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High Fructose Corn Syrup

by Dr. Glenn Myers, M.D.

High Fructose Cron SyrupThe corn refiners association has recently started advertising that HFCS is healthy for us. The fact is, it’s not. They and others have designed websites to make people think HFCS is good for us. This is pure capitalism without regard for our health.

     We're actually drowning in high fructose corn syrup. It’s in many of our foods and beverages. This country eats more sweetener made from corn than from sugarcane or beets. Almost all nutritionists point to high fructose corn syrup consumption as a major culprit in the nation's obesity crisis. This inexpensive sweetener flooded the American food supply in the early 1980s, just about the time the nation's obesity rate started its unprecedented climb. The process of pulling sugar from cornstarch wasn't perfected until the early 1970s, by Japanese researchers. After some tinkering, they landed on a formula that was 55 percent fructose and 45 percent glucose.



There are two possible reasons that HFCS makes us fat.

  • Either we're eating too many empty calories in ever-increasing portion sizes
  • Or fructose in all that corn syrup short-circuits our metabolism and forces us to gain weight.

Loading HFCS into increasingly larger portions of soft drinks and processed foods has packed more calories into us and more money into food processing companies. But some health experts argue that the issue is bigger than mere calories. The theory is: The body processes the fructose in high fructose corn syrup differently than it does sugarcane or beet sugar, which in turn alters the way metabolic-regulating hormones function. It also forces the liver to kick more fat out into our bloodstreams.