What are the biggest sugar carriers people should watch out for?
The holiday season has become a jet-fuelled boost of over-indulgence on an already excessive culture of over-consumption.
Even outside of the holiday season, everyone unknowingly consumes a large amount of added sugar in food products.
Most food labels show the total amount of added sugar in grams.
What’s useful to know is four grams is equal to one teaspoon of sugar,
so dividing the total number of grams of sugar on a food product by four
gives you the amount of sugar in teaspoons.
The World Health Organisation recommends no more than 12 teaspoons of sugar a day for an adult. It points out that there are added health benefits if this is halved to six teaspoons.
Soft drinks and energy drinks contain up to 95% of a person’s
recommended daily sugar intake. An average can of carbonated soft drink
contains between eight and ten teaspoons of sugar.
Sweet snacks such as candies, nougat, cookies, cakes, pies and dried
fruit apples contain between 70% and 80% of a person’s recommended daily
sugar intake.
Sauces and instant gravies can make up 38% of a person’s recommended
daily sugar intake. And ice creams, frozen yoghurts and milkshakes have a
sugar content of up to 25% of a person’s recommended daily sugar
intake.
What does sugar do to the body?
While you may be on holiday your liver is not. The liver has to
metabolise large amounts of sugar – especially fructose – and goes into
overdrive.
Most processed carbohydrates, sugary beverages and festive treats
require very little work for digestion. This is because they are in
their simplest form already. But the lack of dietary fibre means that it
is rapidly absorbed into the blood stream.
The load of liquid energy is transported to an overwhelmed liver and
the pancreas, which in turn releases a large amount of insulin to move
glucose out of the blood stream and into tissue such as muscle and brain
cells, where it can be used.
But because most people live a relatively sedentary lifestyle, only
some of this glucose gets used up. Energy cannot be created or
destroyed. It gets converted from one form to another.
If the glucose load is not converted to kinetic energy (exercised), it will be stored.
It takes about 25 minutes of brisk aerobic exercise to burn off the energy content of one can of soft drink.
Excess “sugar” transported to the liver will be converted to glycogen
and fatty acids. Glycogen is useful during periods of starvation but
this is rare in urban environments. The fat gets stored around the belly
and in the liver, in what is called “visceral fat”. A state of what is
commonly known as insulin resistance ensues. More insulin has to be made
to lower blood sugar and “overcome” the resistance.
This leads to increased inflammation in the body, abnormal
cholesterol profiles, hypertension and non-alcoholic fatty liver
disease. These all increase the risk of cardiovascular disease (heart
attack and stroke), cirrhosis, and even the risk of common cancers.
Some people say the problem is carbohydrates, not sugar. Is this true?
All sugars are forms of carbohydrates. The word sugar is loosely used
to reference carbohydrates in their simplest form such as glucose,
fructose and galactose.
These refined or processed sugars are rapidly absorbed into the blood
stream. The most notorious is fructose found in most sugar beverages,
which are often made from high fructose corn syrup.
Eating fruit is different from “drinking” fruit as the fibre in the
edible form slows the absorption of sugar (fructose), and serves as a
prebiotic.
Can you work sugar out of your system after a binge? Is it possible, and if so how long does it take?
The acute effect of the sudden release of insulin to shift the
glucose load leads to rapid blood sugar lowering. So the initial high is
quickly followed by a slump. Fatigue ensues.
In the long run it is difficult to burn off excess sugar.
The holiday period is a microcosm of what happens in our bodies on a
macrocosmic level during the year. A year full of work, unhealthy living
and too little exercise is capped by a holiday season of overindulgence
– leading to higher risks of chronic illness.
This is why modifying and controlling one’s diet is so important.
Exercise is important, but proportionately a diet change will make the
biggest difference.
The ideal scenario over the holiday period is to abstain completely
from sugary items and eat purposefully. But if you can’t then at least
plan your festivities and portion treats by eating less inbetween special occasions, and setting limits when you do indulge.
Start the new year on a healthy note as a continuation of the changes
made in December, rather than have to take empty resolutions to start
again.
SOURCE:
TheConversation



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