Not all Sugars are equal.

imhotep

Well-known member
  • Mar 29, 2017
    14,824
    8
    35,333
    113
    A massive new study reveals that the source of sugar makes all the difference. While sugary drinks like soda and even fruit juice sharply increase the risk of type 2 diabetes, sugars in solid foods—especially nutrient-rich ones—may actually be less harmful or even protective. The findings challenge long-standing dietary assumptions and suggest it’s time to rethink how we talk about sugar and health.

    New research from Brigham Young University is changing the way we look at sugar. According to the findings, where your sugar comes from matters just as much as how much you consume.

    In the most extensive analysis of its kind, researchers from BYU and institutions in Germany examined data from over 500,000 people across multiple continents. Their discovery?
    Sugars from drinks like soda and even fruit juice were consistently linked to a higher risk of developing type 2 diabetes (T2D). Surprisingly, sugars from other sources did not show this same risk. In fact, some were even linked to a lower risk.

    This is the first study to draw clear dose-response relationships between different sugar sources and type 2 diabetes risk, said Karen Della Corte, lead author and BYU nutritional science professor. “It highlights why drinking your sugar—whether from soda or juice—is more problematic for health than eating it.”

    Even after accounting for factors like body mass index, overall calorie intake, and several other lifestyle risk factors, the differences were striking:

    • With each additional 12-oz serving of sugar-sweetened beverages (i.e., soft drinks, energy drinks, and sports drinks) per day, the risk for developing T2D increased by 25%. This strong relationship showed that the increased risk began from the very first daily serving with no minimum threshold below which intake appeared to be safe.
    • With each additional 8-oz serving of fruit juice per day (i.e., 100% fruit juice, nectars and juice drinks), the risk for developing T2D increased by 5%.
    • The above risks are relative not absolute. For example, if the average person’s baseline risk of developing T2D is about 10%, four sodas a day could raise that to roughly 20%, not 100%.
    • Comparatively, 20 g/day intakes of total sucrose (table sugar) and total sugar (the sum of all naturally occurring and added sugars in the diet) showed an inverse association with T2D, hinting at a surprising protective association..
    Why drinking sugar would be more problematic than eating sugar may come down to the differing metabolic effects. Sugar-sweetened beverages and fruit juice supply isolated sugars, leading to a greater glycemic impact that would overwhelm and disrupt liver metabolism, thereby increasing liver fat and insulin resistance.

    On the other hand, dietary sugars consumed in or added to nutrient-dense foods, such as whole fruits, dairy products, or whole grains, do not cause metabolic overload in the liver. These embedded sugars elicit slower blood glucose responses due to accompanying fiber, fats, proteins, and other beneficial nutrients.

    Fruit juice, even with some vitamins and nutrients, is much less beneficial. Because of its high and concentrated sugar content, the researchers conclude that fruit juice is a poor substitute for whole fruits, which provide more fiber to support better blood glucose regulation.
     

    Stimulus mind

    Well-known member
  • Feb 27, 2021
    30,806
    152,381
    113
    TFS, සහෝ. :) (y) Cool drinks, fruit juice වගේ නම් බොන්නෙම නැති තරම්. පළතුරක් වුණත් කෑවොත් තමයි ඉතින්. :yes: දියවැඩියාව, ප්‍රෙෂර්, කොලෙස්ටරෝල් වගේ ඒවා එන්න බලපාන අනිත් ලොකුම හේතුව පාන් පිටිවලින් හදාපු ෂෝර්ට් ඊට්ස් වගේ දේවල් ඉවක් බවක් නැතුව හැමදාම ගිලින එක.
     

    Honey Bunch

    Well-known member
  • Nov 24, 2018
    16,973
    26,386
    113
    Kandy
    මම විඩියෝ එකක් දැක්කා සුද්දන්ට සීනි ජාති එහෙම කෑවට ලේසියට දියවැඩියාව එන්නේ නෑ නමුත් දකුනු ආසියානු අයට ඒ ප්‍රමානයම කෑවොත් පූර්ව දියවැඩියාව තත්ව එන්න පුලුවන් කියලා ජාන නිසා
     

    imhotep

    Well-known member
  • Mar 29, 2017
    14,824
    8
    35,333
    113
    මම විඩියෝ එකක් දැක්කා සුද්දන්ට සීනි ජාති එහෙම කෑවට ලේසියට දියවැඩියාව එන්නේ නෑ නමුත් දකුනු ආසියානු අයට ඒ ප්‍රමානයම කෑවොත් පූර්ව දියවැඩියාව තත්ව එන්න පුලුවන් කියලා ජාන නිසා
    East Asians develop the condition despite not being obese based on their body mass index (BMI).
    Recent research has identified 61 new genetic variants associated with type 2 diabetes in people of East Asian descent that had not previously been detected in people of European descent, which might help to explain this.
     

    Hrithik_Roshan

    Well-known member
  • May 21, 2025
    4,221
    5,595
    113
    Not all sugars are equal. They differ in quality as well as in price. In fact many Sri Lankans are not even aware that different sugars exist as they only hear about brown sugar in the media and think it is the best and the only sugar. Little do they know that 4 kilos of brown sugar need to be purified to get 1 kilo of white sugar heroin.
     

    topkollek

    Well-known member
  • May 22, 2014
    42,787
    1
    56,794
    113
    ┬┴┬┴┤(·_├┬┴┬┴
    Pesticide Residues in Sugar
    • Residue Levels: Refined white sugar is typically 99.9% sucrose, with extensive processing (filtration, crystallization, washing) removing most pesticide residues. Studies show low pesticide residues in the final sugar product, as sugarcane juice is clarified and purified extensively.

    • Specific Pesticides:
      • Diuron, Ametryn, Hexazinone, Tebuthiuron: Detected in surface water near sugarcane fields at high frequencies (91-100%), with concentrations up to 2579 ng/L for imidacloprid and 1101 ng/L for ametryn. However, their transfer to the final sugar product is minimal due to processing.
        Atrazine: Regulated in the U.S. with a 3 µg/L drinking water limit, but banned in Europe due to contamination risks. Trace amounts may persist in unrefined sugar.

      • 2,4-D and Fipronil: Studies indicate these can affect non-target organisms, but their presence in processed sugar is low due to degradation and removal during refining.
    • Unrefined Sugars: Brown or raw sugars, retaining more molasses, may contain slightly higher trace residues of pesticides or environmental contaminants due to less processing. However, levels are typically below acceptable daily intake (ADI) limits. For example, a 70 kg person would need to consume 1.5 kg of tilapia fillets daily to exceed diuron’s ADI, suggesting low risk in sugar.

    • Regulatory Standards: In regulated markets (e.g., U.S., EU), pesticide residues in sugar are monitored, with tolerances set for 27 pesticides in the U.S. for sugarcane, though not all are used simultaneously. Residues are generally low, but 11 are acutely toxic, and 26 are linked to chronic health issues.
     

    imhotep

    Well-known member
  • Mar 29, 2017
    14,824
    8
    35,333
    113
    I heard that the order of eating also changes sugar absorption. For example, if you eat sugary food as dessert after the main meal, it will cause less harm than eating the same sugary food first and then the main meal.
    @imhotep any idea?
    True.... Eating vegetables and protein before consuming simple carbohydrates has a beneficial effect on post-meal blood sugar. The Japanese had done considerable studies on this.