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Showing posts with label blood sugar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blood sugar. Show all posts

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Fructose Sugar


Obesity is becoming almost an epidemic in many western countries and it is starting at a younger and younger age. The answer to why is becoming increasingly clear. It is sugar, too much of it and the wrong kind of sugar that we are getting in processed foods and when we dine out especially at fast food restaurants.

The name sugar is used to describe a whole class of compounds, most of them sweet but we usually think of sugar as the granular white table sugar, sucrose, we spoon into coffee and tea make them sweet.  It has been around for a couple of centuries and it comes mostly from cane sugar that’s grown best in the tropics. It’s a disaccharide, that is it is two sugars linked together with a structure as shown on the right.  When we eat it, it’s broken down by an enzyme into two separate simple sugars, glucose and fructose.  You will probably recognize ‘glucose’ as the blood sugar molecule that the body can use to give us quick energy but the fructose is another story.

One of my earlier blogs was about ‘chirality’ and in it I talked about molecules often being left or right handed and the problems the left handed molecules can cause. The reason is that our cells are full of protein molecules that are called enzymes that are vital catalysts  in making our complicated body chemistry work quickly at body temperatures. The way an enzyme works is shown in a simple animation.  It turns out that our body has no enzyme to handle the left handed fructose molecule that is released as sugar is broken down and so it is treated like a foreign body or toxin and is sent directly to the liver. From there, most of it ends up as body fat. Another problem is that since the fructose goes to the liver, it doesn’t increase blood sugar levels and doesn’t signal the brain when you’ve eaten enough so you tend to eat much more than you need.

To make matters worse, food scientists have found a substitute for cane sugar that is even worse for us. Fructose happens to be a lot sweeter than glucose and they have produced a High Fructose Corn Syrup [HFCS] that is generally 55% fructose to 45% glucose and has the advantage of being cheaper and much easier to handle than white granulated sugar.  HFCS is apparently now being put into everything from baby formula to bread and checking the label doesn’t help much because it can be classified as a carbohydrate.  In some drinks the HFCS is as high as 65% and there are no regulations that prevent the use of HFCS’s as high as 90%. 

The best advice is to stay away from processed foods and sugar. So for desert, it sounds like eating nice fresh fruit would be the best solution.  Wrong – in fruits the sweetness comes from fructose! So even though fresh fruit is very nutritious, be aware of the fructose you’re ingesting – click on the link to check out amounts in the different kinds of fruit.

Honey has a lot of good stuff in it but have a look at the amount of fructose in it. Maple Syrup is mostly sucrose so if you have a ‘sweet tooth’, the only answer I can come up with is to use other kinds if sweeteners.  I like to grow the stevia plant because it’s natural. You can now obtain it in dried form at a health food store. It's about 300 times as sweet as sugar so take care. Barley malt extract is another alternative. 

If you want to know all the science and have time - you could listen to Dr. Lustig's video.  Rie 

Sunday, January 15, 2012

The Zone

As you get older, you are usually more conscious of your ‘good’ days and ‘bad’ days. The problem is that you don’t quite know ‘why’ you can feel so ‘with it’ one day and be dragging around the next. But Barry Sears figured out one of the main reasons and he wrote a book on the subject called ‘The Zone’, back in 1995.

Dr. Sears was a biochemist who started out as a research scientist mostly in the field of fatty acids that make up many natural oils. This work led him to the study of other food groups and finally to the writing of the book spelling out a diet that, if followed, led to a state of optimal health. Athletes who first followed the diet, proved that it worked by excelling because their bodies and minds worked at peak efficiency, not just on occasion but all the time!

I read Sears book, ‘The Zone’ some years ago now, found it explained why the diet worked so well and I was very interested in following his diet but frankly, I found it daunting. No only did it call for a strict adherence to eating 3 meals a day and two snacks, all at given time intervals, but those meals and snacks had to contain 40% calories from carbohydrates, 30% from protein, and 30% from fat. There were recipes on line that helped and those who followed it give glowing testimonials but to do it properly, I could see it consuming any free time I had. At that time as well, I was traveling a number of months of every year, so I did not ever give it a full chance.

In the late 1950’s I had read several of Adelle Davis’s books. By then she was a well-known nutritionist explaining aspects of daily nutrition that were new to me. For instance, in her advice:

‘At breakfast, eat like a king; at lunch, like a prince and at supper, like a pauper,’ she made it clear that it all had to do blood sugar levels and how to keep them in a range where the body felt energetic throughout the day. For instance, if some protein like meat, eggs, or beans, are eaten at breakfast, since the protein takes longer to digest, it is still supplying some blood sugar until the lunch you ate at noon begins to add to it. The chart on the right shows an ordinary day when the advice given is not followed. Note the dip in blood sugar [red line] before lunch and the high levels in the evening when the energy available is generally not used and is stored as fat.

The Zone diet is clearly designed to keep blood sugar at a stable constant level so you feel good and your body is always ready to work or play at top efficiency. However, if you are like me and have a general sense of how important sugar levels in your blood are to your energies and well-being, you can do a pretty good job of eating sensibly to maintain a steadily available supply yourself without adhering to the strict 'Zone' diet. Rie