gribbler
I read the abstracts offered at that sight, but being abstracts, they do not reveal any of the science that went into the conclusion (abstract). So they just come across as Yahoos for the subsidized corn growers and the pockets of the politicians benefiting from their support of this very profitable product. In addition, I am very well aware how the political powers that be have a strong influence on what is acceptable science, and that has to do more with ideology and/or money (e.g Global Warming, Evolution, Big Bang Theory).
High Fructose Corn Syrup has a 55% Fructose 45% Glucose mixture. Sucrose has 50-50 mixture of the two. However, in the Sucrose molecule, the Fructose is bound to the Glucose. In the High Fructose Corn Syrup, the Fructose molecules are not connected to the Glucose molecules.
Insulin levels in the blood control the levels of glucose in the body. But fructose is regulated in the liver, and when too much fructose enters the liver, the liver can't process it all fast enough for the body to use as sugar. Instead, it starts making fats from the fructose and sending them off into the bloodstream as triglycerides. These lead to heart disease. In addition, Fructose ends up circumventing the normal appetite signaling system, so appetite-regulating hormones aren't triggered--and you're left feeling hungry, thus this contributes to weight gain. And the Fructose surplus in the blood stream may lead to type II diabetes. Fruits and vegetables have relatively small, "normal" amounts of fructose that most bodies can handle quite well, but we now have High Fructose Corn Syrup in many many food products and drinks, thus people now have high levels of fructose running through their body.
Now I am not a specialist in anyway on this, but it appears to me that we have a real serious problem with so many people becoming obese with the health problems obesity brings. and the great increase in obesity in our country coincides with the rising number of foods that have High Fructose Corn Syrup. And HFCS is sweeter than sugar, and in that sense, somewhat addictive.
The Corn growers are rising to the occasion to solve the High Fructose Corn Syrup problem it presents to them, simply by renaming HFCS to sweet corn syrup, or something like it with no fructose in the name.
I read the abstracts offered at that sight, but being abstracts, they do not reveal any of the science that went into the conclusion (abstract). So they just come across as Yahoos for the subsidized corn growers and the pockets of the politicians benefiting from their support of this very profitable product. In addition, I am very well aware how the political powers that be have a strong influence on what is acceptable science, and that has to do more with ideology and/or money (e.g Global Warming, Evolution, Big Bang Theory).
High Fructose Corn Syrup has a 55% Fructose 45% Glucose mixture. Sucrose has 50-50 mixture of the two. However, in the Sucrose molecule, the Fructose is bound to the Glucose. In the High Fructose Corn Syrup, the Fructose molecules are not connected to the Glucose molecules.
Insulin levels in the blood control the levels of glucose in the body. But fructose is regulated in the liver, and when too much fructose enters the liver, the liver can't process it all fast enough for the body to use as sugar. Instead, it starts making fats from the fructose and sending them off into the bloodstream as triglycerides. These lead to heart disease. In addition, Fructose ends up circumventing the normal appetite signaling system, so appetite-regulating hormones aren't triggered--and you're left feeling hungry, thus this contributes to weight gain. And the Fructose surplus in the blood stream may lead to type II diabetes. Fruits and vegetables have relatively small, "normal" amounts of fructose that most bodies can handle quite well, but we now have High Fructose Corn Syrup in many many food products and drinks, thus people now have high levels of fructose running through their body.
Now I am not a specialist in anyway on this, but it appears to me that we have a real serious problem with so many people becoming obese with the health problems obesity brings. and the great increase in obesity in our country coincides with the rising number of foods that have High Fructose Corn Syrup. And HFCS is sweeter than sugar, and in that sense, somewhat addictive.
The Corn growers are rising to the occasion to solve the High Fructose Corn Syrup problem it presents to them, simply by renaming HFCS to sweet corn syrup, or something like it with no fructose in the name.
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