San Diego Union-Tribune

RESEARCH SHOWS SWEETENED DRINKS DISRUPT APPETITE CONTROL

- HEALTHDAY NEWS

It could be more than just added calories: New research gives insight into why sugary drinks are a leading cause of obesity.

Sugar-sweetened drinks are the largest source of calories from added sugar for U.S. adults, and researcher­s now report that the drinks also hinder hormones that quell hunger and regulate appetite.

“Our study found that when young adults consumed drinks containing sucrose, they produced lower levels of appetite-regulating hormones than when they consumed drinks containing glucose — the main type of sugar that circulates in the bloodstrea­m,” said researcher Dr. Kathleen Page. She’s an associate professor of medicine specializi­ng in diabetes and childhood obesity at the University of Southern California’s Keck School of Medicine.

The study included 69 adults, ages 18 to 35, who consumed drinks containing either sucrose or glucose during two separate sessions. Sucrose is a combinatio­n of glucose and fructose from sugar cane or sugar beets. Glucose is found in honey, grapes, figs and plums.

Blood samples were taken from the study participan­ts 10, 35 and 120 minutes after they had the drinks. When they consumed drinks with sucrose, they produced lower amounts of hormones that suppress hunger than when they had drinks with an equal amount of glucose, the findings showed.

The researcher­s also found that factors such as body weight and sex affected how the different types of sugars affected those hormones.

For example, obese people and those with lower insulin sensitivit­y had a smaller rise in hunger-suppressin­g hormones after they had drinks sweetened with sucrose than when they had drinks with glucose.

The study was published Dec. 10 in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinol­ogy & Metabolism.

The findings don’t mean that you should switch from one type of sweet drink to another, but that you should try to cut back on any type of added sugar, according to Page, head of the university’s Diabetes and Obesity Research Institute.

“The majority of sucrose that people consume in the American diet comes from sugar-sweetened foods and beverages, whereas glucose is found naturally in most carbohydra­te-containing foods, including fruits and whole grain breads,” she said in a university news release.

“I would advise reducing the consumptio­n of sugarsweet­ened foods and beverages and instead trying to eat more whole foods, like fruits,” Page added.

The Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health has more informatio­n on sugary drinks at hsph.harvard.edu.

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