|
Affiliate
instructions: You have permission to publish these articles in
and on your website, blog or anywhere else your readers would
view it provided the entire article is left un-altered and the
bio/about the author resource box is included in its entirety.
All
you need to do is copy and paste. You of course, should replace
all www.Mealplans101.com links with your affiliate hoplink. I
recommend including the Meal Plans101.com website link at the
top and bottom of the article to give the reader more than one
place to click through.
It
is also effective to sometimes include a cd cover of the software
where applicable.
Insulin and HFCS
Christopher R. Mohr,
PhD, RD
www.mealplans101.com (replace with your hoplink)
Unruly insulin levels can royally screw up your physique. Specific
foods affect insulin levels. However, what may be more important
is knowing what specific ingredients in foods mess with insulin.
You can lift all day until you are blue in the head, but eating
specific foods and food ingredients could be holding you back from
resembling the chiseled Statue of David.
First a Little Background
Insulin is THE most anabolic hormone in the body. Insulin’s
anabolic properties make it rather important when thinking about
packing on muscle. However, too much insulin could cause you to
resemble Professor Klump from The Nutty Professor. Here’s
how it works.
Insulin secretion occurs via the ?-cells in the pancreas with the
consumption and digestion of food; particularly in response to carbohydrate-rich
foods. Over stimulation of the ?-cells, characterized by diets consistently
high in simple sugars (e.g., a “soda and Twinkie” type
diet) may lead to insulin resistance overtime (probably because
that kind of diet is usually accompanied by weight gain). Basically,
when you consume high sugar foods, blood glucose is chronically
elevated and insulin is continually released to control blood glucose
levels (not allowing them to go too high).
Chronically elevated insulin levels decreases the bodies ability
to burn fat, increases triglycerides, decreases HDL levels (the
good cholesterol) and causes excessive peroxidation (the stuff we
pay lots of money to avoid by buying eating lots of fruits and vegetables
and antioxidant supplements)!
Therefore, dietary control and exercise are imperative since both
help regulate glucose. In addition to the umbrella classification
of high sugar foods, there are two specific ingredients that need
to be considered: fructose and more specifically high fructose corn
syrup (HFCS). Both are found in a wide variety of foods, many of
which may surprise you.
Fructose and insulin
Here’s the scoop. Fructose is a monosaccharide (one sugar)
that is often referred to as “fruit sugar” because it
is the primary carbohydrate in most fruits. Fructose is also the
primary sugar in honey and makes up half the carbohydrate in sucrose
(table sugar). The interesting thing about fructose is that it does
not stimulate insulin secretion and does not require insulin to
be transported into cells, like other carbohydrates.
After all the talk about the importance of controlling insulin
levels, it appears as though a lack of insulin secretion from fructose
consumption may be a good thing. However, insulin also controls
the fate of another hormone, leptin, so as you’ll see, its
release is necessary.
Leptin tells your body to stop eating when it’s full. Essentially,
leptin signals the brain to stop sending hunger signals because
the “tank is full.” Since fructose doesn’t stimulate
insulin, there will be no subsequent increase in leptin levels,
and no feeling of satiety (i.e., you’ll keep eating and eating).
Is fructose making YOU fat?
Fructose requires a different pathway for metabolism than other
carbohydrates because it basically skips glycolysis (normal carbohydrate
metabolism). Because of this, fructose serves as an unregulated
source of something called acetyl-CoA, the starting material for
fatty-acid synthesis. This, coupled with unstimulated leptin levels
is setting you up for a big, fat disaster! It’s like opening
the flood gates of fat deposition.
Don’t over interpret this; fructose should not be eliminated
from the diet. This is more of a “heads up” since most
readers of this site share similar health and fitness goals. Remember
that fructose is the primary sugar found in fruits. Fruits provide
a whole slew of nutrients that can’t otherwise be obtained
from the diet so don’t toss them in the trash too fast. A
little fructose, like that found in fruit, is OK. It’s when
high levels of fructose are consumed, which is common these days
because of the inclusion of sucrose and, even more so, HFCS into
virtually all commercial foods.
High Fructose Corn Syrup
HFCS was brought to the market in the 1970’s by food companies
looking to save money during production and, therefore, make more
money from the consumer. HFCS hides itself in a variety of common
foods such as ketchup, seasonings, barbeque sauce, soda, juices,
cereals, pasta sauce, fruit-flavored yogurt and even some meal replacements
powders, to name but a few. HFCS is popular among food companies
because it is much sweeter than any natural sugar available, much
cheaper, and easy to transport because it is a liquid.
While it may seem that this is just my over zealous mind taking
things to extreme, read on; there are several animal studies to
support my theories that body weight and adiposity both increase
while consuming a high fructose diet (9,10,11). The data on humans
is a bit more difficult to come across, but there are a few studies.
For example, one study demonstrated that individuals consuming 28%
of total energy from sucrose (remember, ½ the carbohydrate
in sucrose is fructose) vs. artificial sweetener had a higher energy
intake, body weight, and fat mass after a short 10-weeks (12).
This doesn’t sound like rocket science; greater energy intake
equals greater weight gain. There were some interesting findings
though. There was an increase of a little more than 400 kcals in
the sucrose group, which should result in an approximate weight
gain of 3.1 kg if all other factors are held constant. However,
there was only about half that weight gain in this group. Therefore,
the authors estimate that 48% of the excess energy intake from sucrose
was used for other energy demanding body processes, such as lipogenesis
(the creation of fat).
In addition, even though all subjects were told they were being
given artificially sweetened products, most of those in the sucrose
group guessed the true content of their beverages. Even though subjects
knew they were consuming more calories from drinks, they didn’t
compensate by eating less calories from other foods. Again, the
authors suggest this could be a mechanism due to lack of control
over eating behavior (remember the lack of insulin secretion and
subsequent leptin production from fructose consumption talked about
earlier).
Similarly another study demonstrated those consuming HFCS sweetened
soda vs. artificially sweetened soda did not reduce participants
total energy intake to compensate for the extra energy consumed
as HFCS. These data, like above, suggest that the consumption of
HFCS (from soda in this case) does not provide the body with a sense
of fullness causing an increase in excess energy, hence, weight
gain. I will say it again; fructose does not stimulate insulin or
leptin, causing an increase in total energy intake because the “shut
off switch (leptin)” is not registering that there is food
in the body.
To make matters even worse, fructose consumption is even tied specifically
to insulin resistance in rodents (suggesting it may have the same
affect on humans too)(13,14) and increased triglyceride secretion
(15).
So what does this all mean?
Let me sum up this whole article in one sentence: avoid HFCS like
the plague! Go through your entire refrigerator, freezer and cabinets
and read the ingredient labels with the same attention to detail
you would use when going on a first date. If HFCS is high up on
the list of ingredients (meaning there is a relatively large amount
in the particular food) toss it in the garbage. Soda is one of the
biggest culprits. It’s a great deal for the soda companies
(e.g., use less of an even cheaper sugar for a sweeter product),
but a heck of a deal for your body (e.g., get fat). Now of course
HFCS alone cannot make you fat; for example soda made with “natural
sugar” is still soda. However, coupled with an increased caloric
intake (eating too much) and decrease energy output (not being active
enough), you’re setting yourself up for a recipe for unhealthy
disaster.
The easiest trick to avoid this (and many other “useless”
ingredients) is to primarily shop around the perimeter of the store.
Think about it: produce is on one side, seafood, red meat, poultry
on another, and dairy products, eggs, bread on the third. HFCS infests
commercially available products; the more these can be avoided,
the better off you’ll be, both health and physique-wise. Try
to buy foods in the most “natural” state possible; the
less processing the manufacturers do, the better off you’ll
be.
References:
1. JAMA, 286(10), 1195-1200, 2001
2. MSSE, 35(3), 449-455, 2003
3. Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care, May;6(3):301-6, 2003
4. J Strength Cond Res, Feb;17(1):12-9, 2003
5. J Appl Physiol. Oct;93(4):1337-44, 2002
6. Can J Appl Physiol. 26 Suppl:S236-45, 2001
7. AJCN, 68, 794-801, 1998
8. AJCN, 74, 426-234, 2001
9. J Nutr, 112, 1546-1554, 1982
10. Br J Nutr, 70, 199-209, 1993
11. J Lab Clin Med, 128, 208-213, 1996
12. AJCN, 76, 721-729, 2002
13. J Nutr, 107, 147-155, 1977
14. Metabolism, 29, 970-973, 1980
15. AJCN, 49, 1155-1163, 1989
About the Author:
Dr. Chris Mohr RD, PhD is
a health nutrition consultant to a number of media outlets
and corporations including Discovery Health Channel, Clif Bar,
Waterfront Media, and Fit Fuel. He has authored and co-authored
several textbooks and textbook chapters, including consulting
with LL Cool J on "LL Cool J's Platinum Workout" (Rodale
Press, 2006). He is also co-creator
of Meal Plans 101 nutrition software. For more information on how
you can utilize Chris's expertise go to www.mealplans101.com
(replace and redirect with your hoplink)
|