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How sugar may make you stupid

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LOL

You've probably never even heard of ghrelin, leptin, incretin, glucagon, neurotensin and various other neuropeptides. You probably don't know what the POMC neuron is.

LOL

So someone can burn 2000 calories a day and eat 1000 calories a day and gain weight then?
 

Srsly

Banned
You'd do better to expand upon why you think he's incorrect. What's wrong with a caloric deficit based approach?

Pretty much nobody succeeds long term just counting calories. The long term trials on calorie restriction are absolutely dismal. The neuroendocrine system will always trump willpower in the long run. However, you can do things that affect the neuroendocrine system to reach a lower set point so that you will naturally eat less calories and lose body fat.
 
False. Insulin does not regulate sugar levels. It facilitates in sending glucose to various parts of your body from the blood stream to a cellular level. It is used not just as a source of energy feeding your skeletal muscle tissue, your brain, etc - but also aids in recovery of said tissue during damage.

False.

Insulin does not regulate glucose uptake by the brain which is a VERY fortunate thing indeed. Another organ whose glucose uptake is not maintained by insulin is the kidney.

What insulin may affect is the level of glucose available in the blood. Excessive insulin has a negative effect on the amount of glucose available to the brain (hypoglycemia) and can cause people to lose consciousness.

It does not regulate "levels". It helps your body absorb the glucose.

False. It DOES regulate sugar "levels" since what is meant by sugar "levels" is the amount of glucose present in your blood. The terms hyper- and hypoglycemia refer to glucose levels in the blood.

Otherwise, you might as well forget about glucose altogether, since it is transformed into lipids and glycogen for storage purposes. Sugar barely exists as "glucose" inside the cell, as it enters glycolysis intracellulary, where it is broken down to a more workable energy source or converted to fat.

If you do find excessive glucose inside a cell, that means that there is an enzyme deficiency in the person or he may have some other disease.

Also, sugar isn't the culprit - it is GLUCOSE. Glucose is what carbohydrates are turned into when your body digests them. Carbs as in bread, pasta, whole grains, wheat, sugars, etc.

It is not just glucose, although it does play a major part.

Fructose is also problematic. It bypasses steps in glycolysis and thus is not as heavily regulated as glucose. People with an enzyme deficiency (aldolase B deficiency) may even die if they consume fructose.

They are all glucose.

This is a gross oversimplification.

Eating large amounts of whole grains produces the same effect as eating large amounts of sugar - the main difference is how quickly your body can turn a raw ingredient such as whole grains into glucose vs a refined material like table sugar.

Planting the blame solely on "sugar" foods like candy, snacks, pop, etc is asinine and misleading. No shit high amounts of glucose are dangerous - why not blame ALL foods high in carbohydrates and not just "sugar"?

There is a big difference between eating lots of hard sugar-coated candy and eating lots of vegetables.

The variation in the rate of metabolism is one of the biggest differentiating factors. If you merely consume large amounts of sucrose, which is a disaccharide composed of glucose and fructose, your body will readily break down these foods and absorb them rapidly, which would then also be rapidly stored in the liver as glycogen or converted to fat for storage. If you eat more complex sugars, your body has a harder time breaking that down to easily absorbable glucose. Basically, the more steps there are to a reaction, the lower the efficiency of your body in getting the same amount of energy as potentially expected. Complex sugars have to be broken down by enzymes in your mouth and enzymes released by your pancreas. Disaccharides are much more easily broken down. Polysaccharides, which require a longer time to break down, may not even be broken down and absorbed by the time you have a bowel movement.

Basically, the more complex the food you consume are at a macromolecular level, the more time your body will take in breaking them down for absorption, the longer lasting your satiety will be, and thus you'll eat less.

If you eat a box of chocolates, do you feel full? If you eat a salad, do you feel full? The former contains sucrose and lactose. The latter contains more complex carbohydrates, such as cellulose and starch. Furthermore, a simple sugar that is found in plants is not metabolized by the human body, particularly xylose, but since it forms a large part of the plants we eat, it is able to control our hunger merely by its mass (one of the major controllers of satiety is how "full" your stomach is, even if the contents may not be digestible).

Glucose did not make that happen. Working out did not make that happen. The auto-immune disease did.

This is not relevant to the conversation but I wish you the best.

Is there a relation between eating large amounts of carbohydrate-heavy foods and diabetes? For type 2, sure. It's insulin resistance. You produce so much of it to help facilitate the carbs you intake that your body begins to become resistant to the hormone - meaning you'll wind up on Metformin and other diabetic meds.

Type 2 Diabetes has a multifactorial cause. There is a genetic link, there is a link to a person's lifestyle, there is a link to the types of foods he eats.

Moderation. That's it. I am a diabetic due to an auto immune disease and I find blaming sugar for so much is flat-out wrong. Pop, candy, snacks are not the only means we get carbs.

Moderate the whole fucking thing - this bullshit about "omg that sugary goodness is bad for you" is just one TINY fucking aspect to a much larger picture.

Again, it isn't as simplistic as you're making it out to be.

And the solution you've provided is something that can only happen effectively if people eat the right kinds of foods. Moderation is fine and all, but what are these limits going to be? The reasons doctors don't discourage eating whole grains and vegetables is because your hunger is satisfied after having a lower caloric intake than it would if all you ate were candies and all you drank was pop.

If these doctors and scientists who come out with these studies REALLY cared - they'd finish out the mile they started instead of stopping after checking out the first 20 yards.

Most people who suffer from health problems due to improper diet don't do so because they have been gouging on vegetables and whole grains. Eating less complex sugars which are easily absorbed and then rapidly stored leads to a faster recurrence of hunger and thus excessive and/or more frequent eating, which leads to obesity. If people ate a lot of vegetables, for example, they would feel too full to eat after a short while, whereas this threshold is a lot higher if you eat candies and drink pop.

There's so much more to the glucose picture than just "sugar". Demonizing one part does nothing to help curb the problem when so many equally dangerous parts exist.

Overeating vegetables is not as equally dangerous as eating candies and drinking pop.

Also - do we REALLY need a study to tell us "eating too much of a bad thing is bad for you"? REALLY? No fucking shit! Thanks for the tip! Nobody knows this!

The better effort would be to help people understand how to properly moderate their food intake - but no - we get continuous research into shit everyone already knows.

Sugar isn't bad in moderation. An alcoholic drink here and there won't turn your liver toxic. An over-abundance, will. Same shit here.

Who has said that sugary foods are inherently evil? Who has never eaten a cookie or drank a can of Coke? Most doctors will tell you the same thing: be moderate in your consumption. What people are talking about is when people do not consume in moderation but overindulge. A lot of foods that we eat regularly are high in simple sugars, high in sodium, and/or high in fat. The reason we get any disease associated with these diseases, whether it be diabetes, hypertension, or atherosclerosis respectively, is usually due to excessive indulgence.

Instead of demonizing something that can be A-OK in moderation - how about EDUCATING on how to properly moderate.

You're getting the complete wrong impression from the article. Obviously what is being talked about is the danger of excess. It is idiotic to demonize glucose since that is one of the basic sources of energy and is the only thing that our brain can metabolize for energy.

EDIT:
Also saying that foods will affect everyone the same is stupid, as well. As is proven time and again what works for A might not work for B.

In medicine, as with other sciences, we deal with majority groups/cohorts. In some people with higher metabolic rates, eating twice or three times as much as an average person has little effect on their body mass and the state of their health. There are never any absolutes. Some people are immune to HIV; does that mean doctors should stop warning about the dangers of unprotected intercourse?
 

jaxword

Member
Pretty much nobody succeeds long term just counting calories. The long term trials on calorie restriction are absolutely dismal. The neuroendocrine system will always trump willpower in the long run. However, you can do things that affect the neuroendocrine system to reach a lower set point so that you will naturally eat less calories and lose body fat.

Yeah, I don't disagree there with the psychology and the difficulty...but if we're just talking pure numbers, how does one gain weight if they are on a caloric deficit? Someone mentioned burning off 2000 for every 1000; putting aside the actual number estimates, I'm curious to your reasoning of how someone's body can gain weight from negative calories.
 

Srsly

Banned
Yeah, I don't disagree there with the psychology and the difficulty...but if we're just talking pure numbers, how does one gain weight if they are on a caloric deficit? Someone mentioned burning off 2000 for every 1000; putting aside the actual number estimates, I'm curious to your reasoning of how someone's body can gain weight from negative calories.

I never said that someone can gain weight with a negative calorie deficit.
 
LOL

You've probably never even heard of ghrelin, leptin, incretin, glucagon, neurotensin and various other neuropeptides. You probably don't know what the POMC neuron is.

LOL

All those things you have listed are affected by your caloric intake (as well as other factors). Over a long period of time where you restrict your calories, the rate of leptin production, for example, decrease and thus your metabolic rate falls, making it more difficult for you to lose weight after a while by merely restricting your caloric intake but there is a net weight loss. A person has to pick up the slack and exercise as well to increase the metabolic rate.

Ghrelin secretion has little to do with caloric intake and more to do with how much "filled up" your stomach is. That is why ghrelin levels have been seen to be significantly reduced in people who have smaller stomachs, either due to surgery or naturally.

Glucagon is directly related to blood sugar levels, though, and something that actually supports the guy's theory about calories. The less you eat, the lower your blood sugar, the more glucagon induces gluconeogenesis and the more release of glucose from cells. This eventually leads to weight loss since your fat stores have to be broken down to increase blood sugar levels.

The truth is, both hunger and caloric intake are what come into play when talking about weight gain and loss. If you restrict your caloric intake for a substantial amount of time, your body's homeostatic state is affected and thus there is a change in set points. A person would feel satiated with a lesser amount of food if he eats fewer calories over a long period of time.

This is a similar effect as type 2 diabetes, where your body develops resistance to insulin. In this case, your body becomes more resistant to the hunger-inducing hormones or may produce lesser and lesser amounts as it gradually adjusts to the decreased caloric intake.
 

SRG01

Member
They all trigger insulin responses. The strength of which varies. Insulin is the hormone responsible for regulating fat cells.

On first page, but I need to respond to this: consumption of fructose does not trigger an insulin response. Fructose processed primarily by the liver and works a different metabolic pathway. You'd never get full if you drank pure fructose.

HFCS presenting neural damage is pretty well known, although the counting effect of Omega-3 fatty acids is news to me.

You'd do better to expand upon why you think he's incorrect. What's wrong with a caloric deficit based approach?

Because different types of nutrition are processed by different biological pathways. Proteins, fats, and carbs/sugars are all processed differently. And that's excluding the value of vitamins and other minerals.
 

Srsly

Banned
All those things you have listed are affected by your caloric intake (as well as other factors). Over a long period of time where you restrict your calories, the rate of leptin production, for example, decrease and thus your metabolic rate falls, making it more difficult for you to lose weight after a while by merely restricting your caloric intake but there is a net weight loss. A person has to pick up the slack and exercise as well to increase the metabolic rate.

Ghrelin secretion has little to do with caloric intake and more to do with how much "filled up" your stomach is. That is why ghrelin levels have been seen to be significantly reduced in people who have smaller stomachs, either due to surgery or naturally.

Glucagon is directly related to blood sugar levels, though, and something that actually supports the guy's theory about calories. The less you eat, the lower your blood sugar, the more glucagon induces gluconeogenesis and the more release of glucose from cells. This eventually leads to weight loss since your fat stores have to be broken down to increase blood sugar levels.

The truth is, both hunger and caloric intake are what come into play when talking about weight gain and loss. If you restrict your caloric intake for a substantial amount of time, your body's homeostatic state is affected and thus there is a change in set points. A person would feel satiated with a lesser amount of food if he eats fewer calories over a long period of time.

This is a similar effect as type 2 diabetes, where your body develops resistance to insulin. In this case, your body becomes more resistant to the hunger-inducing hormones or may produce lesser and lesser amounts as it gradually adjusts to the decreased caloric intake.

It's true that lowering calories can change the neuroendocrine system and allow people to keep weight off, in some people, but it's still a pretty dismal method of keeping weight off. Just this week, the look AHEAD trials was halted 11 years in (it was supposed to be 13.5 years long) because it was obvious that calorie restriction (and other lifestyle interventions -- i.e. exercise) wasn't going to make a difference. Weight loss was minimal and the difference in CVD events was going to be non-significant.

I mentioned the various hormones/peptides because they aren't exactly tied to calorie intake. Ghrelin is also affected by quality of sleep. People who get inadequate amounts of sleep or have a sleep disorder like sleep apnea have higher levels of ghrelin which leads to a greater appetite. Ghrelin is also not just affected by energy density. A meal consisting primarily of fat and protein will suppress ghrelin much longer than a meal consisting primarily of carbohydrate. In fact, carbohydrate strongly suppresses ghrelin initially, but there is a rebound effect ~3 hours later where ghrelin rises above baseline. Protein strongly suppresses ghrelin, without the rebound effect and fat minimally suppresses ghrelin, but does so for a while and without the rebound effect.

I'm not sure about the set point changing just by eating at a calorie deficit for a while. Most people re-gain their weight after calorie restriction. If you take a weight reduced person and match them to someone else who is the same weight but not weight reduced, the person who is weight reduced will have less leptin than the non weight reduced person. Leptin also controls hunger. More leptin = less hunger and higher metabolic rate, thus the weight reduced person will struggle to maintain his/her reduced weight compared to the non weight reduced person. Interesting, overweight people tend to have high levels of circulating leptin, but it isn't acting in the brain (leptin resistance), likely due to elevated triglycerides. So giving an obese person leptin won't reduce their weight, but giving a weight reduced person allows them to much more easily maintain their weight loss.
 
It's true that lowering calories can change the neuroendocrine system and allow people to keep weight off, in some people, but it's still a pretty dismal method of keeping weight off. Just this week, the look AHEAD trials was halted 11 years in (it was supposed to be 13.5 years long) because it was obvious that calorie restriction (and other lifestyle interventions -- i.e. exercise) wasn't going to make a difference. Weight loss was minimal and the difference in CVD events was going to be non-significant.

What does that have to do with this discussion?

The trial you're talking about was to determine whether weight loss resulted in decreased frequency of heart disease in the context of type 2 diabetes. What we're talking about is reduced caloric intake in a healthy individual leading to weight loss, which is completely irrelevant.

I mentioned the various hormones/peptides because they aren't exactly tied to calorie intake. Ghrelin is also affected by quality of sleep. People who get inadequate amounts of sleep or have a sleep disorder like sleep apnea have higher levels of ghrelin which leads to a greater appetite. Ghrelin is also not just affected by energy density. A meal consisting primarily of fat and protein will suppress ghrelin much longer than a meal consisting primarily of carbohydrate. In fact, carbohydrate strongly suppresses ghrelin initially, but there is a rebound effect ~3 hours later where ghrelin rises above baseline. Protein strongly suppresses ghrelin, without the rebound effect and fat minimally suppresses ghrelin, but does so for a while and without the rebound effect.

Yes, I already stated that ghrelin is not directly related to caloric intake, which can explain why eating a lot of calories does not necessarily decrease hunger. I've already mentioned that it is the type of food consumed - i.e. the source of the calories - that determines how long one's satiety is maintained.

I'm not sure about the set point changing just by eating at a calorie deficit for a while. Most people re-gain their weight after calorie restriction. If you take a weight reduced person and match them to someone else who is the same weight but not weight reduced, the person who is weight reduced will have less leptin than the non weight reduced person. Leptin also controls hunger. More leptin = less hunger and higher metabolic rate, thus the weight reduced person will struggle to maintain his/her reduced weight compared to the non weight reduced person. Interesting, overweight people tend to have high levels of circulating leptin, but it isn't acting in the brain (leptin resistance), likely due to elevated triglycerides. So giving an obese person leptin won't reduce their weight, but giving a weight reduced person allows them to much more easily maintain their weight loss.

Set point changing occurs in chronic conditions, whether it be your metabolic rate or your body temperature or your oxygen requirement. The body becomes accustomed after a while. People who diet for an extended period of time naturally become full faster. The weight is usually gained back either due to increasing caloric intake or becoming more sedentary.

Why do a lot of people gain weight to begin with? Chronic overeating changes the set point of their body to such an extent that they get hungry faster and eat more than they normally would. People these days are fatter than generations before for a variety of reasons, but it can be easily seen that the ease of access to high caloric foods has had a big part in this.

Of course there are many factors to consider, such as the prevalence of a sedentary lifestyle, but even in sedentary occupations of previous generations, you did not see the level of obesity you see today. Going down to the fast food restaurant and eating sometimes as much as what is recommended caloric intake for an entire day has played a big part, not to mention that foods are refined and processed to such an extent that they are easy to digest and absorb, which may results in faster onset of hunger.
 

Enco

Member
If you want to lose weight, you cut down on your calories and stick to whole unprocessed foods as much as possible.

After you've lost the weight you want (over a reasonably long time), you just have to maintain on what you're eating. You'll probably be able to eat slightly more but your weight should be stabilised. You don't have to calorie count for the rest of your life. By now you should be used to your new diet and lifestyle so just carry on with it.
 
Or how about you worry about yourself and allow a free country to remain that way.

We need education, not regulation.

By that logic, why not put arsenic in food? Or all kinds of carcinogenic substances?

I'm against more regulations in most cases, but the anything concerning health should be regulated strictly.
 

Ledsen

Member
How many do you eat? I eat (no joke) an apple a day at least 6 times a week.

I eat 4-5 fruits/day, 7 days/week. Mostly bananas but also peaches, oranges, and everything else I can get my hands on. Not apples though because my gall bladder gets a bit cranky.
 

Dice

Pokémon Parentage Conspiracy Theorist
I'm really not one for sweets. Even most fruit is way too sweet for me. However, apparently I get plenty of sugars from the milk in my lattes. Probably drink 24-32oz of milk a day.
 

pswii60

Member
HFCS is in everything.

Only if you're in America.

Here in the UK, HFCS is known as "glucose-fructose syrup" and is nowhere near as common. All our branded soft-drinks (including Coke) use cane sugar and always have done. There are a few specific products it is present in (jaffa cakes, hob-nobs, certain ice creams and dipping sauces) but they're actually few and far between.

Not sure why the US is so obsessed with using HFCS in all their foods instead of cane sugar.

Having said all that, the majority of the UK public is also becoming obese and almost lacking in as much common sense as Americans. So perhaps HFCS isn't the only problem.
 

Bazza

Member
I have been catching up on supernatural the last few weeks and im about half way through season 7,
quite funny how the leviathan's plans to enslave the human race by making them submissive and stupid using corn syrup in products is so similar to the effect the corn syrup is actually having on us in real life.
 
I cant believe that people are trying to compare grains to sugar. Next is how dangerous it is to eat fruit due to the sugars in fruit!. Nevertheless I find this new science interesting. I remember reading also about how sugar disrupts your hormones. There has never been any good benefits for eating refined sugar. I try to limit my sugar intake but I used to be better at it before.
 

fanboi

Banned
storafötter;43505631 said:
I cant believe that people are trying to compare grains to sugar. Next is how dangerous it is to eat fruit due to the sugars in fruit!. Nevertheless I find this new science interesting. I remember reading also about how sugar disrupts your hormones. There has never been any good benefits for eating refined sugar. I try to limit my sugar intake but I used to be better at it before.

Well, the "new" fruits that have gone through decades of refinment to taste "better" isn't so good for you since they have maximized fruitsugar.
 
Here's a great Google talk given by the author of "Why we get fat". He has some great ideas and does a good job explaining why the laws of thermodynamics that work in inanimate objects aren't the best at explaining weight gain or weight loss in humans. Plus a bunch of other useful info.

Google Talk - Gary Taubes
 

TheExodu5

Banned
You'd do better to expand upon why you think he's incorrect. What's wrong with a caloric deficit based approach?

There's a lot more to it than just counting calories. Can you achieve success by simply counting calories? Sure. But it's still a gross oversimplification of the matter.

There are plenty of aspects that contribute to this, many of which I simply don't know enough about to go into detail, so I'll just list two:

- People are not bomb calorimeters. Humans will not achieve the same efficiency when extracting energy from foods like bomb calorimeters do.
- Macronutrients do matter. Your body processes fat, carbs, and protein in very different ways. Simple example: if you're doing strength training and you don't intake any protein, you will be unable to build new muscle.

Also, keep in mind the poster was using calories in vs. calories out as an argument against why caloric intake was not the primary factor in weight gain. He was saying that no one had any excuses. This means he was ignoring the metabolic effect in his "calories out" metric. The reality of the matter is that the metabolic rate can vary quite wildly from one individual to another. Not only that, but certain individuals will store fat more efficiently than others. Watch the "Why we get fat" posted above.
 
By that logic, why not put arsenic in food? Or all kinds of carcinogenic substances?

I'm against more regulations in most cases, but the anything concerning health should be regulated strictly.
C'mon man, that stuff is highly toxic, you can't be serious with this argument.
 
There is a very good reason why governments should regulate sugar and HFCS consumption if it's proven to have an effect on cognitive abilities: economics.

Or more specifically, having a highly trained, highly qualified, well-educated base of workers is an economic advantage. It is why our model of public education - founded in the late 19th century - helped the US become one of the most innovative and productive countries in the world (certainly there were other factors as well, but widely available public education changed the workforce). It is why public education is now the norm in every first world country after centuries where a quality education was largely a domain and a right of the privileged and the wealthy. First-world, post-industrial countries cannot compete without an educated workforce.

In the global, information age that we live in now, it is more important than ever for us to keep an edge as important as the education and quality of our employable adults. If known levels of sugar consumption does indeed affect cognitive abilities in humans, then I think it is the responsibility of the government - a proxy of the people organized in this country - to help regulate the consumption of sugar.

This can take many forms: better education on the effects of sugar, restricting advertisement of products high in sugar from children, perhaps a new initiative to label certain foods that meet certain criteria for sugars with a "Seal of Health" or something, etc. Regulations don't have to involve bans; they can be used as a carrot as well as a prod. But if sugar is indeed detrimental to cognitive abilities, it is most certainly the responsibility of the government to help bring about a change in the population's behavior for the sake of the economy.
 
C'mon man, that stuff is highly toxic, you can't be serious with this argument.

I was exaggerating for dramatic effect, but the point is, if we allow obviously harmful substances in our food, where do we draw the line?

At least, they should slap a big sticker "WARNING: Contains HFCS" or something on it.
 
Jack_AG said:
Carbs as in bread, pasta, whole grains, wheat, sugars, etc.

They are all glucose.


Eating large amounts of whole grains produces the same effect as eating large amounts of sugar - the main difference is how quickly your body can turn a raw ingredient such as whole grains into glucose vs a refined material like table sugar.
Nope.

I can't believe this discussion missed the most obvious example of why this reasoning is bullshit: Asian diets.

Asian (including Indian subcontinent) diets are traditionally very high in carbs in the form of rice, consumables made from rice based flours (noodles, buns, etc), fruits, and vegetables. And yet until Western eating habits started to influence Asian countries, Asians generally suffered very low rates of obesity, low rates of diabetes, and low rates of various diet-linked ailments like heart disease. Both of which have been on the rise due to increased consumption of diets richer in animal based fats (excluding fish) and refined sugars.
 

Wildesy

Member
I have no idea why, but I glanced at the title and read it as 'How many sugar make you stupid'.

Pretty sure I'm fucked...
 
Those of you who have young kids should try an experiment: cut as much sugar out of your child's diet as possible for a week and monitor behavioral changes. This is easier with young kids because you can have absolute control over all of the variables.

I have an 18mo and a few weeks back, we noticed she was suddenly becoming whiny, not listening to us, and breaking her normal sleep patterns. Just the terrible-twos? On a hunch, I told my wife to go through her snacks with me and found one "fruit-bar" where the second ingredient was sugar.

Sure enough, we took it out of her diet and it was like night and day. With no other change in her diet, cutting out one snack -- a "fruit bar" -- where she was getting probably over 50% of her daily sugar corrected her behavioral flare ups. We replaced it with another, much funkier tasting fruit bar where the first ingredient is rolled oats and 4/8 ingredients are dried fruits with no additional sugar -- she still seems to like it, luckily. (And by the way, the ability for me to easily look at and compare the ingredients and nutritional information is the result of government regulation on food labeling -- a perfect example of how government regulation can work without taking the form of an onerous ban)

We've generally kept her on a very sugar restricted diet but not carb restricted. She still gets things like grilled cheese sandwiches, pastas, rice, low-sugar cereals, and so on, but cutting out the sugar made a big difference in behavior and sleep patterns.
 
I can't believe this discussion missed the most obvious example of why this reasoning is bullshit: Asian diets.

Asian (including Indian subcontinent) diets are traditionally very high in carbs in the form of rice, consumables made from rice based flours (noodles, buns, etc), fruits, and vegetables. And yet until Western eating habits started to influence Asian countries, Asians generally suffered very low rates of obesity, low rates of diabetes, and low rates of various diet-linked ailments like heart disease. Both of which have been on the rise due to increased consumption of diets richer in animal based fats (excluding fish) and refined sugars.

Yeah. I don't get how the Paleo crowd handwaves this away.

Those of you who have young kids should try an experiment: cut as much sugar out of your child's diet as possible for a week and monitor behavioral changes. This is easier with young kids because you can have absolute control over all of the variables.

I have an 18mo and a few weeks back, we noticed she was suddenly becoming whiny, not listening to us, and breaking her normal sleep patterns. Just the terrible-twos? On a hunch, I told my wife to go through her snacks with me and found one "fruit-bar" where the second ingredient was sugar.

Sure enough, we took it out of her diet and it was like night and day. With no other change in her diet, cutting out one snack -- a "fruit bar" -- where she was getting probably over 50% of her daily sugar corrected her behavioral flare ups. We replaced it with another, much funkier tasting fruit bar where the first ingredient is rolled oats and 4/8 ingredients are dried fruits with no additional sugar --

We've generally kept her on a very sugar restricted diet but not carb restricted. She still gets things like grilled cheese sandwiches, pastas, rice, low-sugar cereals, and so on, but cutting out the sugar made a big difference in behavior and sleep patterns.

I'm glad her behavior problems went away, but this seems to be post hoc reasoning. You changed one factor of her diet, but did you control for anything else? Social interactions, etc? Did you ever punish her for her whiny behavior, or praise her when she was well behaved during that period?
 
I'm glad her behavior problems went away, but this seems to be post hoc reasoning. You changed one factor of her diet, but did you control for anything else? Social interactions, etc? Did you ever punish her for her whiny behavior, or praise her when she was well behaved during that period?

As I've said, with young kids, it's very easy to control for all other variables because they can't make many choices yet :) At 18 months, it's not like she can open doors and get her own snacks.

She doesn't go to school yet and we have her on a more or less fixed schedule (including activities she does with the nanny, all mapped out on a calendar) so it's very easy for us to control the variables. Snack times are controlled, snacks are controlled, even juice is never given undiluted. Bathe at 7, snack at 7:30, milk at 8:00, up to bed at 8:30, out of bed at 8 AM (though she usually wakes herself up at 7:30) -- a clockwork regiment most of the time.

Additionally, we've observed that when given, for example, a pumpkin cookie which had a sizable amount of sugar in it (that my wife baked), it had the same effect. Once you take most of the sugar out of a small child's diet, you can very easily observe effects of sugar by introducing it in a controlled manner.

It worked for us, but if you have a small child, you should experiment with it and see for yourself.

It makes me cringe when I see other parents and their kids and the sugary stuff they are eating and drinking (in particular) and the parents are practically yelling at their kids to get them to behave.
 
SE Asians have been eating said diets for thousands upon thousands of years. Their diets are also low in sugar. They are not genetically predisposed to store very much fat either. The concept of "lipophilliac-ness" or the degree to which their fat cells are genetically predisposed to grow in the presence of insulin is an important factor in why some races react differently than others. The video presents the example of crossbreeds of cattle that are developed to store the right amounts of fat for the tastes of the time. The "b-b-b-but asians eat rice!" counter doesn't hold up against the evidence or the proposition put forth.
 
That's lovely, but then the original argument doesn't hold one way or the other:

Jack_AG said:
Carbs as in bread, pasta, whole grains, wheat, sugars, etc.

They are all glucose.

Non-Asians have also had traditionally carb-heavy diets. Europeans, for example, have diets rich in breads and pastas as well.

Indeed, for most of recorded history, humans have been dependent on a grain heavy diet with only the last two or three centuries seeing refined sugar and animal-based fats becoming a larger and larger part of human diet as the cost has gone down and the availability and accesibility of both have gone up.

The Asian population is a good barometer because refined sugars and animal based fats (excluding fish) have traditionally not been a heavy part of the Asian diet until the last half-century. Incidentally, the rate of diabetes, heart disease, and obesity have been on the rise while rice consumption is still very prevalent.
 

kottila

Member
Everyones a nutrionist scientist these days. I can't stand being around people that only talk about their carb levels.
Just eat decent food made from scratch (junk food is okay once in a while), always go for whole grain, drink no (or very little) soda and do some exercise and you will be fine (ay not apply if you have a disease).

edit: and reduce your intake of snacks, eat small pieces of dark chocolate instead of bars of milk chocolate
 

sonicfan

Venerable Member
Toronto Star
Bad news sugar lovers: a diet high in fructose won’t just make you fat, it may also make you stupid, according to research out of California.

A steady high-fructose diet disrupts the brain’s cognitive abilities, leading to poor learning and memory retention, says a study by Fernando Gomez-Pinilla, a neurosurgery professor at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and Rahul Agrawal, a visiting UCLA postdoctoral fellow from India.

“This type of diet. . . (affects) the transmission of information across cells. . . learning and memory and practically any type of brain function depends very much on how transmission is transported across cells,” Gomez-Pinilla said in an interview with the Star.

Health concerns

Their study, published in the May 15 edition of the Journal of Physiology, looked at high sugar consumption, focusing less on naturally occurring fructose in fruits and more on the fructose in high-fructose corn syrup.

Research has already proven a high-fructose diet leads to a slew of health concerns, including obesity, diabetes and fatty liver.

The U.S. is the world’s largest consumer of sweeteners.

High-fructose corn syrup, which acts as a preservative and sweetener, is found in a variety of processed foods, from soft drinks and baby food to salad dressings and condiments.

The average American consumes approximately 21 kilograms of cane sugar and 16 kilograms of high-fructose corn syrup annually, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Role of fatty acids

Gomez-Pinilla and Agrawal studied two groups of rats, both of which drank a fructose solution in their drinking water for six weeks. One of the groups also consumed omega-3 fatty acids, from flaxseed oil and a DHA (docosahexaenoic acid) capsule. Omega-3 fatty acids have been found to guard against heat disease, high cholesterol and mental conditions such as bipolar disorder and depression, according to the University of Maryland Medical Center.

Both rat groups were trained on a maze for five days before starting their new diet. After six weeks, Gomez-Pinilla and Agrawal retested the rats on the maze to monitor brain function and memory retention, noting the rats that consumed the fructose solution without the omega-3 fatty acids had problems with how they were able to think and recall routes in the maze.

Those rats also showed a resistance to insulin, a hormone that regulates sugar levels in the body.

“Rats fed on a (omega-3 fatty acids) deficient diet showed memory deficits in a Barnes maze, which were further exacerbated by fructose take,” the authors write.

They found that a rich diet of omega-3 fatty acids counteracted the negative affects of fructose.

Implications for humans

In terms of humans, Gomez-Pinilla predicts such changes in the brain to happen within six months to a year.

“The implication(s) here (are) the high consumption and the chronic consumption for man,” Gomez-Pinilla said, adding research needs to be done on the specific affects on humans.

“We don’t know yet how long (the damage) can last.”

The war on unhealthy food choices is a growing. In September, New York City announced it would ban sugar-filled drinks larger than 16-ounces from concession and fast-food stands, restaurants and movie theatres.

In Canada, a push on healthy eating is on the rise as the country grapples with the fact that 31.5 per cent of Canadian children aged 5 to 17 are either overweight or obese, according to a Statistics Canada report released in September.

“Diabetes is very prevalent in western society. It’s known already there is an (epidemic) of diabetes, which is highly related to a consumption of foods high in sugar,” Gomez-Pinilla said.

Gomez-Pinilla advocates a nutrient-rich diet that includes omega-3 fatty acids and a proper mix of healthy choices to offset the dangers of fructose.

Foods that are rich in omega-3 fatty acids include flaxseed oil, some types of fish, such as salmon, and nuts.



Stopped drinking soft drinks long, long time ago so I am good ^_^

Wait, what?

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(Obama drinking my favorite softdrink, Cheerwine)
 
D

Deleted member 17706

Unconfirmed Member
Same thing in every nutrition thread, but "calories in calories out" is such a gross simplification that it's overly meaningless. It doesn't help anyone, and is just used by people to attempt to shut down any discussion about how complicated the human body is. We aren't internal combustion engines.

Those of you who have young kids should try an experiment: cut as much sugar out of your child's diet as possible for a week and monitor behavioral changes. This is easier with young kids because you can have absolute control over all of the variables.

I have an 18mo and a few weeks back, we noticed she was suddenly becoming whiny, not listening to us, and breaking her normal sleep patterns. Just the terrible-twos? On a hunch, I told my wife to go through her snacks with me and found one "fruit-bar" where the second ingredient was sugar.

Sure enough, we took it out of her diet and it was like night and day. With no other change in her diet, cutting out one snack -- a "fruit bar" -- where she was getting probably over 50% of her daily sugar corrected her behavioral flare ups. We replaced it with another, much funkier tasting fruit bar where the first ingredient is rolled oats and 4/8 ingredients are dried fruits with no additional sugar -- she still seems to like it, luckily. (And by the way, the ability for me to easily look at and compare the ingredients and nutritional information is the result of government regulation on food labeling -- a perfect example of how government regulation can work without taking the form of an onerous ban)

We've generally kept her on a very sugar restricted diet but not carb restricted. She still gets things like grilled cheese sandwiches, pastas, rice, low-sugar cereals, and so on, but cutting out the sugar made a big difference in behavior and sleep patterns.

If just cutting out the extremely sugary stuff did that much, just imagine if you went all the way and actually fed her good, real food. You'd see some even more impressive "night and day" changes.
 
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