shadron
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 2, 2005
- Messages
- 5,918
Bottom line: if you have to drink soda (and I'm not recommending that you do), drink the diet, caffeine-free variety. This substance, in my very humble and not-fully-able-to-be-substantiated opinion, is likely one of the primary causes of the current obesity and diabetes epidemic.
~Dr. Imago
Let me see if I understand this: HFCS 55 only differs from sucrose by having the fructose and glucose molecules held together by a weak bond which the human enzyme sucrose is designed to undo, and by being pre-dissolved in water. Is this the significant difference that allows it to more readily be metabolized into fat? Or is there a different imbalance here you are referring to, between table sugar and HFCS?
Would you be less upset by soda if they used sucrose? Why should soda be a problem (you seem to indicate it is with the "if you must" attitude) with artificial sweeteners, where there is no chance for either tooth decay enhancement or for fructose metabolism?
The fact that we have enzymes that break down fructose, some of which are absent in certain disease states, is further illustrative of the fact that fructose is tolerable in the diet for most individuals, and that we evolved to be able to process the disaccharide, sucrose. The problem arises, though, with the extraordinarily high levels of fructose in certain "fortified" foods, such as in sweetened soft-drinks, and this causes the issue of "shunting" into fat anabolism. Generally, fructose itself is not problematic provided this doesn't become a primary dietary source of carbohydrate.
OK, does that refer to HFCS specifically, or use of table sugar in general, or what? Stop eating grapes? Remember, the "level" of fructose in that table sugar that we evolved to digest is itself 50% fructose. Do not any other sugars lend themselves to fat metabolism?
