At least once in your life, you’ve probably heard that you can eat any food as part of a healthy diet, even sugar, but only in small amounts. This is because it all comes down to how many calories you eat.
Most people agree that if you eat more calories than you burn, you’ll gain weight. So, it seems like it doesn’t matter if the calories come from sugar or a salad, as long as you’re not sitting around all day and you burn off those extra calories by moving more.
However, even though you need to eat fewer calories than you use to lose weight, it’s not right to say all calories are the same.
The kind of food you eat matters too. Calories from different foods are used differently by our bodies. Some foods are better for losing weight than others.
For example, if you drink a sweet drink with 50 calories or eat a salad with 50 calories, your body reacts in very different ways.
What’s important to understand is that our bodies have different reactions to different foods. This is especially true for sugar. You can’t just think of sugar calories the same way as other calories without thinking about what they do to your body.
In this article, I’m going to explain why sugar is not good for losing weight and also why it’s generally not good for your health.
Table sugar, which people all over the world eat a lot of, comes from plants like sugar cane, beets, or corn. After they take the sugar out of these plants, what’s left is refined sugar. This kind of sugar is half glucose and half fructose.
The American Heart Association has said that women should try to eat no more than 6 teaspoons of sugar a day, and men should try no more than 9 teaspoons.
The reason it’s bad to eat more sugar than this, especially if you’re trying to lose weight, is because your body needs to burn off this sugar for energy.
Glucose is a type of sugar that every cell in our body can use right away to make energy. We get glucose from the foods we eat, and our body turns it into energy that our cells can use.
But fructose is different. Our body’s cells can’t use fructose for energy. Only the liver can deal with fructose. And remember, table sugar is made of both glucose and fructose.
When we eat too much fructose, it’s too much for the liver to handle, and the liver’s energy-making parts, called mitochondria, get overwhelmed. So, the liver has to turn this extra fructose into fat.
This means that even if you’re eating foods that aren’t high in fat if your diet has a lot of sugar, it’s like you’re eating a high-fat diet. That’s because a lot of the sugar ends up being stored as fat in the liver, which can lead to weight gain over time.
Whenever you eat or drink something that is high in sugar, your body produces a hormone called Dopamine, which is an excitatory neurotransmitter.
Dopamine is a chemical that is responsible for inducing feelings of pleasure in a person. Dopamine is also released during activities like sex.
Whatever your brain perceives as pleasures dopamine will be released during that activity.
The problem with this is that chronic stimulation of dopamine can also lead to addiction, the reason being, that the more dopamine is released the more it downregulates its receptor.
This means when you keep on indulging in an addictive activity such as watching pornography, gambling, social media scrolling, shopping, chronic alcohol and sugar consumption all eventually lead to addiction.
The reason is that the more you indulge in hedonic activities, the more dopamine you release and the more you have to do that particular activity next time to get that same amount of excitatory response from dopamine because the receptors get downregulated over time leading to addiction.
Studies have shown that sugar causes a big rush of dopamine in your brain, giving you that addictive feeling of wanting more the next time.
For example let’s say you have a glass of sweetened soda or a fruit juice, the sugar (fructose) in them lights up the limbic system in your brain, stimulating dopamine and leading to addiction over time, making you crave more again and again.
This cycle can be a big problem when you’re trying to lose weight. The more sweets you eat, the more you want them, making it hard to stick to healthier food choices. This can lead to eating too much and choosing foods that aren’t good for weight loss.
Also Read: What Role Do Hormones Play In Weight Loss?
In a nutshell, metabolic syndrome means a number of risk factors for different types of diseases, like type 2 diabetes, hypertension, cardiovascular disease, etc.
How does sugar play a role in this? As stated above, when sugar (fructose) is consumed in excess, it is converted into liver fat which leads to insulin resistance in the liver.
Insulin is the hormone responsible for glucose regulation. Whenever you eat a meal, your blood glucose level goes up, insulin is released from the pancreas and it stores that glucose in the blood in all the cells of the body.
Although, When insulin resistance occurs in the liver it means the cells of the liver are no longer responding to the usual amount of insulin to store that blood glucose.
Hence the pancreas has to work harder by releasing even more insulin every time you have a meal leading to type 2 diabetes and fat storage around your organs commonly referred to as belly fat.
One of the waste products that is produced from excess sugar (fructose) consumption is uric acid.
Uric acid is the reason for diseases such as gout. One of the other damaging aspects of uric acid is that it blocks nitric oxide production in the blood vessels which is responsible for vasodilation (unrestricted blood flood).
Thus leading to constriction in the blood vessels and increasing chances of hypertension.
4. Sugar and Alcohol Cause Similar Damage to the Body
What does alcohol have to do with sugar since they are both quite different and cannot be compared right? Well, not quite.
Ethanol is the active chemical ingredient found in alcohol. Ethanol is naturally made when the sugar is fermented by yeast.
Chronic alcohol consumption causes a disease known as fatty liver. Why does this happen? Similar to sugar (fructose), the cells in your body cannot directly use alcohol for energy.
Hence the job rests on the liver to metabolize 80% of the alcohol consumed. And what is the result of it? the liver gets overwhelmed and it turns the ethanol into liver fat causing fatty liver.
The only difference between sugar (fructose) and alcohol is that you dont get the same intoxicating effects from sugar as one gets from consuming alcohol since the brain does not metabolize fructose.
Sugar also causes a disease known as NAFLD (non-alcoholic fatty liver disease). More and more children are now being diagnosed with NAFLD due to their excess sugar (fructose) consumption.
Fatty liver also increases the risk of cardiovascular diseases because when the liver turns the fructose into liver fat, it also converts some of the fructose into LDL (low-density lipoprotein) to get stored in your muscle and fat cells.
There are two types of LDL, particle A, and particle B, LDL A is reportedly neutral in its morphology it is not as dense as compared to LDL B and does not increase the risk of a cardiovascular event (heart attack).
LDL B on the other hand has shown to be the trouble maker, because it is dense in its chemical structure and sticks onto the endothelial cells in the blood vessels leading to plaque formation causing atherosclerosis (narrowing of the blood vessels) leading to heart attacks, stroke, kidney disease etc.
Lastly, sugar (fructose) can harm your liver and cause the same diseases as done by alcohol.
There are enough studies out there linking excess sugar consumption and accelerated aging.
The reason is that the sugar from the food we eat binds to hemoglobin in the blood known as glycation which causes something called the maillard or browning reaction.
It’s the same reaction used to brown the meat using barbecue sauce except it’s heated over 300 degrees.
Our body’s temperature is usually 98.7 degrees therefore in a normal scenario it takes several decades for aging to occur through glycation.
However, studies show that the fructose in sugar drives the Maillard reaction seven times faster than glucose.
This small difference can cause the cells in your body to age more rapidly than they should leading to accelerated aging, wrinkles, cognitive decline, etc.
Go into your kitchen, and pick up any food item that came in a package. Read the nutrition label behind it and in most cases, you will find sugar in the first three ingredients.
It’s found in every processed product, whether it’s bread, flavored yogurt, chips, tomato sauce, soy sauce, you name it and most possibly it will be there in one of the listed ingredients.
The question is why? why is there added sugar in so many packaged foods nowadays? the answer is as I mentioned above, sugar (fructose) is addictive especially when you combine sugar, salt, and fat you get a delicious and addictive combination that you can’t get enough of.
The food industry is indeed aware of this fact hence you will find sugar in 90% of the items in your grocery store. They know if they put it in there you will come back for more and that has been the case.
By “eat your sugar” I mean naturally available sugar like fructose which is found in fruits along with fiber. If fructose is poison, fiber is its antidote.
When you drink sweetened sodas, fruit juices, and smoothies, they are stripped of their fibrous content leaving only the sugar behind which overloads the liver.