Believe 'A Calorie Is a Calorie'?
auntiebabs
Posts: 1,754 Member
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-lustig-md/sugar-toxic_b_2759564.html?utm_hp_ref=fb&src=sp&comm_ref=false#sb=2928504,b=facebook
A long article, but worth reading...
Here are some excerpts. Do check out the article for a clearer context....
Fiber. You eat 160 calories in almonds, but you absorb only 130. The fiber in the almonds delays absorption of calories into the bloodstream, delivering those calories to the bacteria in your intestine, which chew them up. Because a calorie is not a calorie.
Protein. When it comes to food, you have to put energy in to get energy out. You have to put twice as much energy in to metabolize protein as you do carbohydrate; this is called the thermic effect of food. So protein wastes more energy in its processing. Plus protein reduces hunger better than carbohydrate. Because a calorie is not a calorie.
Fat. All fats release nine calories per gram when burned. But omega-3 fats are heart-healthy and will save your life, while trans fats clog your arteries, leading to a heart attack. Because a calorie is not a calorie.
Sugar. This is the "big kahuna" of the "big lie." Sugar is not one chemical. It's two. Glucose is the energy of life. Every cell in every organism on the planet can burn glucose for energy. Glucose is mildly sweet, but not very interesting (think molasses). Fructose is an entirely different animal. Fructose is very sweet, the molecule we seek. Both burn at four calories per gram. If fructose were just like glucose, then sugar or high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS) would be just like starch. But fructose is not glucose. Because a calorie is not a calorie.
....For instance, the increase in sugar consumption over the past 30 years paralleled the increase in obesity, diabetes and heart disease.... But correlation is not causation. Which direction do the data go? Does sugar cause obesity and metabolic disease? Or do obese people with metabolic disease drink soda?
"What in the world's food supply explains diabetes rates, country-by-country, over the last decade?" ...
...We assessed total calories; meat (protein); oils (fat); cereals (glucose); pulses, nuts, vegetables, roots, and tubers (fiber); fruit excluding wine (natural sugar); and sugar, sugarcrops, and sweeteners (added sugar). We controlled for poverty, urbanization, aging, and most important, obesity and physical activity.
Bottom line -- only changes in sugar availability explained changes in diabetes prevalence worldwide; nothing else mattered.
Total caloric availability was unrelated to diabetes prevalence; for every extra 150 calories per day, diabetes prevalence rose by only 0.1 percent. But if those 150 calories per day happened to be a can of soda, diabetes prevalence rose 11-fold, by 1.1 percent (and Americans on average consume the added sugar equivalent of 2.5 cans of soda per day, so that's 2.75 percent!). And this effect of sugar was exclusive of obesity; controlling for body mass index did not negate the effect. Even more important, we showed that the change in sugar availability preceded the change in diabetes (that's cause, not effect); and we showed directionality -- those countries where sugar availability rose showed increases in diabetes, while those where sugar availability fell showed decreases in diabetes. This is a very robust signal, with little noise. While epidemiology can't prove scientific causation, the data allow for objective inference. Sugar drives diabetes worldwide, and unrelated to its calories.
The food industry has contaminated the American food supply with added sugar to "sell more product" and thereby uphold their Wall Street mandate to increase profits. Of the 600,000 food items in the American grocery store, 80 percent have been spiked with added sugar; and the industry uses 56 other names for sugar on the label. They know when they add sugar, you buy more. And because you do not know you're buying it, you buy even more.....
A long article, but worth reading...
Here are some excerpts. Do check out the article for a clearer context....
Fiber. You eat 160 calories in almonds, but you absorb only 130. The fiber in the almonds delays absorption of calories into the bloodstream, delivering those calories to the bacteria in your intestine, which chew them up. Because a calorie is not a calorie.
Protein. When it comes to food, you have to put energy in to get energy out. You have to put twice as much energy in to metabolize protein as you do carbohydrate; this is called the thermic effect of food. So protein wastes more energy in its processing. Plus protein reduces hunger better than carbohydrate. Because a calorie is not a calorie.
Fat. All fats release nine calories per gram when burned. But omega-3 fats are heart-healthy and will save your life, while trans fats clog your arteries, leading to a heart attack. Because a calorie is not a calorie.
Sugar. This is the "big kahuna" of the "big lie." Sugar is not one chemical. It's two. Glucose is the energy of life. Every cell in every organism on the planet can burn glucose for energy. Glucose is mildly sweet, but not very interesting (think molasses). Fructose is an entirely different animal. Fructose is very sweet, the molecule we seek. Both burn at four calories per gram. If fructose were just like glucose, then sugar or high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS) would be just like starch. But fructose is not glucose. Because a calorie is not a calorie.
....For instance, the increase in sugar consumption over the past 30 years paralleled the increase in obesity, diabetes and heart disease.... But correlation is not causation. Which direction do the data go? Does sugar cause obesity and metabolic disease? Or do obese people with metabolic disease drink soda?
"What in the world's food supply explains diabetes rates, country-by-country, over the last decade?" ...
...We assessed total calories; meat (protein); oils (fat); cereals (glucose); pulses, nuts, vegetables, roots, and tubers (fiber); fruit excluding wine (natural sugar); and sugar, sugarcrops, and sweeteners (added sugar). We controlled for poverty, urbanization, aging, and most important, obesity and physical activity.
Bottom line -- only changes in sugar availability explained changes in diabetes prevalence worldwide; nothing else mattered.
Total caloric availability was unrelated to diabetes prevalence; for every extra 150 calories per day, diabetes prevalence rose by only 0.1 percent. But if those 150 calories per day happened to be a can of soda, diabetes prevalence rose 11-fold, by 1.1 percent (and Americans on average consume the added sugar equivalent of 2.5 cans of soda per day, so that's 2.75 percent!). And this effect of sugar was exclusive of obesity; controlling for body mass index did not negate the effect. Even more important, we showed that the change in sugar availability preceded the change in diabetes (that's cause, not effect); and we showed directionality -- those countries where sugar availability rose showed increases in diabetes, while those where sugar availability fell showed decreases in diabetes. This is a very robust signal, with little noise. While epidemiology can't prove scientific causation, the data allow for objective inference. Sugar drives diabetes worldwide, and unrelated to its calories.
The food industry has contaminated the American food supply with added sugar to "sell more product" and thereby uphold their Wall Street mandate to increase profits. Of the 600,000 food items in the American grocery store, 80 percent have been spiked with added sugar; and the industry uses 56 other names for sugar on the label. They know when they add sugar, you buy more. And because you do not know you're buying it, you buy even more.....
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Replies
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Outstanding info. Thank you!0
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Lol, this the third time someone is posting a Lustig link today! He is an extremist quack. Just because someone can be controversial enough to get publicity doesn't mean thier data is good.0
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Thanks for the article. Before even reading this I've been well aware of added sugar in almost everything we eat. So even if the data were off the main point is clear, too much sugar in Americans' food and lots of sickness and disease that is related to this sugar.0
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Thanks for the article. Before even reading this I've been well aware of added sugar in almost everything we eat. So even if the data were off the main point is clear, too much sugar in Americans' food and lots of sickness and disease that is related to this sugar.
Too many calories is the issue.0 -
a calorie is a calorie, it is a unit of heat or energy.
That is like saying there is a difference between lighting up 1000 btu of candles and one butane torch that puts out 1000 btu.
There might be other stuff, the butane might smell horrible or shoot up and burn your ceiling, but the heat generated is the same.0 -
Thanks for the article. Before even reading this I've been well aware of added sugar in almost everything we eat. So even if the data were off the main point is clear, too much sugar in Americans' food and lots of sickness and disease that is related to this sugar.
Too many calories is the issue.
Correct. There is no added sugar in a steak or chicken or fresh veggies or fruits. If you want to choose prepacked foods with a ton of additives, you take your risks. Common sense. I didn't Lolstig to tell me that.0 -
OP, Thanks for posting. It makes it that much easier to put you on IGNORE now. I love it when the alarmists make themselves easily identifiable.0
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Good info. Sugar is seriously in everything. It's hard to avoid. It can be done though. I always wonder if all the scientific theories combined would really explain the obesity epidemic.0
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I've been following the "calorie is a calorie" and the calorie in/caloire out science the last few years. Lots of good studies coming out now that will eventually tweak those premises, I think.
Here is one article I saw on PBS the end of last year. Nothing concrete, but interesting.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/body/is-a-calorie-a-calorie.html
As they summerize, I still think the acutal issue of being overweight or considered obese isn't found in this nuances of a few hundred calories here and there, but in the fact we eat too much and move too little. I'll say that until someone proves otherwise.0 -
Thanks for posting!0
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"A calorie is not a calorie" is getting really old. A calorie is a calorie, like it's been mentioned, it's a unit of energy.
Yes, the quality of what you eat matters, sure, some things are more easily digested than others, but whether you eat 1000 calories of sugar or 1000 calories of big macs, or 1000 calories of carrots, you're eating 1000 calories.0 -
Bro-science disagrees with this post.0
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As they summerize, I still think the acutal issue of being overweight or considered obese isn't found in this nuances of a few hundred calories here and there, but in the fact we eat too much and move too little. I'll say that until someone proves otherwise.
This.0 -
Thanks for the article. Before even reading this I've been well aware of added sugar in almost everything we eat. So even if the data were off the main point is clear, too much sugar in Americans' food and lots of sickness and disease that is related to this sugar.
Too many calories is the issue.
Correct. There is no added sugar in a steak or chicken or fresh veggies or fruits. If you want to choose prepacked foods with a ton of additives, you take your risks. Common sense. I didn't Lolstig to tell me that.
^ Yup0 -
Correct. There is no added sugar in a steak or chicken or fresh veggies or fruits. If you want to choose prepacked foods with a ton of additives, you take your risks. Common sense. I didn't Lolstig to tell me that.
Changing his name to Lolstig is really redundant... Lustig means funny in Swedish.0 -
Whatever the truth, I know I feel better when I eat less sugar and less processed crap. So I'll keep doing that. It's been working for me all these years. I'll choose the breads and tortillas without the frankensugars.
Folks can tell me it's just "calories in versus calories out" and for sheer math, sure. But I know how I feel and what works for me.0 -
I think "a calorie is a calorie" is up for debate. I noticed while on Weight Watchers that two foods could have an identical calorie count, but one would cost me more points than the other.0
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a calorie is a calorie, it is a unit of heat or energy.
That is like saying there is a difference between lighting up 1000 btu of candles and one butane torch that puts out 1000 btu.
There might be other stuff, the butane might smell horrible or shoot up and burn your ceiling, but the heat generated is the same.
Yup....
I think this article confuses the energy aspect of a calorie vs the nutritional value of a particular calorie. As a unit of energy, a calorie is indeed a calorie...however, from a nutritional standpoint, not all calories are created equal.0 -
I do not believe all calories are created equal.
1200 calories of organic veggies and lean proteins will have vastly different results than 1200 calores of processed foods and TV dinners.0 -
I think "a calorie is a calorie" is up for debate. I noticed while on Weight Watchers that two foods could have an identical calorie count, but one would cost me more points than the other.
Well if that method worked so well for you, why would you be here?0 -
I think "a calorie is a calorie" is up for debate. I noticed while on Weight Watchers that two foods could have an identical calorie count, but one would cost me more points than the other.
I'm willing to have a bet on the lower points being the WW branded low fat (and high sugar) version.0 -
I think "a calorie is a calorie" is up for debate. I noticed while on Weight Watchers that two foods could have an identical calorie count, but one would cost me more points than the other.
That's because WW dings you for eating less nutritious calories...it also allows you free points with veggies and the like...which indeed have calories and if you were to eat at a caloric surplus of veggies, you'd most definitely gain weight.
A calorie is a scientific unit of energy...so a calorie is indeed a calorie. The nutritional value of a particular calorie is a completely different discussion.0 -
I do not believe all calories are created equal.
1200 calories of organic veggies and lean proteins will have vastly different results than 1200 calores of processed foods and TV dinners.
From an overall health and body compostion point of view? Yes.
From a weight loss point if view? Not at all.
Google the Twinkie Diet.0 -
I do not believe all calories are created equal.
1200 calories of organic veggies and lean proteins will have vastly different results than 1200 calores of processed foods and TV dinners.
^^this.0 -
Yes and No - I read that article too (it came to me on Zite). What he's saying is absolutely valid. There are better ways to get our nutrients. If you purely count calories, that can work for you. It works for me. But if I want to maximise the benefits I'm getting from my food, I do have to think more about what I'm eating. It depends whether you want 1200 calories of really healthy, nutritious food, or 1200 calories of anything easy you can just grab.
Or 1500 calories, or 2000 calories, or whatever works for you.
It has a lot of merit, this article, but the fact is that some can't be bothered thinking that much into what they eat.0 -
I do not believe all calories are created equal.
1200 calories of organic veggies and lean proteins will have vastly different results than 1200 calores of processed foods and TV dinners.
From an overall health and body compostion point of view? Yes.
From a weight loss point if view? Not at all.
Google the Twinkie Diet.
Which means from a post weight loss weight maintenance point of view as well.....0 -
Thanks for posting.0
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Yup....
I think this article confuses the energy aspect of a calorie vs the nutritional value of a particular calorie. As a unit of energy, a calorie is indeed a calorie...however, from a nutritional standpoint, not all calories are created equal.
this0
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