Tuesday, 12 January 2016
1st blog post of january
Excessive sugar in the diet is not the best idea when it comes to healthy living. 500 extra calories a day from sugar is just what you need to gain 1 pound. While its been widely noted that excess sugar can increase the overall risk of heart disease, a 2013 study in the journal of the american heart association displayed strong evidence that sugar can actually affect the pumping mechanism of your heart and could increase the rate of heart failure. The findings specifically pinpointed a molecule from sugar (as well as from starch) called glucose metabolite glucose 6-phosphate (G6P) that was responsible for the changes in the muscle protein of the heart. These changes could eventually lead to heart failure. Approximately half of the people that are diagnosed with heart failure die within five years. Move over salt and hypertension, you've got competition. Sugar, as it turns out, is just as much of a silent killer. A 2008 study found that excess fructose consumption was linked to an increase in a condition called leptin resistance. Leptin is a hormone that tells you when you've had enough food. The problem is, we often ignore the signal our brain sends to us. For some people though, leptin simply does not want to work, leaving the person with no signal whatsoever that the body has enough food to function. This in turn can lead to over consumption of food and consequently, obesity. Why the silent killer? Because it all happens without symptoms or warning bells. If you've gained weight in the past year and can't quite figure out why, perhaps you should look at how much fructose you're feeding your body.
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