It's sugar, not fat, that causes heart attacks.

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  • liftsiron
    Administrator
    • Nov 2003
    • 18443

    It's sugar, not fat, that causes heart attacks.

    Mark Hyman, MD

    It's over. The debate is settled.

    It's sugar, not fat, that causes heart attacks.

    Oops. Fifty years of doctors' advice and government eating guidelines have been wrong. We've been told to swap eggs for cereal. But that recommendation is dead wrong. In fact, it's very likely that this bad advice has killed millions of Americans.

    A rigorously done new study shows that those with the highest sugar intake had a four-fold increase in their risk of heart attacks compared to those with the lowest intakes. That's 400 percent! Just one 20-ounce soda increases your risk of a heart attack by about 30 percent.

    This study of more than 40,000 people, published in JAMA Internal Medicine, accounted for all other potential risk factors including total calories, overall diet quality, smoking, cholesterol, high blood pressure, obesity and alcohol.

    This follows on the heels of decades of research that has been mostly ignored by the medical establishment and policy makers. In fact, the Institute of Medicine recommends getting no more than 25 percent of your total calories from added sugar. Really? This study showed that your risk of heart attacks doubles if sugar makes up 20 percent of your calories.

    Yet more than 70 percent of Americans consume 10 percent of their daily calories from sugar. And about 10 percent of Americans consume one in every four of their calories from sugar.

    Failed Dietary Guidelines

    U.S. Dietary Guidelines provide no limit for added sugar, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) still lists sugar as a "generally regarded as safe" (GRAS) substance. That classification lets the food industry add unlimited amounts of sugar to our food. At least the American Heart Association recommends that our daily diet contain no more than 5 percent to 7.5 percent added sugar. Yet most of us are eating a lot more. Most of us don't know that a serving of tomato sauce has more sugar than a serving of Oreo cookies, or that fruit yogurt has more sugar than a Coke, or that most breakfast cereals -- even those made with whole grain -- are 75 percent sugar. That's not breakfast, it's dessert!

    This is a major paradigm shift. For years, we've been brainwashed into thinking that fat causes heart attacks and raises cholesterol, and that sugar is harmless except as a source of empty calories. They are not empty calories. As it turns out, sugar calories are deadly calories. Sugar causes heart attacks, obesity, Type 2 diabetes, cancer and dementia, and is the leading cause of liver failure in America.

    The biggest culprit is sugar-sweetened beverages, including sodas, juices, sports drinks, teas and coffees. They are by far the single biggest source of sugar calories in our diet. In fact, more than 37 percent of our sugar calories come from soda. The average teenage boy consumes 34 teaspoons of sugar a day, or about 544 calories from sugar. Even more troubling, this isn't just putting kids at risk for heart attacks at some remote later date in their lives. It’s killing them before their 20th birthday.

    This new research syncs with decades of data on how sugar causes insulin resistance, high triglycerides, lower HDL (good) cholesterol and dangerous small LDL (bad) cholesterol. It also triggers the inflammation we now know is at the root of heart disease.

    And fats, including saturated fats, have been unfairly blamed. With the exception of trans fats, fats are actually protective. This includes omega-3 fats, nuts and olive oil, which was proven to reduce heart attack risk by more than 30 percent in a recent large randomized controlled study.

    Here's the simple fact: Sugar calories are worse than other calories. All calories are not created equal. A recent study of more than 175 countries found that increasing overall calories didn't increase the risk of Type 2 diabetes, but increasing sugar calories did -- dramatically.

    How to Cure Our Sugar Addiction

    America lags far behind the rest of the world in addressing this problem. Mexico, for example, responded after learning that when soda consumption increased to 20 percent of calories for the average citizen, their rates of obesity and Type 2 diabetes skyrocketed. Public health officials there researched effective solutions to combat obesity and diabetes from around the world.

    The key interventions they implemented included taxing soda, banning junk food television advertising, and eliminating processed foods, junk food and sugar-sweetened beverages from schools. More than 15 countries have targeted sugar-sweetened beverages by taxing them -- a strategy that’s proven successful.

    Another effective strategy is revamping food labeling to make it clear if a food is good, should be consumed with caution, or is bad for you. In the United States, even someone with a Ph.D. in nutrition has trouble deciphering food labels. How can the average person be expected to know?

    Recent and mounting scientific evidence clearly proves that sugar -- and flour, which raises blood sugar even more than table sugar -- is biologically addictive. In fact, it's as much as eight times more addictive than cocaine.

    The average American consumes about 152 pounds of sugar and 146 pounds of flour a year. It’s imperative that we revamp our outdated and dangerous national dietary guidelines. And we need clear strategies and medical programs to help people understand and address the health risks and addictive nature of sugar and refined carbohydrates.

    That's how we can reverse this tsunami of obesity and chronic disease that is robbing us of our health and crippling our economy.

    Wishing you health and happiness,

    Mark Hyman, MD

    Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dr-mar...b_4746440.html
    ADMIN/OWNER@Peak-Muscle
  • irish_2003
    Vet
    • Oct 2011
    • 733

    #2
    study sponsored by the US Gov't and the meat industry...lmfao

    Comment

    • liftsiron
      Administrator
      • Nov 2003
      • 18443

      #3
      Originally posted by irish_2003
      study sponsored by the US Gov't and the meat industry...lmfao
      Nevermind! It reinforces my beliefs!
      ADMIN/OWNER@Peak-Muscle

      Comment

      • MR. BMJ
        Moderator
        • Apr 2006
        • 3209

        #4
        I think this guy is smoking crack and dead wrong. He is basing all of this on an observational study, which does not show causation, like he stated in the article. I'd love for him to show any of the sugar claims causing any of this, because if he is basing any of this stuff like that idot Lustig, he is wrong, and just an alarmist. Alan Aragon already put Lustig in place on the whole sugar-phobia craz, and Lustig looked stupid in the debate.

        Heart health and diabetes are multi-factoral health concerns ,and while I agree that over consumption of certain foods can play a role if in excess amounts, most of these studies are used out of context. 12 sodas per day = probably not good, but 1 soda a day is not gonna hurt anybody, especially if they are active and it is alotted in their macronutrient count. This would apply to any food item, not just soda and sugar, when eaten in excess, or above maintenance, for any extended period of time....especially if already inactive and overweight to begin with.

        Comment

        • Glycomann

          #5
          This does not surprise me. unlike the rest of you I agree completely with the article. The US gov farm bill funds all the major grain production including corn, soy and wheat. So we have very cheap sources of 3 really shitty sources of carbs. corn syrup is in everything. Soy and wheat are loaded with pro-inflammatory compounds. It's actually difficult to pick up an article of processed food in the US without high fructose corn syrup. simple sugars like this are very bad. BTW, more than 1/2 of scientific research in the US is funded by the US government through the NIH and NSF 31 billion and 3.3 billion respectively. That funding brought you steroids and growth hormone. the NIH funding apparatus is the model that is most admired around the world.

          Comment

          • liftsiron
            Administrator
            • Nov 2003
            • 18443

            #6
            Originally posted by Glycomann
            This does not surprise me. unlike the rest of you I agree completely with the article. The US gov farm bill funds all the major grain production including corn, soy and wheat. So we have very cheap sources of 3 really shitty sources of carbs. corn syrup is in everything. Soy and wheat are loaded with pro-inflammatory compounds. It's actually difficult to pick up an article of processed food in the US without high fructose corn syrup. simple sugars like this are very bad. BTW, more than 1/2 of scientific research in the US is funded by the US government through the NIH and NSF 31 billion and 3.3 billion respectively. That funding brought you steroids and growth hormone. the NIH funding apparatus is the model that is most admired around the world.

            Good post!!!!!!!
            ADMIN/OWNER@Peak-Muscle

            Comment

            • DRveejay11
              Moderator
              • Jul 2013
              • 995

              #7
              Amen brother.

              Been preaching this ditch the toxic sugar crap for 20 years

              No arrogance intended, just came from how I responded to carbs; most notably, simple ones.

              Originally posted by Glycomann
              This does not surprise me. unlike the rest of you I agree completely with the article. The US gov farm bill funds all the major grain production including corn, soy and wheat. So we have very cheap sources of 3 really shitty sources of carbs. corn syrup is in everything. Soy and wheat are loaded with pro-inflammatory compounds. It's actually difficult to pick up an article of processed food in the US without high fructose corn syrup. simple sugars like this are very bad. BTW, more than 1/2 of scientific research in the US is funded by the US government through the NIH and NSF 31 billion and 3.3 billion respectively. That funding brought you steroids and growth hormone. the NIH funding apparatus is the model that is most admired around the world.

              Comment

              • Shovel
                VET
                • Jul 2011
                • 2772

                #8
                Originally posted by MR. BMJ
                I think this guy is smoking crack and dead wrong. He is basing all of this on an observational study, which does not show causation, like he stated in the article. I'd love for him to show any of the sugar claims causing any of this, because if he is basing any of this stuff like that idot Lustig, he is wrong, and just an alarmist. Alan Aragon already put Lustig in place on the whole sugar-phobia craz, and Lustig looked stupid in the debate.

                Heart health and diabetes are multi-factoral health concerns ,and while I agree that over consumption of certain foods can play a role if in excess amounts, most of these studies are used out of context. 12 sodas per day = probably not good, but 1 soda a day is not gonna hurt anybody, especially if they are active and it is alotted in their macronutrient count. This would apply to any food item, not just soda and sugar, when eaten in excess, or above maintenance, for any extended period of time....especially if already inactive and overweight to begin with.
                I've been doin my own "study" the last few weeks with sugar and fats. The sugar being 2 cubes in my 3 cups of coffee every morning And the fats being all the unsalted nuts daily.
                I've had a bp of 165/90+ every morning with the coffee and sugar minus the nuts the previous day along with 150+ blood sugar.
                The days of coffe with Splenda and walnuts/peanuts/peanut butter and NO sugar my BP is 120-130/60-70. Blood sugar is 90-110 then as well.
                It's for sure the sugar and can spike bp and Blood sugar immediatly.

                I agree with you about moderation, but sugar is evil. Lol
                Semper Fi

                Comment

                • willsgotrythm
                  Vet
                  • Jul 2012
                  • 459

                  #9
                  I have taken as much simple sugar out of my diet as I can. Except for a couple things that I eat that are processed and every now and then having some ice cream or some cookies, I don't eat much sugar. I never really was a huge sweets eater anyway. But I do know that if you start eating sweets that's what causes the cravings, at least for me. So if the sweets are not around me I don't even think about them.

                  Comment

                  • tobyonekinobi
                    Vet
                    • Feb 2014
                    • 137

                    #10
                    Im with Glycomann on this. My wife is a naturalist so im fortunate that its ready to eat and dont have to wory about to much. We spend the money on the better quality foods for our family and have reaped the health benefits. We avoid wheat and soy and anything processed. I have a 9 year old son who has not been to the doctor for sickness in two years. We have been for the concussions for fallin out of a tree but not sickness. Hes in a public school system with strep and flu and everything else. My wife is working with a 12 year old little girl with Rhumetoid Arthritis. They were about to give her shots that will make her infertile. She put the family on a food plan and the girl ran so much this weekend without pain her muscles were sore. She told her mom that she had never felt that. Food is powerful stuff

                    Comment

                    • GetBigger

                      #11
                      i do agree to some degree, but i dont think fruit sugar should be looked at the same as soda/candy. the article did say added sugar. also i have a hard time believing the fat from say hamburgers is healthy. if you cook a burger in a pan and dump it down your sink there is a good chance it could clog it.i dont think you can go wrong with lean meats, healthy fats, fruits, and veggies. just my opinion of course.

                      Comment

                      • liftsiron
                        Administrator
                        • Nov 2003
                        • 18443

                        #12
                        Originally posted by GetBigger
                        i do agree to some degree, but i dont think fruit sugar should be looked at the same as soda/candy. the article did say added sugar. also i have a hard time believing the fat from say hamburgers is healthy. if you cook a burger in a pan and dump it down your sink there is a good chance it could clog it.i dont think you can go wrong with lean meats, healthy fats, fruits, and veggies. just my opinion of course.
                        I agree fatty meat is bad, also fruit juice isn't much better than sugar soda pop. 12 0zs OJ every morning equals 20 lbs of extra fat in a year.
                        ADMIN/OWNER@Peak-Muscle

                        Comment

                        • Shovel
                          VET
                          • Jul 2011
                          • 2772

                          #13
                          But, I like my OJ and AJ dammit!!!
                          Semper Fi

                          Comment

                          • T1DMMA2BB
                            Vet
                            • Apr 2013
                            • 324

                            #14
                            Originally posted by tobyonekinobi
                            Im with Glycomann on this. My wife is a naturalist so im fortunate that its ready to eat and dont have to wory about to much. We spend the money on the better quality foods for our family and have reaped the health benefits. We avoid wheat and soy and anything processed. I have a 9 year old son who has not been to the doctor for sickness in two years. We have been for the concussions for fallin out of a tree but not sickness. Hes in a public school system with strep and flu and everything else. My wife is working with a 12 year old little girl with Rhumetoid Arthritis. They were about to give her shots that will make her infertile. She put the family on a food plan and the girl ran so much this weekend without pain her muscles were sore. She told her mom that she had never felt that. Food is powerful stuff
                            Man this actually brought a tear to my eye when I read it. My mom has been battling RA for years. She used to be a competitive bicyclist and so active with hiking and what not. Now she can barely get around and cant even lift some of the pans she has. I have to take out her garbage and she cant even walk around the block for exercise. If you could tell me what your wife is helping the little girl shes working with diet wise or just some general pointers I would really appreciate it.

                            Comment

                            • GetBigger

                              #15
                              Originally posted by liftsiron
                              I agree fatty meat is bad, also fruit juice isn't much better than sugar soda pop. 12 0zs OJ every morning equals 20 lbs of extra fat in a year.
                              i agree fruit juice isnt much better. i shoulda been more clear i ment from whole fruits. tho grapes, bananas, and different types of melon dont have much fiber and maybe should be avoided. red grapes do have resveratrol which im still on the fence about.

                              i would like to know peoples thought on sugar vs artificial sweetners.

                              Comment

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