Los Angeles Times

If it’s sweet, watch out

-

Re “The heartbreak­ing news about sugar and a sugar substitute,” Opinion, March 5

Sweeteners, both sugar and artificial, have adverse health effects.

From documentat­ion of cardiovasc­ular disease in 3,500-year-old Egyptian mummies to the present epidemic of obesity, sugar is a prime suspect. The hormonally triggered “sugar high” (the release of serotonin and dopamine) and consequent sugar low (hypoglycem­ia) lead to hunger, weight gain and obesity. Production of cholestero­l and triglyceri­des are increased with an enhanced sugar load.

Artificial sweeteners fail to produce the satisfacti­on of the sugar high, promoting eating (documented in the medical journal the Lancet in 1986). The shaming of erythritol as associated with cardiovasc­ular disease is actually the result of overeating.

In addition, another strategy has appeared that is most relevant: Adequate protein and (good) fat with each meal enhance satiety and diminish the insulin effect.

A reality check demands that we limit sweeteners in food. So, Anthony Bourdain’s words that our bodies are an amusement park may ring true, but the fact is that they are indeed temples.

In our world, we have endless food choices and one life to live.

Jerome P. Helman, MD Venice

Bertrand Russell, the English philosophe­r, once said that since smoking gives him great pleasure, it’s worth dying a few years earlier from the habit.

In Robin Abcarian’s column, she wondered if her father, who died at 91, might have lived to be 92 if he hadn’t eaten so much sugar.

Actually, 91 ain’t that bad.

Benny Wasserman La Palma

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States