<<http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2004-06/mcsc-mns060404.php>>

Maybe not so sweet, after all…

 Not all sugars are equal, at least when it comes to weight gain and
health Philadelphia, PA -- Researchers at the Monell Chemical Senses
Center, the University of California, Davis and other collaborating
colleagues report that drinking beverages containing fructose, a
naturally-occurring sugar commonly used to sweeten soft drinks and other
beverages, induces a pattern of hormonal responses that may favor the
development of obesity. 
It is estimated that consumption of fructose has increased by 20-30% over
the past three decades, a rate of increase similar to that of obesity,
which has risen dramatically over the same time span. Data from the
present study suggest a mechanism by which fructose consumption could be
one factor contributing to the increased incidence of obesity. 

In the study, reported in the June 4 issue of the Journal of Clinical
Endocrinology and Metabolism, 12 normal-weight women ate standardized
meals on two days. The meals contained the same number of calories and
the same distribution of total carbohydrate, fat and protein. On one day
the meals included a beverage sweetened with fructose. On the other day,
the same beverage was sweetened with an equal amount of glucose, another
naturally-occurring sugar that is used by the body for energy. 

Following meals accompanied by the fructose-sweetened beverage,
circulating levels of insulin and leptin were decreased compared to when
the women ate the same meals accompanied by the glucose-sweetened
beverage. Lower levels of insulin and leptin, hormones that convey
information to the brain about the body's energy status and fat stores,
have been linked in other studies to increased appetite and obesity. 

In addition, levels of ghrelin, a hormone thought to trigger appetite
that normally declines following a meal, decreased less after meals on
the day the women drank the fructose-sweetened beverage. And, the
fructose also resulted in a long-lasting increase of triglycerides, fatty
molecules in the blood that are indicators of risk for cardiovascular
disease. 

Together, the hormonal responses observed after drinking beverages
sweetened with fructose suggest that prolonged consumption of diets high
in energy from fructose could lead to increased caloric intake and
contribute to weight gain and obesity. Lead author Karen Teff, Ph.D., a
physiologist at Monell, comments, "Fructose consumption results in a
metabolic profile of hormones which would be predicted to increase food
intake, thereby contributing to obesity in susceptible populations." 

Teff notes that this pattern of hormonal responses is similar to that
observed after consuming a high-fat meal, and continues, "Based on our
previously published work, this metabolic profile resembles that of fat
consumption. Thus, despite the fact that fructose is a sugar,
metabolically the responses are similar to those seen following fat
ingestion." The elevated levels of plasma triglycerides observed after
fructose consumption further suggest that frequent fructose consumption
could also contribute to the development of atherosclerosis and
cardiovascular disease. 

According to co-author Dr. Peter Havel, a research endocrinologist at the
University of California, Davis, "Although this short-term experiment
provides important new data, additional research is needed to investigate
the long-term impact of consuming fructose in humans, particularly its
effects on lipid metabolism and on endocrine signals involved in body
weight regulation. New studies should also be conducted in subjects who
are at increased risk for metabolic diseases such as type-2 diabetes and
cardiovascular disease and who may be more susceptible to the adverse
effects of overconsuming fructose". 


###
The Monell Chemical Senses Center is a nonprofit basic research institute
based in Philadelphia, PA. Scientists at the Monell Center conduct
research devoted to understanding the senses of taste, smell, and
chemical irritation: how they function and how they affect our lives,
from before birth through old age. The Center's approach is
multidisciplinary. Scientists from a variety of backgrounds collaborate
to address topic areas in sensation and perception, neuroscience and
molecular biology, environmental and occupational health, nutrition and
appetite, health and well-being, and chemical ecology and communication. 

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"If evil could be branded, its emblem would be the Wal-Mart logo."
-Inthesetimes article

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