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> " HSI - Jenny Thompson "

> <HSIResearch

 

> Sugar Coating It

> Thu, 02 Sep 2004 08:23:36 -0400

>

> Sugar Coating It

>

> Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

>

> September 02, 2004

>

>

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

>

> Dear Reader,

>

> Here's a no-brainer headline if I ever saw one:

> " Study: Sugary Soda

> Boosts Diabetes Risk. "

>

> Who could have possibly seen THAT one coming?

>

> What's a little surprising is WHERE it came from.

>

>

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

>

> You are what you drink

>

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

>

>

> Researchers at the Harvard School of Public Health

> examined nine years

> of dietary and medical data on more than 51,000

> women who participated

> in the Nurses' Health Study II. From this group,

> well over 700 cases

> of type 2 diabetes were diagnosed during the study

> period.

>

> After crunching the data, the Harvard team concluded

> that the excess

> calories and high levels of rapidly absorbable

> sugars found in

> non-diet soft drinks promote weight gain and a

> greater risk of

> developing type 2 diabetes. In fact, women who drink

> one or more soft

> drinks per day may have an 80 percent increased risk

> of type 2

> diabetes compared to women who pass on this type of

> beverage.

>

> Another problem: The calories in a soft drink don't

> cause a feeling of

> fullness in the way that calories from food do,

> promoting a higher

> calorie and sugar intake.

>

> But a soft drink trade group disagreed with the

> Harvard results. Their

> spokesperson stated that " unhealthy lifestyles " are

> to blame for

> obesity and diabetes, not soft drink consumption.

>

> Which is sort of like saying that cars don't cause

> traffic accidents,

> it's the driving around in cars that causes

> accidents.

>

>

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

>

> Good timing

>

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

>

>

> When I came across the sugar study I couldn't help

> but wonder why

> researchers – from Harvard no less – would devote

> their time and

> research dollars to a study with an almost certain

> foregone

> conclusion. Even more curious: The study was

> published in the Journal

> of the American Medical Association (JAMA), arguably

> the biggest of

> the Big Kahunas of medical journals.

>

> Seems like much ado about the glaringly obvious. But

> then a New York

> Times article reminded me that what may be obvious

> out here in the

> real world is sometimes much less apparent in the

> world of food

> marketing.

>

> Last week the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee

> submitted its

> report containing the recommendations for the 2005

> revision of USDA

> Dietary Guidelines. As I told you in the e-Alert

> " Sweetening the

> Pyramid " (8/27/03), lobbying efforts from the sugar

> industry have made

> a huge impact on the previous revisions of the

> guidelines. And those

> efforts were strongly felt this time as well.

>

> The Times article reports that, last May, the

> 12-person committee was

> deadlocked – 6 to 6 – on whether or not the

> guidelines should include

> a statement about sugar intake being related to

> obesity and nutrient

> deficiency. But over the past three months, some

> recent studies won

> over three of the committee members. The final vote

> was 9 to 3 in

> favor of including a sugar statement.

>

> And according to the Times, the Harvard JAMA study

> was instrumental in

> tipping the balance.

>

>

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

>

> The fine print

>

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

>

>

> The final recommendations of the advisory committee

> are just that:

> recommendations. So what the final 2005 guidelines

> will eventually say

> about sugar is anybody's guess. And even if the

> guidelines do suggest

> that added sugars should be avoided, that doesn't

> mean the general

> public will necessarily hear much about it.

>

> In any case, it's going to take a lot more than the

> advice of a

> government panel to get people to wise up and lay

> off the huge

> consumption of soft drinks and other foods that are

> loaded with added

> sugars.

>

> So what in the world are people supposed to drink if

> they're advised

> to stop guzzling soda pop? The lead researcher of

> the Harvard study,

> Dr. Meir Stampfer, has a suggestion. He told the

> Associated Press

> that, generally, your best beverage option is water.

>

>

> Water! Imagine!

>

> The sugar lobby won't be happy to hear about that.

>

>

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

>

> ...and another thing

>

> It's time to fight the good fight.

>

> Against the common cold that is.

>

> I have some good information to follow up on

> yesterday's e-Alert

> ( " Calendar Girl " 9/1/04) about using a standardized

> extract of the

> herb andrographis to relieve and shorten the

> duration of upper

> respiratory infections.

>

> Vitamin E may significantly reduce the risk of

> catching a common cold

> in the first place.

>

> In a recent issue of the Journal of the American

> Medical Association,

> researchers report on a study in which more than 600

> subjects, aged 65

> or older, received either a daily supplement of 200

> IU of vitamin E or

> a placebo for a trial period of one year.

>

> The results: Vitamin E supplements had no effect on

> lower respiratory

> tract infections, but did have a preventive effect

> on upper

> respiratory infections. In fact, the subjects who

> took E supplements

> had a 20 percent reduced risk of coming down with a

> common cold.

>

> Right off, I can think of two things that might

> improve that

> percentage of reduced risk.

>

> In the e-alert " Over the Teeth, Past the Gums... "

> (2/5/03), HSI

> Panelist Allan Spreen, M.D., recommended a vitamin E

> daily dose of 400

> IU. Of course, more is not necessarily better, but

> doubling up on the

> 200 IU used in the study might, at the very least,

> help overcome

> problems of vitamin absorbency. Dr. Spreen also

> recommends

> supplementing with " mixed tocopherols " when taking

> vitamin E. Most

> vitamin E studies use only one form of tocopherol,

> which is not as

> effective as getting a mix.

>

> Of course, there are plenty of good dietary sources

> of vitamin E, such

> as eggs, liver, nuts and seeds, spinach, broccoli,

> peaches, wheat germ

> and vegetable oils.

>

> And when supplementing with vitamin E, Dr. Spreen

> strongly recommends

> an additional supplement of 200 mcg of selenium per

> day. As Dr. Spreen

> has pointed out, " Both selenium and vitamin E are

> intimately

> associated with stimulation of the part of the

> immune system dealing

> with production of immunoglobulins. " (The immune

> system uses

> immunoglobulins (or antibodies) to identify and

> neutralize viruses and

> bacteria.)

>

> So before the cold and flu season sets in, make sure

> you're getting

> plenty of vitamin E and selenium to help those

> immunoglobulins do

> their stuff.

>

> To Your Good Health,

>

> Jenny Thompson

> Health Sciences Institute

>

>

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

>

> Sources:

>

> " Sugar-Sweetened Beverages, Weight Gain, and

> Incidence of Type 2

> Diabetes in Young and Middle-Aged Women " Journal of

> the American

> Medical Association, Vol. 292, No. 8, 8/25/04,

> jama.ama-assn.org

> " Study: Sugary Soda Boosts Diabetes Risk " The

> Associated Press,

> 8/24/04, thewbalchannel.com

> " Added Sugars, Less Urgency? Fine Print and the

> Guidelines " Marian

> Burros, The New York Times, 8/25/04, nytimes.com

> " Vitamin E and Respiratory Tract Infections in

> Elderly Nursing Home

> Residents " Journal of the American Medical

> Association, Vol. 292, No.

> 7, 8/18/04, jama.ama-assn.org

> " Vitamin E may Help Elderly Ward off Colds " Alison

> McCook, Reuters

> Health, 8/17/04, reutershealth.com

>

> Copyright ©1997-2004 by www.hsibaltimore.com,

> L.L.C. The e-Alert may

> not be posted on commercial sites without written

> permission.

>

>

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

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