amounts of weight by the end
of the 12 weeks, but only the people drinking fructose-sweetened
beverages with each meal showed signs of unhealthy changes
in their liver function and fat deposits. In this group, the
liver churned out more fat, while the subjects consuming similar
amounts of glucose-sweetened drinks showed no such change.
The fructose-drinking volunteers also were not as sensitive
to insulin, the hormone released by the pancreas to capture
and break down glucose in the blood and store it as fat. Insulin
insensitivity is one of the first signs
of diabetes. These subjects also gained more visceral
fat, the dangerous kind that embeds itself between tissues
in organs such as the heart and liver and secretes hormones
and other chemicals that throw off the body's normal metabolism,
setting the stage for atherosclerosis and heart attack. "This
suggests that in the same way that not all fats are the same,
not all dietary carbohydrates are the same either," says Peter
Havel, professor of nutrition at the University
of California Davis and lead author of the study.
But don't expect to be able to exercise your new sugar-smarts
at the grocery store quite yet. Most of the sugar we encounter
in products and in restaurants isn't glucose, but rather high
fructose corn syrup or sucrose, each a combination
of glucose and fructose (sucrose is an even 50-50 split between
the two, while high fructose corn syrup comes in either 55%-45%
fructose-glucose or 42%-58% pairings). It's difficult to find
anything that's mostly glucose, which means our sweeteners
are setting us up for weight gain, and more insidiously, metabolic
changes that can make us more prone to heart
disease and diabetes.
Dr. Walter
Willett, chair of the department of nutrition at the
Harvard School of Public Health, notes that studies have shown
that long-term consumption of sugared drinks can double the
risk of diabetes,
with half of that risk due to the excess weight brought on
by the calories, and the other half due to the beverages'
high sugar content - mostly fructose. "This study provides
the best argument yet that we should either decide to consume
less sugar-sweetened beverages in general, or that we should
conduct more research into the possibility of using other
sweeteners that may be more glucose-based," says Matthias
Tschoep, an obesity researcher at the Obesity Research Center
in the University
of Cincinnati, and author of a commentary accompanying
the study. "It's an unbelievable piece of work."
If that's the case, then why the glut of blended sugars
rather than pure glucose in our foods today? Glucose isn't
as sweet as fructose, and because our collective sweet
teeth have become accustomed to a certain level of
sweetness, anything less might be unsatisfying. "The proportion
of fructose in food probably hasn't increased that much, since
high fructose corn syrup simply replaced sucrose in many cases,"
says Havel. "But people are also simply consuming more sugar
in their diet." In fact, if you think that the study subjects
drank way more sweetened beverages (25% of their daily energy
requirements came from the sugar in their drinks) in this
study than the average American, you might want to consider
this: according to recent data from an annual government survey,
Americans on average wash down 16% of their daily energy needs
with sugared drinks - not that far off the 25% threshold set
by Havel in the study.
Willett, for one, isn't convinced that glucose-based sweeteners
are an attractive option for soda makers. "I don't think any
beverage company
out there is considering putting pure glucose into their product,"
he says. "It doesn't have the same level of sweetness."
Instead, he is advocating a drastic change in the sugar
content of sodas. His Department of Nutrition is urging manufacturers
to produce a line of beverages containing only 1 gm of sugar
per ounce, a 70% reduction in sugar content. It's all part
of a campaign to re-train the American sweet
tooth. "If children grow up with everything tasting
super sweet, then it's hard for them to appreciate he gentle
sweetness of a fresh carrot or an apple," he says. "Part of
this is deconditioning palates to a much more natural level
of sweetness." That certainly won't be easy, but it will surely
be worth it. We could have our sugar and stay healthy too.