PDA

View Full Version : Research may provide new link between soft drinks and weight gain


abdulhakeem
30-07-05, 05:39 PM
Public release date: 29-Jul-2005
Contact: Dama Kimmon
dama.kimmon@uc.edu
513-558-4519
University of Cincinnati

A University of Cincinnati (UC) study provides new evidence that drinking large amounts of beverages containing fructose adds body fat, and might explain why sweetening with fructose could be even worse than using other sweeteners.


Researchers allowed mice to freely consume either water, fructose sweetened water or soft drinks. They found increased body fat in the mice that drank the fructose-sweetened water and soft drinks--despite that fact that these animals decreased the amount of calories they consumed from solid food.


This, said author Matthias Tschöp, MD, associate professor in UC's psychiatry department and a member of the Obesity Research Center at UC's Genome Research Institute, suggests that the total amount of calories consumed when fructose is added to diets may not be the only explanation for weight gain. Instead, he said, consuming fructose appears to affect metabolic rate in a way that favors fat storage.


"Our study shows how fat mass increases as a direct consequence of soft drink consumption," said Dr. Tschöp.



The research appears in the July 2005 issue of Obesity Research, the official journal of the North American Association for the Study of Obesity (NAASO).


Consumption of sweetened foods and beverages containing sucrose and high-fructose corn syrup?particularly carbonated soft drinks and some juices and cereals--has been thought to be a leading cause of obesity. A widely used sweetener derived from corn, high-fructose corn syrup is similar to sucrose (table sugar) in its composition, about half glucose and half fructose.


Dr. Tschöp's lab used novel body composition analyzers that use magnetic resonance technology to carefully monitor body fat in mice.


All the mice began the study at an average weight of 39 grams. Those consuming the fructose-sweetened water showed significant weight gain over the course of the study, with an average final weight of 48 grams--compared with averages below 44 grams for the other groups--and had about 90 percent more body fat than the mice that consumed water only.


Total caloric intake was lower in the mice that consumed the fructose-sweetened water than in the other groups, except for the control animals provided with water only.

"We were surprised to see that mice actually ate less when exposed to fructose-sweetened beverages, and therefore didn't consume more overall calories," said Dr. Tschöp. "Nevertheless, they gained significantly more body fat within a few weeks."


Results from an earlier study in humans led by Peter Havel, DVM, PhD, an endocrinology researcher at the University of California, Davis, and coauthored by Dr. Tschöp, found that several hormones involved in the regulation of body weight, including leptin, insulin and ghrelin, do not respond to fructose as they do to other types of carbohydrates, such as glucose.


Based on that study and their new data, the researchers now also believe that another factor contributing to the increased fat storage is that the liver metabolizes fructose differently than it does other carbohydrates.


"Similar to dietary fat, fructose doesn't appear to fully trigger the hormonal systems involved in the long-term control of food intake and energy metabolism," said coauthor Dr. Havel.


The researchers say that further studies in humans are needed to determine if high-fructose corn syrup in soft drinks is directly responsible for the current increase in human obesity.


This study was conducted at both UC and the German Institute of Human Nutrition, in collaboration with the University of California, Davis.


Other coauthors were Hella Juergens, Wiltrud Haass, Annette Schürmann, Corinna Koebnick and Hans-Georg Joost, all of the German Institute of Human Nutrition, Potsdam-Rehbruecke; Tamara Castañeda, University of Cincinnati; Frank Dombrowski, Otto-von-Guericke-University, Magdeburg, Germany; Bärbel Otto, Innenstadt University Hospital, Munich; Andrea Nawrocki and Philipp Scherer, both of Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York; and Jochen Spranger and Michael Ristow, both of Charité University Medicine, Berlin.


http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2005-07/uoc-rmp072605.php

abdulhakeem
30-07-05, 05:44 PM
Study: Fructose adds more than calories

Friday, July 29, 2005
By Tim Bonfield
Enquirer staff writer

Few people would be surprised to learn that drinking a lot of soda pop can make a person gain weight.

But a study of mice issued today indicates that fructose – a corn-based sweetener commonly used in soda -- does more than just add calories to a diet. It may play a role in making the body create fat.

The study was conducted by researchers at the University of Cincinnati, and co-authored by researchers in Germany and California. It was published in the July issue of Obesity Research, a specialty medical journal. .

Researchers allowed mice to freely consume water, fructose sweetened water or fructose-sweetened soft drinks.

They found that the mice that drank the fructose-sweetened drinks tended to eat less solid food, so the overall calorie consumption was not widely different between the groups. Still, the mice that consumed fructose wound up with as much as 90 percent more body fat than the water-only drinkers.

This means that fructose appears to affect metabolic rate in a way that favors fat storage, said study author Dr. Matthias Tschöp, a member of the Obesity Research Center at UC’s Genome Research Institute.

The researchers say that further studies in humans are needed to determine how much of the nation’s growing obesity problem can be linked to high-fructose corn syrup in soft drinks.

E-mail tbonfield@enquirer.com (tbonfield@enquirer.com)

http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050729/NEWS01/399990004

Study: Sweetener in soda creates fat

By Tim Bonfield
Enquirer staff writer

Few people would be surprised to learn than drinking a lot of soda pop can make a person gain weight.

But a study of mice issued today indicates that fructose – a corn-based sweetener commonly used in soda – does more than just add calories to a diet. It may play a role in making the body create fat.
The study was conducted by researchers at the University of Cincinnati, and co-authored by researchers in Germany and California. It was published in the July issue of Obesity Research, a specialty medical journal.

Researchers allowed mice to freely consume water, fructose sweetened water or fructose-sweetened soft drinks. They found that the mice that drank the fructose-sweetened drinks tended to eat less solid food, so the overall calorie consumption was not widely different between the groups. Still, the mice that consumed fructose wound up with as much as 90 percent more body fat than the water-only drinkers.

This means that fructose appears to affect metabolic rate in a way that favors fat storage, said study author Dr. Matthias Tschöp, a member of the Obesity Research Center at UC’s Genome Research Institute.

“Our study shows how fat mass increases as a direct consequence of soft drink consumption,” said Dr. Tschöp.

All the mice began the study at an average weight of 39 grams. Those consuming the fructose-sweetened water wound up weighing 48 grams, compared to less than 44 grams for the water-only group – a weight gap of about 9 percent.

However, the fructose mice also had about 90 percent more body fat than the mice that consumed water only.

“We were surprised to see that mice actually ate less when exposed to fructose-sweetened beverages, and therefore didn’t consume more overall calories,” said Dr. Tschöp. “Nevertheless, they gained significantly more body fat within a few weeks.”

The mice study supports a previous study led by Dr. Peter Havel, of the University of California at Davis, that reported that human weight-regulating hormones do not respond to fructose as they do to other carbohydrates, such as glucose (table sugar).

Based on that study and their new data, the researchers now believe that the liver metabolizes fructose differently, leading to higher body fat.

“Similar to dietary fat, fructose doesn’t appear to fully trigger the hormonal systems involved in the long-term control of food intake and energy metabolism,” said Dr. Havel, who was a co-author of the mouse study.

The researchers say that further studies in humans are needed to determine how much of the nation’s growing obesity problem can be linked to high-fructose corn syrup in soft drinks.

E-mail tbonfield@enquirer.com (tbonfield@enquirer.com)

http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050729/NEWS01/307290009