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MerryL
10-17-2007, 07:48 PM
I always try to avoid this stuff and I try to make sure my son avoids it, too. I even buy him natural sodas for an occasional treat (not Hansens--even their "natural" soda has HFCS!). Please, always read the ingredients.:wink:

http://www.westonaprice.org/modernfood/highfructose.html

The Double Danger of
High Fructose Corn Syrup

By Bill Sanda (http://www.westonaprice.org/modernfood/highfructose.html#author), BS, MBA
For many years, Dr. Meira Fields and her coworkers at the US Department of Agriculture investigated the harmful effects of dietary sugar on rats. They discovered that when male rats are fed a diet deficient in copper, with sucrose as the carbohydrate, they develop severe pathologies of vital organs. Liver, heart and testes exhibit extreme swelling, while the pancreas atrophies, invariably leading to death of the rats before maturity.
Sucrose is a disaccharide composed of 50 percent glucose and 50 percent fructose. Dr. Fields repeated her experiments to determine whether it was the glucose or fructose moiety that caused the harmful effects. Starch breaks down into glucose when digested. On a copper-deficient diet, the male rats showed some signs of copper deficiency, but not the gross abnormalities of vital organs that occur in rats on the sucrose diet. When the rats were fed fructose, the fatal organ abnormalities occured.
Lysl oxidase is a copper-dependent enzyme that participates in the formation of collagen and elastin. Fructose seems to interfere with copper metabolism to such an extent that collagen and elastin cannot form in growing animals--hence the hypertrophy of the heart and liver in young males. The females did not develop these abnormalities, but they resorbed their litters.<sup>1</sup>
These experiements should give us pause when we consider the great increase in the use of high fructose corn syrup during the past 30 years, particularly in soft drinks, fruit juices and other beverages aimed at growing children, children increasingly likely to be copper deficient as modern parents no longer serve liver to their families. (Liver is by far the best source of copper in human diets.)
"The bodies of the children I see today are mush," observed a concerned chiropractor recently. The culprit is the modern diet, high in fructose and low in copper-containing foods, resulting in inadequate formation of elastin and collagen--the sinews that hold the body together.
BINGEING ON FRUCTOSE

Until the 1970s most of the sugar we ate came from sucrose derived from sugar beets or sugar cane. Then sugar from corn--corn syrup, fructose, dextrose, dextrine and especially high fructose corn syrup (HFCS)--began to gain popularity as a sweetener because it was much less expensive to produce. High fructose corn syrup can be manipulated to contain equal amounts of fructose and glucose, or up to 80 percent fructose and 20 percent glucose.<sup>2</sup> Thus, with almost twice the fructose, HFCS delivers a double danger compared to sugar.
(With regards to fruit, the ratio is usually 50 percent glucose and 50 percent fructose, but most commercial fruit juices have HFCS added. Fruit contains fiber which slows down the metabolism of fructose and other sugars, but the fructose in HFCS is absorbed very quickly.)
In 1980 the average person ate 39 pounds of fructose and 84 pounds of sucrose. In 1994 the average person ate 66 pounds of sucrose and 83 pounds of fructose, providing 19 percent of total caloric energy.<sup>3</sup> Today approximately 25 percent of our average caloric intake comes from sugars, with the larger fraction as fructose.<sup>4</sup>
High fructose corn syrup is extremely soluble and mixes well in many foods. It is cheap to produce, sweet and easy to store. It’s used in everything from bread to pasta sauces to bacon to beer as well as in "health products" like protein bars and "natural" sodas.
FRUCTOSE FOR DIABETICS?

In the past, fructose was considered beneficial to diabetics because it is absorbed only 40 percent as quickly as glucose and causes only a modest rise in blood sugar.<sup>5</sup> However, research on other hormonal factors suggests that fructose actually promotes disease more readily than glucose. Glucose is metabolized in every cell in the body but all fructose must be metabolized in the liver.<sup>6</sup> The livers of test animals fed large amounts of fructose develop fatty deposits and cirrhosis, similar to problems that develop in the livers of alcoholics.
Pure fructose contains no enzymes, vitamins or minerals and robs the body of its micronutrient treasures in order to assimilate itself for physiological use.<sup>7</sup> While naturally occurring sugars, as well as sucrose, contain fructose bound to other sugars, high fructose corn syrup contains a good deal of "free" or unbound fructose. Research indicates that this free fructose interferes with the heart’s use of key minerals like magnesium, copper and chromium. Among other consequences, HFCS has been implicated in elevated blood cholesterol levels and the creation of blood clots. It has been found to inhibit the action of white blood cells so that they are unable to defend the body against harmful foreign invaders.<sup>8</sup>
Studies on the Maillard reaction indicate that fructose may contribute to diabetic complications more readily than glucose. The Maillard reaction is a browning reaction that occurs when compounds are exposed to various sugars. Fructose browns food seven times faster than glucose, resulting in a decrease in protein quality and a toxicity of protein in the body.<sup>9</sup> This is due to the loss of amino acid residues and decreased protein digestibility. Maillard products can inhibit the uptake and metabolism of free amino acids and other nutrients such as zinc, and some advanced Maillard products have mutagenic and/or carcinogenic properties. The Maillard reactions between proteins and fructose, glucose, and other sugars may play a role in aging and in some clinical complications of diabetes.<sup>10</sup>
Fructose reduces the affinity of insulin for its receptor, which is the hallmark of type-2 diabetes. This is the first step for glucose to enter a cell and be metabolized. As a result, the body needs to pump out more insulin to handle the same amount of glucose.<sup>21</sup>
OTHER EFFECTS

Nancy Appleton, PhD, clinical nutritionist, has compiled a list of the harmful effects of fructose in her books Lick the Sugar Habit, Healthy Bones, Heal Yourself With Natural Foods, The Curse Of Louis Pasteur and Lick the Sugar Habit Sugar Counter. She points out that consumption of fructose causes a significant increase in the concentration of uric acid; after ingestion of glucose, no significant change occurs. An increase in uric acid can be an indicator of heart disease.<sup>12</sup> Furthermore, fructose ingestion in humans results in increases in blood lactic acid, especially in patients with preexisting acidotic conditions such as diabetes, postoperative stress or uremia. Extreme elevations cause metabolic acidosis and can result in death.<sup>13</sup>
Fructose is absorbed primarily in the jejunum before metabolism in the liver. Fructose is converted to fatty acids by the liver at a greater rate than is glucose.<sup>14</sup> When consumed in excess of dietary glucose, the liver cannot convert all of the excess fructose in the system and it may be malabsorbed. The portion that escapes conversion may be thrown out in the urine. Diarrhea can be a consequence.<sup>19</sup> A study of 25 patients with functional bowel disease showed that pronounced gastrointestinal distress may be provoked by malabsorption of small amounts of fructose.<sup>26</sup>
Fructose interacts with oral contraceptives and elevates insulin levels in women on "the pill."<sup>17</sup>
In studies with rats, fructose consistently produces higher kidney calcium concentrations than glucose. Fructose generally induces greater urinary concentrations of phosphorus and magnesium and lowered urinary pH compared with glucose.<sup>18</sup>
In humans, fructose feeding leads to mineral losses, especially higher fecal excretions of iron and magnesium, than did subjects fed sucrose. Iron, magnesium, calcium, and zinc balances tended to be more negative during the fructose-feeding period as compared to balances during the sucrose-feeding period.<sup>19</sup>
There is significant evidence that high sucrose diets may alter intracellular metabolism, which in turn facilitates accelerated aging through oxidative damage. Scientists found that the rats given fructose had more undesirable cross-linking changes in the collagen of their skin than in the other groups. These changes are also thought to be markers for aging. The scientists say that it is the fructose molecule in the sucrose, not the glucose, that plays the larger part.<sup>20</sup>
Because it is metabolized by the liver, fructose does not cause the pancreas to release insulin the way it normally does. Fructose converts to fat more than any other sugar. This may be one of the reasons Americans continue to get fatter. Fructose raises serum triglycerides significantly. As a left-handed sugar, fructose digestion is very low. For complete internal conversion of fructose into glucose and acetates, it must rob ATP energy stores from the liver.<sup>21</sup>
Not only does fructose have more damaging effects in the presence of copper deficiency, fructose also inhibits copper metabolism--another example of the sweeteners double-whammy effect. A deficiency in copper leads to bone fragility, anemia, defects of the connective tissue, arteries, and bone, infertility, heart arrhythmias, high cholesterol levels, heart attacks, and an inability to control blood sugar levels.<sup>22</sup>
Although these studies were not designed to test the effects of fructose on weight gain, the observation of increased body weight associated with fructose ingestion is of interest. One explanation for this observation could be that fructose ingestion did not increase the production of two hormones, insulin and leptin, that have key roles in the long-term regulation of food intake and energy expenditure.<sup>23</sup>
HYPERSENSIVITY

The magnitude of the deleterious effects of fructose varies depending on such factors as age, sex, baseline glucose, insulin, triglyceride concentrations, the presence of insulin resistance, and the amount of dietary fructose consumed.<sup>24</sup> Some people are more sensitive to fructose. They include hypertensive, hyperinsulinemic, hypertriglyceridemic, non-insulin dependent diabetic people, people with functional bowel disease and postmenopausal women.<sup>25</sup>
Everyone should avoid over-exposure to fructose, but especially those listed above. One or two pieces of fruit per day is fine, but commercial fruit juices and any products containing high fructose corn syrup aremore dangerous than sugar and should be removed from the diet.

drafter
10-17-2007, 07:54 PM
Serious question, If a person is copper deficient can they suck on a copper penny or maybe make up a mixture similar to colloidal silver. How deficient is "deficient"?? Can a person absorb enough to offest the effects of the corn syrup.

MerryL
10-17-2007, 08:05 PM
Serious question, If a person is copper deficient can they suck on a copper penny or maybe make up a mixture similar to colloidal silver. How deficient is "deficient"?? Can a person absorb enough to offest the effects of the corn syrup.

I don't know but I wouldn't try to get a child to suck on a penny. It probably would be easier just to get a copper supplement or a multi-vitamin that contains copper.

drafter
10-17-2007, 08:12 PM
It probably would be easier just to get a copper supplement or a multi-vitamin that contains copper.

Duh, didn't think about that one. I guess they make a supplement for just about everything. I just hate taking pills. My kids don't much drink pop but it seems a lot of confections contain the stuff also.

MerryL
10-17-2007, 08:27 PM
Apparently, beekeepers have been feeding honey bees HFCS so they can harvest more honey:

http://www.alternet.org/environment/65289/

No wonder the bees are dying off.:rant:

phideaux
10-17-2007, 09:51 PM
Great topic, MerryL!

Dr. Andrew Weil has long harped on HFCS as a dangerous substance, and as a contributing cause to diabetes in some people. The stuff really wreaks havoc with your blood sugar levels.

http://www.drweil.com/drw/u/id/QAA331712

Q Sipping Too Many Calories?
What's so bad about high fructose corn syrup?
A Answer (Published 8/13/2004)

High fructose corn syrup (HFCS) is a relatively recent invention of the food industry that is used to sweeten soft drinks and juices. Manufacturers began to use HFCS instead of old-fashioned corn syrup because it has a sweeter taste, blends well with other foods, maintains a longer shelf life and is cheaper. It has now become the main sweetener used in beverages. You'll also find it in processed foods ranging from salad dressings and ketchup, to jams, jellies, ice cream and many others - even bread, of all things. HFCS contains 14-percent fructose, much more than regular corn syrup, and I am concerned about its potentially disruptive effects on metabolism. The body doesn't utilize fructose well, and never before in history have people been consuming so much of it.

HFCS may be to blame, at least in part, for the current epidemic of obesity in the United States. A study published in the April 2004 issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition cited U.S. Department of Agriculture data showing that consumption of HFCS in the United States increased by more than 1,000 percent between 1970 and 1990. (Almost two-thirds of the HFCS consumed in this country is in beverages.) The researchers found that Americans over the age of 2 consume more than 300 calories per day from caloric sweeteners, one-sixth of the average total calorie consumption. Another study, in England, showed that over the course of a year obesity increased by 7.5 percent among a group of school children who continued to eat and drink as they habitually did during a study aimed at reducing soda consumption. In youngsters who gave up sodas, the rate of obesity stayed about the same. The study results were published in the April 24, 2004, issue of the British Medical Journal. HCFS may promote weight gain because it behaves in the body more like fat than glucose, the blood sugar derived from other sweet foods.
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Some evidence suggests that fructose may also disturb liver function. And unlike glucose, fructose doesn't appear to set in motion the process by which the body tells us it is full. Another potential danger: a study published in the November 2000 issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition showed that in men (but not women) fructose elevates triglycerides, blood fats that increase the risk of heart disease.
All told, HFCS is a bad actor and a marker of low-quality foods. My recommendation is to check labels and avoid any products containing it.
Andrew Weil, M.D.

Streets Of Gold
10-17-2007, 10:33 PM
Last summer I ran out of Bar-b-cue sauce. I went to a local food store and checked every label on every sauce. There is an approximately 8' x 6' space dedicated to this stuff.

Not one had what I consider good ingredients. Most of them (95%) had water and HFCS as the 2 first MAIN ingredients. The same as in Coca-cola and many other soft drinks. Now that's something to think about.

phideaux
10-17-2007, 11:01 PM
Last summer I ran out of Bar-b-cue sauce. I went to a local food store and checked every label on every sauce. There is an approximately 8' x 6' space dedicated to this stuff.

Not one had what I consider good ingredients. Most of them (95%) had water and HFCS as the 2 first MAIN ingredients. The same as in Coca-cola and many other soft drinks. Now that's something to think about.

Yeah, I have this problem too. The only BBQ sauce that I have found (at a reasonable price) that doesn't contain HFCS or tons of refined sugar, I found at Walmart of all places: Annie's All-Natural Organic BBQ Sauce. It 's about twice the price of Kraft or whatever. You can also get good (and really expensive) stuff at "health food" stores.

drewfu
10-17-2007, 11:05 PM
Check out the latest issue of Free Market from the Ludwig Von Mises Institute. The cover story is about the quotas on sugar importation that aid the corn syrup industry.

ajrocks
10-17-2007, 11:57 PM
It's amazing what products have it, almost all breads do too. Some that you think would be good for you have it. Most yogurts have it. in fact almost all food has it.

I've been trying to avoid it for over a two years. It's hard, sometimes you have to give in, I have a family of four, that's why.

As an example Welches all natural grape juice has it. Drives me crazy all these products that are "all natural" have this ingredient:banghead:.

phideaux
10-18-2007, 12:42 AM
It's amazing what products have it, almost all breads do too.... :banghead:.

Yeah, what they call "bread" in today's grocery stores would have been called "cake" 100 years ago. It's nutritional insanity.:banghead:

killer2021
10-19-2007, 04:06 AM
Yea I've been trying to avoid it too! But it is in everything. The only real way of getting a decent food supply is to grown your own crops! Your health is your most important asset so I would try at great lengths to get these toxins out of your diet. I don't have any kids so it should be pretty easy to do for me.

My grandpa has been farming his own food for pretty much his whole life and he is nearly 100 years old and he still gets up to make sure his crops are in good shape!

sanyo
10-19-2007, 09:13 AM
I just threw it away, always read before buying.Its about money not your health.

phideaux
10-19-2007, 09:31 AM
I just threw it away, always read before buying.Its about money not your health.

Or better yet, bring it back to Publix and get your money back and tell the store manager that you are no longer buying their food filled with crap.