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Thu, 3 Jun 2004 08:42:18 -0500

HSI - Jenny Thompson

The Sweet Lowdown

 

The Sweet Lowdown

 

Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

 

June 3, 2004

 

**************************************************************

 

Dear Reader,

 

It's not always easy to " keep it sweet " while also keeping

it healthy these days.

 

For instance, in the e-Alert " Sweet, but Sour " (4/27/04), I

told you about the significant health problems that have

been associated with aspartame. An HSI member named Gina

found this alarming and wrote: " As a regular user of this

product, I am now worried. Can you recommend another

sweetener (without an after-taste) which I can use instead

of aspartame? "

 

Sure can, Gina. Today we'll take a look at some alternate

sweeteners, along with helpful information from other HSI

members.

 

-----------------------------

Bees' work

-----------------------------

 

We'll start with three sweeteners taken from natural

sources. Last year an HSI member named Miriam asked, " What

do you think of the barley malt sweetener? Also maple syrup

and honey? "

 

I ran Miriam's question by HSI Panelist Allan Spreen, M.D.,

who noted that each of these three is a concentrated

sweetener with lots of calories (not that calories alone are

necessarily a bad thing). " The problem is, these agents are

unnaturally concentrated. Unlike standard refined sugar,

however, the concentrating of the sugars in maple syrup or

malt sweetener still usually retain the minerals and

vitamins needed for their metabolism. Other than for

diabetics or those with weight problems, these sweeteners

may not be too bad (or at least they don't carry any of the

chemical risks of truly artificial sweeteners).

 

" Honey is a unique agent. Bees are basically Mother Nature's

little refiners, and efficient sugar concentrators they are.

So, if sugar is a metabolic problem (hypoglycemia, diabetes)

then honey would not be the answer, as natural as it is.

However, in the raw state (and the word 'raw' is vital

here... 'uncooked' does not qualify) honey contains enzymes

and nutrients that can be very useful to the body.

Unfortunately, heat destroys many of them, and commercial

honey is heated to keep it from crystallizing. "

 

Dr. Spreen also points out that different honeys have

different ratios of different types of sugars (glucose,

fructose, etc.). Apparently tupelo honey has the least

concentrations of the sugars that have the greatest effect

on blood sugar. But no honey is low enough in glucose to

make it a safe choice for diabetics.

 

-----------------------------

Herbal essence

-----------------------------

 

For those who need to avoid the spike of glucose, Dr. Spreen

recommends stevia as a sugar substitute.

 

Stevia is an herb that's been used as a sweetener for

hundreds of years. It can be found in most health food

stores, but FDA restrictions state that it can't be called

a " sweetener, " so it's sold as a dietary supplement. (Once

again, the FDA " protects " consumers with a completely

unnecessary regulation.)

 

Stevia is reputed to be 300 times sweeter than cane sugar,

and yet studies have also shown that it suppresses glucose

response while increasing insulin levels. In the e-

Alert " The Sweet Life " (3/10/03), an HSI member named Arline

wrote: " The best sweetener for diabetics is Stevia. I am a

diabetic and have been using it for years. You can even cook

with it in powder form. I use the liquid to sweeten drinks,

etc. "

 

If there's a downside to stevia, it's a tendency to taste

bitter - not really the quality you look for in a sweetener.

But according to a member named Kathy, the bitterness can

easily be avoided.

 

Last year, Kathy wrote to recommend a brand of stevia called

Kal's, which she says has no unpleasant aftertaste. And she

adds that using too much of any stevia brand - including

Kal's - will cause bitterness. Kathy writes: " As a reference

point only 1/8 teaspoon is plenty to sweeten two large mugs

of tea. Sometimes I use a small amount of stevia like 1/8

teaspoon in a dessert and reduce the regular sweetener by

half. The problem with stevia is measuring out small enough

amounts. And we're talking about the white, powdered

extract, not the green, powdered stevia leaf. "

 

-----------------------------

Sweet from the wood

-----------------------------

 

Another natural alternative to highly processed sweeteners

is xylitol, a birch wood extract that has 40 percent fewer

calories than sugar, and does not cause a spike in blood

sugar levels.

 

In one study, reported in the American Journal of Clinical

Nutrition, the glucose and insulin responses of 80 healthy,

non-obese men were measured after ingesting xylitol. Results

showed that both glucose and insulin were less affected by

xylitol intake than by glucose intake, and researchers

concluded that xylitol is suitable for diabetics.

 

Xylitol also comes with the remarkable claim that it

actually prevents caries (the dental profession's term for

cavities). Last year, HSI Panelist Richard Cohan, D.D.S.,

M.B.A., explained the dental health angle: " The short answer

to why xylitol does not produce either a sugar spike or an

uptick in caries is that it is a five-carbon rather than a

six-carbon sugar. Our metabolic processes seem to depend on

the latter, or multiples of six carbons. Even bacteria seem

not to be able to metabolize five-carbon sugar. "

 

Stores that carry xylitol may be hard to locate, but you can

easily find xylitol products through many Internet sources.

 

-----------------------------

Lying in wait

-----------------------------

 

Returning to Gina's concern about aspartame, there's a

hidden reason to take the extra trouble to look for safe

sweeteners: Aspartame is everywhere.

 

According to the research of an HSI member (who asked not to

use her name): " Many will be shocked at some of the products

which contain aspartame. For example, many know that it's in

sugarless gum and 'diet' soda and candies, but it's also

contained in sugar-filled chewing gum, breath mints, lots of

medications such as cough syrups and aspirins, toothpastes,

yogurts, vitamins, instant breakfasts, and more. Please tell

people that it's imperative to read labels. "

 

Excellent advice. If you don't pay close attention, you may

end up getting quite a bit more aspartame than you bargained

for.

 

To start receiving your own copy of the HSI e-Alert, visit:

http://www.hsibaltimore.com/ealert/freecopy.html

Or forward this e-mail to a friend so they can sign-up to

receive their own copy of the HSI e-Alert.

 

**************************************************************

 

... and another thing

 

Here we go again.

 

The big health news last week: Regular aspirin use may cut

breast cancer risk by as much as 30 percent.

 

If you saw those reports and had a sensation of déjà vu,

it's because almost exactly a year ago a similar study

reported that women who regularly used non-steroidal anti-

inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) such as aspirin and ibuprofen

reduced their breast cancer risk by nearly 30 percent.

 

But there were drawbacks to recommending aspirin therapy a

year ago, and those drawbacks have not (and will not) go

away.

 

All NSAIDs have been shown to contribute to liver and kidney

impairment, as well as gastrointestinal conditions such as

bleeding and ulcers. And add to that: A 2002 study

associated NSAIDs with an increased risk of hypertension in

women.

 

And then there's the problem of mixing different NSAIDs, or

mixing NSAIDs with acetaminophen.

 

Say, for instance, you take an 81 mg tablet of aspirin daily

to reduce heart attack risk. If you begin taking ibuprofen

to help prevent breast cancer, according to a 2001 study the

ibuprofen will block aspirin's antiplatelet abilities. So

you decide to drop the ibuprofen, and increase your aspirin

intake. But sometimes you have arthritis flare-ups that the

aspirin doesn't relieve, so instead of relying on the

ibuprofen, you take acetaminophen. Now the problem is the

aspirin and acetaminophen interaction - because a high

intake of acetaminophen can cause serious damage to the

liver and other organs, and when acetaminophen and aspirin

intake are combined, that risk doubles!

 

So once an NSAID medication is put to work as a preventive

agent (whether for breast cancer or hearth health) it may

complicate the most popular use of NSAIDs: pain relief.

 

The new research is interesting in that it examines a very

specific type of breast cancer called hormone receptor-

positive - a cancer that's driven by estrogen or

progesterone. About 70 percent of all breast cancers fall

into this category. But according to the study, aspirin may

inhibit the process that blocks the production of estrogen.

 

Hormone receptor-positive breast cancer occurs mostly in

postmenopausal women, so in theory this would be the group

that would most benefit from aspirin therapy. Meanwhile,

millions of postmenopausal women are also taking hormone

replacement therapy to boost estrogen levels.

 

Obviously, there are no easy answers. So before any woman

begins popping a daily aspirin to keep breast cancer at bay,

she should check with her doctor to make sure this therapy

is a safe fit with her complete health care and pain

management regimen.

 

To Your Good Health,

 

Jenny Thompson

Health Sciences Institute

 

**************************************************************

To start receiving your own copy of the HSI e-Alert, visit:

http://www.hsibaltimore.com/ealert/freecopya.html

Or forward this e-mail to a friend so they can sign-up to

receive their own copy of the HSI e-Alert.

 

**************************************************************

 

Sources:

" Metabolic Response to Lactitol and Xylitol in Healthy Men "

American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 65, No. 4,

1997, ajcn.org

" Association of Frequency and Duration of Aspirin Use and

Hormone Receptor Status With Breast Cancer Risk " Journal of

the American Medical Association, Vol. 291, No. 20, 5/26/04,

jama.ama-assn.org

" Aspirin May Cut Breast Cancer Risk " CBS News, 5/25/04,

cbsnews.com

" Inverse Association of Breast Cancer and NSAIDs: Results

from the Women's Health Initiative (WHI) " Abstract #4893,

Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research,

Vol. 44, March 2003

 

Copyright ©1997-2004 by www.hsibaltimore.com, L.L.C.

The e-Alert may not be posted on commercial sites without

written permission.

 

**************************************************************

Before you hit reply to send us a question or request,

please visit here

http://www.hsibaltimore.com/ealert/questions.html

 

**************************************************************

If you'd like to participate in the HSI Forum, search past

e-Alerts and products or you're an HSI member and would like

to search past articles, visit http://www.hsibaltimore.com

 

**************************************************************

 

 

 

 

 

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