High Fructose Corn Syrup Increases Risk of Heart Disease

28 Jul, 2011

High-Fructose Corn SyrupA recent study accepted for pub­li­ca­tion in The Endocrine Society’s Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism (JCEM) found that adults who con­sumed high fruc­tose corn syrup for two weeks as 25 per­cent of their daily calo­rie require­ment had increased blood lev­els of cho­les­terol and triglyc­erides, which have been shown to be indi­ca­tors of increased risk for heart disease.

The American Heart Association rec­om­mends that peo­ple con­sume only five per­cent of calo­ries as added sugar. The Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2010 sug­gest an upper limit of 25 per­cent or less of daily calo­ries con­sumed as added sugar. To address this dis­crep­ancy in rec­om­mended con­sump­tion lev­els, researchers exam­ined what hap­pened when young over­weight and nor­mal weight adults con­sumed fruc­tose, high fruc­tose corn syrup or glu­cose at the 25 per­cent upper limit.

“While there is evi­dence that peo­ple who con­sume sugar are more likely to have heart dis­ease or dia­betes, it is con­tro­ver­sial as to whether high sugar diets may actu­ally pro­mote these dis­eases, and dietary guide­lines are con­flict­ing,” said the study’s senior author, Kimber Stanhope, PhD, of the University of California, Davis. “Our find­ings demon­strate that sev­eral fac­tors asso­ci­ated with an ele­vated risk for car­dio­vas­cu­lar dis­ease were increased in indi­vid­u­als con­sum­ing 25 per­cent of their calo­ries as fruc­tose or high fruc­tose corn syrup, but con­sump­tion of glu­cose did not have this effect.”

In this study, researchers exam­ined 48 adults between the ages of 18 and 40 years and com­pared the effects of con­sum­ing 25 per­cent of one’s daily calo­rie require­ment as glu­cose, fruc­tose or high fruc­tose corn syrup on risk fac­tors for car­dio­vas­cu­lar dis­ease. They found that within two weeks, study par­tic­i­pants con­sum­ing fruc­tose or high fruc­tose corn syrup, but not glu­cose, exhib­ited increased con­cen­tra­tions of LDL cho­les­terol, triglyc­erides and apolipoprotein-B (a pro­tein which can lead to plaques that cause vas­cu­lar disease).

“These results sug­gest that con­sump­tion of sugar may pro­mote heart dis­ease,” said Stanhope. “Additionally our find­ings pro­vide evi­dence that the upper limit of 25 per­cent of daily calo­ries con­sumed as added sugar as sug­gested by The Dietary Guidelines for American 2010 may need to be re-evaluated.”

Source: The Endocrine Society via EurekAlert.org.

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