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Fruit Sugars Might Speed Obesity
Florida -
Fructose, the sugar found in fruit, honey and the corn-syrup
sweeteners used in many processed foods, may trick the body into
thinking it's hungrier than it really is, researchers report.
The findings could explain why sweet
foods help boost obesity rates in the United States and elsewhere.
In their studies with rats,
researchers at the University of Florida identified fructose as part
of a biochemical chain reaction that causes weight gain and other
characteristics of metabolic syndrome, the precursor to Type 2
diabetes.
Fructose can also cause an increase
of uric acid levels in the blood, the Florida team found. This
temporary rise in uric acid blocks the action of insulin, the hormone
that regulates how body cells use and store the sugar they need for
energy.
If increased uric acid levels occur
frequently enough, features of metabolic syndrome may develop over
time, the researchers said. These features include obesity, elevated
blood cholesterol levels and high blood pressure.
The Florida researchers fed rats a
high-fructose diet for 10 weeks. All of the rats experienced an
increase in uric acid in the bloodstream and also went on to develop
insulin resistance.
"When we blocked or lowered uric
acid, we were able to largely prevent or reverse features of the
metabolic syndrome," Dr. Richard Johnson, professor of nephrology and
chief of nephrology, hypertension and transplantation at the
university's College of Medicine, said in a prepared statement. "We
were able to significantly reduce weight gain, we were able to
significantly reduce the rise in the triglycerides in the blood, the
[rats'] insulin resistance was less and the blood pressure fell." --
HealthDay News
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