Originally posted by Dr. Davis on 2017-07-25
on the Wheat Belly Blog,
sourced from and currently found at: Infinite Health Blog.
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Fructose—A wolf in sheep’s clothing

While sugar in processed foods
comes as sucrose, a 50:50 mix of glucose and fructose,
it also comes as the ubiquitous high-fructose corn syrup,
containing as much as 66 percent fructose. High-fructose
corn syrup is the sweetener of choice among manufacturers,
whether in low-fat salad dressing or Bloody Mary mix.
Fructose is the source of many
of the problems of these sweeteners. Glucose, the same as
the glucose of blood sugar, also has adverse consequences
(e.g., glycation, glucose modification of proteins, an
irreversible process), but fructose has greater potential
to wreak havoc. This did not become clear until the
processed food industry began loading up on high-fructose
corn syrup, an inexpensive, cost-cutting, shelf-stable
sweetener, putting fructose in virtually everything while
not understanding the consequences, making you the human
version of a fat lab rat. And as consumers got used to
everything being sweet, it caused them to expect even
greater degrees of sweetness, an appetite satisfied by
increasing intake of high-fructose corn syrup—a vicious
cycle, a feeding frenzy that has kids and adults alike
desiring that everything be sweet and rejecting foods
they should be eating.
Ironically, fructose was originally
billed (and still is) as a problem-free sweetener because
it did not raise blood sugar immediately following consumption.
It was even thought to be the perfect sweetener for those with
diabetes for that same reason. But more recent studies are
clear: Fructose raises insulin and blood sugar dramatically,
but the effect is delayed by several days (only
prolonged monitoring uncovered the delayed effect). By an
odd metabolic twist, liver processing of fructose causes an
increase of triglycerides, which, in turn, triggers
distortions in all other lipoproteins (fat-carrying proteins)
in the bloodstream converting, for instance, large and benign
LDL particles into small and heart disease–causing
LDL particles. This means that fructose increases
the particles in the bloodstream that lead to heart disease
(despite fructose being a major ingredient in many “heart
healthy” products, such as low-fat yogurt). Fructose also
increases visceral fat, blood pressure, levels of uric acid
(that lead to gout and heart disease), and inflammation, and
it contributes to a condition called fatty liver.
So, whatever you do, don’t be tricked
by claims of “low-glycemic index.” Fructose follows a
different set of rules. Ingested as, say, the high-fructose
corn syrup in a soft drink, ketchup or low-fat yogurt, it
provokes the glycation reaction even without raising blood
sugar, a stealth reaction that is difficult to detect.
Even without the immediate rise in blood sugar,
fructation—glycation by fructose—is eight to tenfold worse
than glycation by glucose. And as with
glucose-induced glycation, it is also irreversible.
In short, fructose is a lot worse
than it initially appeared. Consuming it at the rate most
people are consuming it—whether as sucrose, high-fructose
corn syrup, other sweeteners, or even excessive quantities
of fruit—is a death trap, a spinoff of the effort to reduce
dietary fat that provoked a carbohydrate feeding frenzy.
Remember, any time blood sugar rises
above normal, glycation occurs at an accelerated rate. What
foods raise blood sugar the most, triggering the greatest
degree of glycation? Grains and sugar. Fat-free and low-fat
foods often contain high-fructose corn sugar. Gluten-free
foods made with cornstarch, tapioca starch, potato starch,
and rice flour are guilty of the same.
The Undoctored and Wheat Belly
solution is to stop overstimulating the processes of
glycation or fructation in the first place by eliminating,
or at least managing, all the foods that are responsible
for these reactions. We must aim to minimize fructose
exposure to what is found naturally in fruit. Removing the
appetite stimulating effects of wheat and grains via
gliadin-derived opiates also will help bring the feeding
frenzy of sugar in all its various forms to a halt.
