Don't want to jack the thread. But has anyone tried Burch tree sugar?
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Exactly^Zilla is correct. Fructose in normal quantities isn't bad for you. Most studies that show fructose as being bad use an ABSURD amount of fructose. Something that isn't even realistic.
So you give up.Alright man you are obviously just trolling me so this will be my last message on the subject.
Zilla is correct. Fructose in normal quantities isn't bad for you. Most studies that show fructose as being bad use an ABSURD amount of fructose. Something that isn't even realistic.
The human body handles glucose and fructose — the most abundant sugars in our diet — in different ways. Virtually every cell in the body can break down glucose for energy. About the only ones that can handle fructose are liver cells. What the liver does with fructose, especially when there is too much in the diet, has potentially dangerous consequences for the liver, the arteries, and the heart.
The entry of fructose into the liver kicks off a series of complex chemical transformations. (You can see a diagram of these at health.harvard.edu/172.) One remarkable change is that the liver uses fructose, a carbohydrate, to create fat. This process is called lipogenesis.
Virtually unknown before 1980, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease now affects up to 30% of adults in the United States and other developed countries, and between 70% and 90% of those who are obese or who have diabetes.
The breakdown of fructose in the liver does more than lead to the buildup of fat. It also elevates triglycerides increases harmful LDL (so-called bad cholesterol) promotes the buildup of fat around organs (visceral fat) increases blood pressure makes tissues insulin-resistant, a precursor to diabetes increases the production of free radicals, energetic compounds that can damage DNA and cells.
Higher intakes of fructose are associated with these conditions, but clinical trials have yet to show that it causes them.
But don't do it by giving up fruit. Fruit is good for you and is a minor source of fructose for most people.
"there are existing data on the metabolic and endocrine effects of dietary fructose that suggest that increased consumption of fructose may be detrimental in terms of body weight and adiposity and the metabolic indexes associated with the insulin resistance syndrome, much more research is needed to fully understand the metabolic effect of dietary fructose in humans."
0.75g/kg body weight = 68 grams for a 200lb male.
One large apple delivers about 15 grams of fructose
One 8 oz can of sugary soda = 30 grams
(see more fructose scores here Foods highest in Fructose)
*** My point being that 0.75g/kg body weight really isn't that much - at least not for gen pop - for us who pay attention to our diets, probably not an issue ***
In an attempt to understand the mechanisms involved in fructose-induced hypertriglyceridemia and its contribution to de novo lipogenesis in an acute setting, in humans, the group of Frayn [91] used a high dose of fructose 0.75g/Kg body weight in a liquid breakfast of mixed macronutrients. [2H2] Palmitate and [U13 C] fructose or [U13 C] glucose were added to trace the handling of dietary fats and the fate of dietary sugars in the body. Compared with glucose, fructose consumed with the fat-containing liquid increased the 4-h appearance of the meal's fatty acid in VLDL. They found, however, that the large amount of fructose used led to impaired triacylglycerol clearance rather than contributing to de novo lipogenesis.
In addition, Parks and co-workers [7] aimed to determine the magnitude by which acute consumption of fructose in a morning bolus would further increase TG concentrations after the next meal. Six healthy subjects consumed carbohydrate boluses of sugar (85g each) in a random order followed by a standard lunch 4 hours later. Subjects consumed either a control test of glucose (100%), a mixture of 50: 50 or 25:75 (wt:wt) glucose:fructose. The investigators demonstrated that post meal lipogenesis increased in proportion to fructose concentration in a beverage: from 7.8% for 100g glucose beverage to 15.9% after a mixture of 50g glucose: 50g fructose and 16.9% after a mixture of 25g glucose: 75g fructose beverage. Body fat synthesis was measured immediately after the sweet drinks were consumed. This study concluded that fructose has an immediate acute lipogenic effect; with greater serum TG level in the morning, and after a subsequent meal, even if consumed as a small amount in a mixture of sugars. The small amount was either 50g or 75g taken with glucose in a beverage. However, it is misleading to suggest that the consumption of a specific food or food ingredient was the cause of obesity and the rise of Type 2 diabetes.
"Actual" science shows that the amount necessary to be hazardous to health is unrealistic and ALWAYS in combination with caloric excess.
Lipogenesis and actual fat gain are NOT the same thing.
We have no data showing fat GAIN with excessive fructose consumption while calories were kept under control - there is a reason for that.
So fructose is to blame for obesity, diabetes, NFLD and everything else huh?
Correleation doesn't equal causation but Harvard already know that. It's just much easier to generate headlines by blaming fructose rather than telling the truth - the fact that this conditions are multi-factorial and based on eating too fucking much in general.
Fructose can certainly do all those things...if consumption is excessive & unrealistic.
LOL - your own evidence CLEARLY states that science has NOT shown fructose to directly cause any of these health issues in humans.
It also CLEARLY states not to avoid fruit because the amount required to reach the "retarded" fructose dose limit is NEVER going to happen.
Yet...you advocate limiting fruit and see fructose as the devil. This data does NOT support your POV whatsoever, try again...
There is NO data showing any ill effects of fructose on humans when not combined with caloric excess and/or given in retarded doses. If you read the "Chronic studies in humans" sections of the SAME paper, you would know this.
That reference was an ACUTE study that gave the WHOLE 0.75g/kg BW dose in 1 meal. Still don't see the dose as being retarded? Because I sure as shit do since NO ONE consumes 0.75g/kg in 1 meal.
Since in real life you CANNOT find an isolated source of fructose with sources, including fruit & sugar, containing an even 50/50 split of fructose/glucose it would require your 200lb male to consume 136g of SUGAR along with 100g of fat (since they added 0.5g/kg bw of fat to the meal) to replicate these results. The vast majority of average people don't do this, never mind our community.
Now if you want to focus on the fat, sedentary, unhealthy folks then yes, fructose intake is an issue because its EXCESSIVE and combined with a bunch of other bad shit (too many cals, etc) - something I've been saying all along.
1) You cannot find a "25:75 glucose fructose" mixture in real life, it literally doesn't exist which makes the 3rd sample non applicable.
2) Acute data should always be interpreted with caution since it isn't an automatic translation to a chronic effect.
3) No one is saying that lipogensis doesn't increase, I'm saying that lipogenesis and fat gain are not the same thing.
Also note that in chronic overfeeding trials, giving folks a 50% surplus in the form of an extra 135g of sucrose, glucose or fructose resulted in NO significant differences in DNL so the idea of fructose being more lipogenic and leading to more fat gain is false:
Macronutrient disposal during controlled overfeeding with glucose, fructose, sucrose, or fat in lean and obese women
A 4-wk high-fructose diet alters lipid metabolism without affecting insulin sensitivity or ectopic lipids in healthy humans
4) I still don't consider 50-75g of fructose in 1 meal to the norm. I am supported by the literature since most americans get around 8% of their cals from fructose with the more extreme groups (male college students) getting 12.5%. In either case, the 50-75g in 1 meal dosing does not reflect reality for the vast majority of people:
Food sources of added sweeteners in the diets of Americans. - PubMed - NCBI
Self‐Reported Sugar‐Sweetened Beverage Intake among College Students
Nothing you have shown has justified the need to completely avoid fructose. It has justified the fact that issues arise with excessive intake - something I said at the start.
Enjoy your fruit
We will. Arguing with Zilla on diet and nutrition is like having a 28-3 lead against the Patriots...he/they will still come out on top. Seriously though, he is the smartest man I have ever interacted with personally about nutrition. He knows the research in and out better than most ppl know their children and spouses.
I'm not doubting that Zilla is knowledgeable - just that he is overly dogmatic and isolates the fructose aspect from the bigger picture. I'm arguing that fructose have few if any nutritional benefits, that it is proven to impose a hepatic load, that it increases lipogens etc AND while the levels are probably harmless for the average person, we as AAS and other med users (who are also concerned with below normal leanness - well, maybe not the PL guys) we do NOT need any more hepatic stress than we're already getting, and we certainly don't need the empty calories. There's of course also the hepatic load from wine and other alcohol, for those of us who partake.
1) Being dogmatic tends to come with the territory of being right or knowing "the research in and out better than most ppl know their children and spouses" as Doc put it it.
2) The irony of you accusing me of isolating "the fructose aspect from the bigger picture" while citing sources that accuses fructose of causing diabetes, NFLD and obesity is strong.
3) In regards to fruit specifically, classing then as empty calories because of the fructose content while ignoring the nutrient density shows that YOU are missing the bigger picture man. The irony is just off the scale at this point.
4) I've had clients rely on fruit as the EXCLUSIVE source of carbs during contest prep and do extremely well. As a result, your concerns over "leanness" are not supported.
5) Your inability to understand the difference between nondiet sodas and fruit due to your fixation on fructose is your undoing here.
It's what makes your advice fundamentally incorrect. Though of course you are entitled to do what you wish, just don't lead others down the same wrong path![]()

EDIT: you wouldn't be Vegan, would you?
I'm beating a dead horse telling you that your missing the big picture and then you ask if I'm a vegan. Painful (and no I'm not).
Another one joins the ignore list.
Yeah, how the Falcons lost that lead, that's one for the history books - largest lead lost, or biggest Super Bowl turnaround after halftime I think? In addition to being the only SB going into overtime. If I actually cared about football, I might be depressed - it is the home team after all.
I'm not doubting that Zilla is knowledgeable - just that he is overly dogmatic and isolates the fructose aspect from the bigger picture. I'm arguing that fructose have few if any nutritional benefits, that it is proven to impose a hepatic load, that it increases lipogens etc AND while the levels are probably harmless for the average person, we as AAS and other med users (who are also concerned with below normal leanness - well, maybe not the PL guys) we do NOT need any more hepatic stress than we're already getting, and we certainly don't need the empty calories. There's of course also the hepatic load from wine and other alcohol, for those of us who partake.
It's your body, go ahead - drink that sweetened Coke, enjoy Pop Tarts, apple sauce, Wonder Bread etc
I'm still minimizing my fruit intake to: a small glass of grape fruit juice, some Schizandra, Goji, and blueberries, and the occasional banana in protein shakes. That I can live with. I'm not a purist. ;-)
So using gatorade as a preworkout and intra. How fast are those sugars usuable for liftin?
so an intra drink is pointless?Your body uses stored glycogen for lifting.
so an intra drink is pointless?
ok cool I completely understand now.Yes, no, and maybe lol.
The answer would depend upon the rest of your day's nutrition.
