SUGAR -the most
harmful drug on the planet
Sugar, an aldehyde or ketone derivative of polyhydric
alcohol, mostly shows up as either
disaccarhides(C12H22O11), or monosaccharides(C6H12O6) found in foods
such as candy, fruit, salt, peanut butter, canned vegetables, bouillon
cubes, medicines, toothpaste, vitamins, and almost all processed
"fat-free" products. The health dangers ingested sugar
creates when habitually imposed upon human physiology are certain.
Simple sugars have been observed to aggravate asthma, muster mental
illness, move mood swings, provoke personality changes, nourish
nervous disorders, hurry heart disease, deliver diabetes, grow gallstones,
hasten hypertension, add arthritis, and on top of all of that...It
will kill you!
Certain harmful refined dietary sugars (which are specifically discussed
below) almost always turn directly into fat! Glucose, Fructose,
Sucrose, Galactose, Maltose, and actose are digested and absorbed
with such speed that the body must convert them into saturated fats.
Saturated Fatty Acids are "sticky" by nature, and, when
introduced into the vascular system, clog arteries, increase the
chance of stroke, diabetes, and definitively decrease athletic performance.
High Sugar Intake Corrupts Muscle Performance And Impedes
Strength Development!
Muscle mitochondrial cells (internal energy cell units that produce
muscle movement) breakdown 6-carbon glucose molecules for all muscle
energy. One of the byproducts of the energy cycle is a 2-carbon
acetate, vinegar. Acetates form the building blocks for cholesterol.
If Acetates are produced faster than they can be burned, enzymatic
reactions within our cells "Join" Acetates end-to-end
to make excess cholesterol and saturated fat, which makes red blood
cells sluggish, sticky, and inefficient, deposits excess saturated
fatty acids around organs and in subcutaneous skinfolds, or, deposits
clogs of cholesterol within the vascular system, impeding blood
transport of vital nutrients and oxygen to peripheral muscle cells.
Unfortunately for those of us who enjoy the moment
of sweet taste, this process tends to go one way, i.e. sugar transforms
to fat; but fat tenaciously tends to remain as fat deposits, and
only severe starvation or extreme caloric expenditures will mobilize
it as a burnable fuel source. Most of our organs burn off fat for
their fuel needs, which is why master's aged athletes store more
fat around organs than do younger athletes, simply from the passing
of time and the nature of human physiology.
The brain, as an organ, commands a pre-eminent role in the sugar
equation. Human survival and efficient maximal performance depends
upon this organ's need for specific fuels such as glucose, glutamic
acid, or ketones to be constantly supplied. If glucose is absent,
low from a dietary insufficiency, or perhaps from high caloric expenditure
during intense muscular exercise, the body must harvest or convert
it from two tissue stores: amino acids found in lean muscle mass,
or chemistry from the adrenal glands (activity/secretion) initiates
a conversion process which transforms liver and/or muscle glycogen
stores into glucose.
A diet high in refined carbohydrates stimulates an abnormal pancreatic
insulin response in order to moderate blood sugar levels, while
high sugar intake may also increase adrenal cortisone and cholesterol
levels fourfold. Constant high intake of simple dietary sugar over-stimulates
or "burns out" normal, healthy pancreas and adrenal function.
Sub-normal or lackluster performance of these two important endocrine
glands leads directly to adult-onset diabetes, cardiovascular complications,
hypoglycemia, and chronic fatigue. The direct result of high sugar
intake is a significant increase in blood serum saturated fatty
acids, which depresses the oxygen transport system dramatically
during athletic performance. Red blood cells stick together and
move slower, delaying delivery of much needed oxygen to muscle cells.
Cellular hypoxia is the constant companion of numerous degenerative
diseases previously mentioned.
Because refined dietary sugars lack vitamins and minerals, they
must draw upon the body tissue micronutrient stores in order to
be metabolized into the system. When these storehouses are depleted,
metabolization of fatty acid and cholesterol are impeded, contributing
to higher blood serum triglycerides, cholesterol, promoting obesity
due to higher fatty acid storage around organs and in subcutaneous
tissue folds. Increased obesity contributes to increased cholesterol
levels by lowering resting metabolism. A lower resting metabolic
rate has been implicated directly to feelings of fatigue or lack
of energy, increased rate of aging, arthritis, and coronary heart
disease. Athletes need a high metabolic rate for a minimal body
fat percentage and explosive energy expenditure upon demand.
A Little Sugar Can Cause All Of That?
Dietary sugars feed harmful intestinal yeasts, fungi, toxic organisms,
and all forms of cellular cancer. Sugar and Vitamin C utilize the
same transport system, but not at the same time! If Vitamin C is
disabled from reaching tissue folds where it is needed to control
or eradicate the virus, fungi, or cancerous organisms that feast
on sugar, they will multiply exponentially. It is very important
that the first four steps during the hydrolysis process of Vitamin
C are allowed transportation in maximum dose for tissue antioxidation
and restoration of cells damaged by intense workouts or accumulated
daily stress.
Dietary sugars have been observed to cross-link proteins, which
leads to increased skin fold wrinkles and general aging of our largest
vital organ, the skin. Because sugar is devoid of vitamins, minerals,
fiber, and has such a deteriorating effect on the endocrine system,
major researchers and major health organizations (American Dietetic
Association and American Diabetic Association) agree that sugar
consumption in America is one of the three major causes of degenerative
disease.
In the last 20 years, we have increased sugar consumption in the
USA 26 pounds to 135 lbs. of sugar per person per year! Prior to
the turn of this century (1887-1890), the average consumption was
only 5 lbs. per person per year! Cardiovascular disease and cancer
was virtually unknown in the early 1900's. When one compares the
rates of degenerative diseases to the rates of total fat consumption,
sugar consumption and altered fat consumption during the past 100
years, altered fat is #1, sugar is #2, and total fat is #3.
Where It Comes From And How Dangerous Is It?
There are 5 classes of simple sugars which are regarded by most
nutritionists as "Harmful" to ideal health and optimal
athletic performance when prolonged consumption in amounts above
15% of the carbohydrate calories are ingested. Sucrose, fructose,
honey, and malts are the classes reviewed in order of the real and
present dangers they impose on our health and therefore physical
performance.
Sucrose Class: Public Enemy #1!
Sucrose is found in almost all processed foods such as plain table
sugar, dextrose, raw natural sugar, blackstrap molasses, maple syrup,
or sorghum molasses. Taken from sugar beets or sugar cane, this
disaccharide is composed of glucose and fructose. Because it contains
NO vitamins or minerals it must rob them from the body in which
it is assimilated, (like a parasite leaching the "life"
from its victim).
Dextrose, D-glucose monohydrate, is a monosaccharide known as glucose,
and comes from the hydrolysis of cornstarch, and is found as a prime
ingredient in many processed foods. Dextrose is mentioned in the
Sucrose Class because it acts very much like the vitamin-mineral
parasite, sucrose; in order to be assimilated after digestion, it
must rob the body of its valuable micronutrient stores. Raw or Natural
Sugar is a white sugar that is also mostly sucrose. While it costs
more than sucrose, raw/natural sugar is 96% less-processed sucrose,
as compared to the purified/bleached table sugar's 99% sucrose content.
The empty calories from this so-called natural product perform exactly
the same as sucrose.
Blackstrap Molasses is made from the "liquid leftovers"
of processed table sugar (sucrose). It does contain small amounts
of iron, calcium and B vitamins, but this token "good"
is offset with 65% sucrose content. An extraction process performed
on sorghum stalks makes sorghum Molasses. Unless this molasses produce
is enzyme treated and heated, it will ferment very rapidly. However,
this process "kills" the small amount of vitamins and
minerals which pass through the initial extraction process, allowing
only a small amount of dietary iron and pesticide spray to as a
companions to its "sweet" 65% sucrose solution. Maple
Sugar or Syrup also contains 65% sucrose content. Several processing
techniques cause lead contaminates: such as boiling the maple sap
in lead buckets, which allows lead to leach into the syrup or sugar-finished
product for market.
Formaldehyde pellets placed in the sap holes in maple trees to keep
the sap flowing often leach into the sap and the final product.
Other "nasties" found in maple syrup/sugar products are
chemical anti-foaming agents, polishing chemicals, and animal fats.
Add cooking the sap over oil fires in lead buckets and your final
product becomes a delectable sweet-tasting yummy laced with poisons!
Fructose Class: A Not-So-Distant #2...
Fructose is "natural" only when found in fresh fruits
that contain all the enzymes, vitamins, and minerals to effectively
assimilate it as a rich nutrient for human consumption. About 20
times sweeter than table sugar, processed fructose is used as an
additive to sweeten all sorts of packaged foods. Without enzymes,
vitamins, and minerals, it, like the sucrose class, robs the body
of its micronutrient treasures in order to assimilate itself for
physiological use. As a sweetener additive, enzymes are added to
corn syrup starch, which produces "High Fructose Corn Syrup"(always
check ingredient lists on all labels).
Fructose does not raise blood sugars significantly, but does raise
blood serum triglycerides significantly! As a left-handed sugar,
fructose digestion is very low. For complete internal conversion
of fructose into glucose and acetates, it must rob ATP energy stores
from the liver. Processed, metabolized, and converted to small glycogen
stores (by the liver for itself and the muscles) digestion is hindered,
blood serum triglycerides are raised, body stores of vitamins, enzymes,
minerals, and liver stores of ATP are scavenged from the body so
that the "eater" my enjoy a moment of sweet taste.
Honey Class: A Surprise #3
Even "Natural Honey" May Only Befriend The Bees! It is
no wonder that the honey bear is the only animal found in nature
with a problem with tooth decay (Honey decays teeth faster than
table sugar)! Honey has the highest calorie content of all sugars
with 65 calories per tablespoon, compared to the 48 calories found
in table sugar! The increased calories are bound to manifest increased
blood serum fatty acids, and weight gain, on top of the likelihood
of more cavities.
Pesticides (carcinogens) used on farm crops and residential flowers
have been found in commercial honey. Honey can be fatal to an infant
whose immature digestive tracts are unable to deal effectively with
Botulinum Spore growth. What enzymes or nutrients raw honey contains
are destroyed by manufacturers who heat it in order to give it a
clear appearance for enhancing $ale$. Some beekeepers feed their
bees sugar water for enhanced production and flavor, while others
add sugar syrup to the product for the same ridiculous reason.
The Three "Tols": Xyli, Sorbi, & Manni, #4.
Xylitol is extracted from birch cellulose and is considered to be
a carbohydrate alcohol. While it has the same amount of calories
as sucrose, it metabolizes in a dissimilar manner and may be used
safely for diabetics and hypoglycemics. Bacterial salivary organisms
do not feed, grow or ferment on xylitol as they do on other simple
aforementioned sugars. "Sugar-Free" chewing gum contains
xylitol because it does not produce the bacterial support for increase
of cavity causing acids. Studies show that prolonged use or large
intake may produce the following side effects: weight gain similar
to that associated with high/prolonged sucrose intake, diarrhea,
tumor growth, and liver/kidney/brain dysfunction. Many manufacturers
have withdrawn xylitol from their product formulation!
Sorbitol and Mannitol are industrial sweet alcohols made from hydrogen
and commercial glucose, extracted from corn sugar. Slow absorption
makes them attractive for use in "sugar-free" gums and
candies. Both are known to nourish and increase the count of mouth
bacteria, namely Streptococcus Mutans that tend to stick to the
teeth. When other sugars are eaten, these bacteria proliferate,
manifesting the perfect chemistry for increasing the rate of tooth
decay beyond the normal rate. While research has not documented
this conjecture, some believe that carcinogenic or mutagenic properties
may be consistent with the behavior of this altered nutrient. Perhaps
the stomach has already testified to this: gastric distress, diarrhea,
or laxative effects, as each 1-2-3 will result with prolonged or
high dietary intake.
Malt Syrup Class: Last And Least, #5.
Most Malt Syrups added for sweetening flavor do elevate blood sugar/triglycerides
response. Many rice syrups, rice honey, and other malt sugars have
significant amounts of glucose, maltose, and corn syrup ADDED to
heighten their sweetness index. Unfortunately, such formulation
creates a blood serum response similar to sucrose and "robs"
vital enzymes, minerals, and vitamins from the body for digestive
assimilation. Only 100% Barley Malt Syrup has a minimal effect on
internal healthy physiology, but its expense may be prohibitive
for most at just under $1.00 per ounce! Simple sugars in reasonably
lenient amounts are safe sugars IF they have enough fiber, enzymes,
and vitamins/minerals to moderate their effect on absorption, blood
chemistry, and viable assimilation into the energy cycle in order
to support both health and dynamic muscular development.
Splenda is actually the brand name of the artificial
sweetener sucralose. Sucralose is reated by adding chlorine molecules
to sugar.
Back to top
|