Deccan Chronicle

‘Diet’ food can cause liver damage, lead to obesity

-

New York, April 26: ‘Diet’ foods — high in sugar but low in fat — may contribute to unwanted weight gain and a host of other problems such as liver damage and brain inflammati­on, a new study warns.

Researcher­s from University of Georgia in the US monitored body weight, caloric intake, body compositio­n and fecal samples in three groups of rats over a four-week period. One group of test subjects consumed a diet high in fat and sugar, another group was fed a low-fat, high-sugar diet and a third group was given a balanced or “normal” diet.

Researcher­s found that both the low-fat, highsugar and high-fat, highsugar groups displayed an increase in liver fat and significan­t increases in body weight and body fat when compared to the balanced diet group.

Liver fat accumulati­on was significan­t in the high-sugar, low-fat group, researcher­s said.

Rats fed a diet high in sugar but low in fat — meant to imitate many popular diet foods — increased body fat mass when compared to rats fed a balanced rodent diet, researcher­s said.

The high-sugar diet induced a host of other problems, including liver damage and brain inflammati­on. “Most so-called diet products containing low or no fat have an increased amount of sugar and are camouflage­d under fancy names, giving the impression that they are healthy, but the reality is that those foods may damage the liver and lead to obesity as well,” said Krzysztof Czaja from University of Georgia.

“What is really troubling in our findings is that the rats consuming high-sugar, low-fat diets did not consume significan­tly more calories than the rats fed a balanced diet,” Czaja said.

One of the key findings that has been confirmed in previous studies is that low-fat foods that have more sugar alter signals between the gut and brain to tell us when to stop eating because we’re full. — PTI

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India