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I'm a reader who enjoys posting comments and recommendations about the books I read. You will not find a synopsis with my recommendations because you can just click on the book title for a link to www.goodreads.com for a synopsis and reviews by other readers. I prefer the 3 Reason format: the reason I chose to read it; the reason I liked (or disliked) the book; and the reason I recommend it.

Friday, March 30, 2007

High Fructose Corn Syrup Takes Another Hit

I hope family members and friends take the time to read this article which is copied here in its entirety. The author does an excellent job of explaining why I avoid high fructose corn syrup in my food selection. Buying products without high-fructose corn syrup is more difficult every day. HFCS is in most breads. Even bakery-fresh bread may have it, if the baker uses frozen dough. HFCS is in most crackers. The trips to the grocery take me longer than ever as I find it in more unexpected products. I don't know how Mott's Original Recipe can call itself original when HFCS is now an ingredient.

Beware of high maltose corn syrup. Another corn processor makes that and markets it to other food companies.

I wish corn processors would listen when I tell them where to stick their overly processed corn by-products, "Put it in the ethanol and not in our food!"


High Fructose Corn Syrup Takes Another Hit
by Craig Weatherby
Courtesy of Vital Choice Seafood
The rise in America’s obesity rates parallel the rise in consumption of high-fructose corn syrup, which occurred as manufacturers replaced costlier cane sugar (sucrose) in drinks and snacks with high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS).

HFCS is produced by processing corn starch to yield glucose, and then processing the glucose to create a syrup that is usually about 45 percent fructose and 55 percent glucose.

Since sucrose (cane sugar) consists of one molecule of glucose and one molecule of fructose (i.e., 50 percent each), you'd think its effects would be similar to those of HFCS. But sucrose behaves very differently in the body, compared with glucose, fructose, or HFCS.

Conversely, the body’s digestion, absorption, and metabolism of fructose differ from the ways it digests, absorbs, and metabolizes glucose or sucrose.

The HFCS-obesity hypothesis

American’s consumption of HFCS increased by more than 1,000 percent between 1970 and 1990, far exceeding the changes in intake of any other food or food group (Bray GA et al 2004).

HFCS now represents more than 40 percent of caloric sweeteners added to foods and beverages and it is the sole caloric sweetener in soft drinks in the United States.

The increased use of HFCS in the United States mirrors the rapid increase in obesity, and the way in which the liver metabolizes fructose favors creation of new body fat.

In addition, unlike glucose, fructose does not stimulate secretion of insulin or leptin: hormones that act as key signals in the regulation of food intake and body weight (Teff KL et al 2004).

These epidemiological and experimental findings explain why many researchers believe that dietary fructose may promote increased calorie intake and weight gain.

The rise in HFCS intake also correlates with the rise in rates of metabolic syndrome: a condition linked to increased risks of type-2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease and characterized by abdominal obesity, hypertension, and impaired glucose (blood sugar), fat, and insulin metabolism.

Tellingly, HFCS produces signs of metabolic syndrome in animal and human studies: especially elevated triglycerides and altered fat metabolism.

Almost one in three Americans have symptoms of metabolic syndrome, and according to the World Health Organization (WHO), some 2.3 billion adults will be overweight by the year 2015 while more than 700 million people, many of them children, will suffer from obesity.

There are some problems with claims that HFCS is a major cause of obesity or metabolic syndrome:

The rise in America’s obesity rates also parallels the rise in consumption of soybeans and soy oil, which are high in omega-6 fatty acids, which promote inflammation and other obesity-fueling effects.
Obesity is also rising in countries where cane sugar still dominates.
Most studies of the effects of fructose have been in rodents, and those in humans have produced mixed results with regard to insulin resistance: a key pre-diabetic, obesity-promoting condition.
Still, the evidence against HFCS seems to be mounting.

As researchers at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh wrote recently, “High-fructose consumption is associated with insulin resistance and diabetic dyslipidemia [unhealthful blood-fat profiles]…” But, as they also said, “… the underlying mechanism is unclear.” (Qu S et al 2006)

New research from Spain may shed some light on the mystery.

Barcelona study details fructose effects on the liver
The authors of an animal study in Spain report some disturbing findings about the way in which fructose is metabolized: outcomes that may bolster the accusations made against HFCS, and increase calls to remove it from foods and beverages (Roglans N et al 2007).

Researchers from the University of Barcelona found that liquid fructose changes the way the livers in rats metabolize fat. Fructose affects a genetic switch called PPAR-alpha in ways that impair the liver's ability to break down the sweetener.

As the Spaniards noted, “Because PPAR-alpha activity is lower in human than in rodent livers, fructose ingestion in humans should cause even worse effects, which would partly explain the link between increased consumption of fructose and widening epidemics of obesity and metabolic syndrome.” (Roglans N et al 2007)

PPAR-alpha is believed to help regulate the burning of body fat (fatty acid oxidation).

Researchers led by Dr. Juan Carlos Laguna fed lab rats a fructose- or glucose-sweetened liquid (10 percent sugars by volume).

The livers of the animals drinking the fructose-sweetened liquid metabolized the syrup differently, yielding a calorie overload to which the animals’ bodies could not adapt.

Dr. Laguna’s team report that dietary fructose increased fat synthesis in the animals' livers and also acted on the PPAR-alpha receptor to reduce breakdown of the fructose.

As he said, “The most novel finding is that this molecular mechanism is related to an impairment in the leptin signal. Leptin is a hormone that plays a key role in the body's energy control; among its peripheral actions, it accelerates fat oxidation in the liver and reduces its synthesis.” (Roglans N et al 2007)

The Spaniards also observed that fructose decreased fat-burning in the animals' livers (thereby increasing levels of blood triglycerides and body fat) and activated the pro-inflammatory (hence, pro-obesity) genetic switch called NF-kappaB: two negative changes not observed in the glucose-fed rats

No weight differences seen: short study duration blamed

The Spanish scientists found no significant differences in weight between the rats drinking liquids with glucose or fructose, possibly because this study was too short for such changes to be measurable.

Even though manufacturers call fructose “fruit sugar” -- to mislead and lull consumers of added fructose -- most fruits have much more sucrose than fructose, and the implications of this study have no bearing on the fructose in fruit.

As Dr. Laguna said, “Fruit is healthy and its consumption is strongly recommended. Our study focuses on liquid fructose intake as an addition to the ordinary diet.”

Sources:

* Roglans N, Vila L, Farre M, Alegret M, Sanchez RM, Vazquez-Carrera M, Laguna JC. Impairment of hepatic Stat-3 activation and reduction of PPARalpha activity in fructose-fed rats. Hepatology. 2007 Mar;45(3):778-88.
* Bray GA, Nielsen SJ, Popkin BM. Consumption of high-fructose corn syrup in beverages may play a role in the epidemic of obesity. Am J Clin Nutr. 2004 Apr;79(4):537-43. Review. Erratum in: Am J Clin Nutr. 2004 Oct;80(4):1090.
* Teff KL, Elliott SS, Tschop M, Kieffer TJ, Rader D, Heiman M, Townsend RR, Keim NL, D'Alessio D, Havel PJ. Dietary fructose reduces circulating insulin and leptin, attenuates postprandial suppression of ghrelin, and increases triglycerides in women. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2004 Jun;89(6):2963-72.
* Qu S, Su D, Altomonte J, Kamagate A, He J, Perdomo G, Tse T, Jiang Y, Dong HH. PPAR{alpha} mediates the hypolipidemic action of fibrates by antagonizing FoxO1. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2007 Feb;292(2):E421-34. Epub 2006 Sep 19.
* Le KA, Faeh D, Stettler R, Ith M, Kreis R, Vermathen P, Boesch C, Ravussin E, Tappy L. A 4-wk high-fructose diet alters lipid metabolism without affecting insulin sensitivity or ectopic lipids in healthy humans. Am J Clin Nutr. 2006 Dec;84(6):1374-9.
* Wei Y, Wang D, Topczewski F, Pagliassotti MJ. Fructose-mediated stress signaling in the liver: implications for hepatic insulin resistance. J Nutr Biochem. 2007 Jan;18(1):1-9. Epub 2006 Jul 18. Review.
* Le KA, Tappy L. Metabolic effects of fructose. Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care. 2006 Jul;9(4):469-75. Review.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

How Bears Hibernate

The harsh February weather kept me inside where I did more than hibernate. I worked on investing research projects I postponed until I had my broadband internet connection at home. While at my parents’ Florida home in January, I waited until after 9 P.M. to use their Internet-phoneline connection to download the data from screens Investor’s Business Daily published only once during January and its weekly screens. When I returned to Ohio, I had data from 22 screens with 40-100 stocks per screen to research.

The task seemed daunting.

Yet, with all that data in one pile, I could see patterns evolving that I might have missed had I looked only at one day’s screen at a time. I could see the same stocks occurring time and again. If the stock was not going to meet my fundamental due diligence once, it was not going to meet it, even if it were in a different screen. I prepared a list of Stocks to Avoid to compare with screened data, and one step of my due diligence became a game of “which of these things is not like the other”. Failing my due diligence screen does not mean someone else can’t make money investing in those stocks; these are simply stocks that I don’t want to keep in my Universe watch-list.

Investor’s Business Daily screened 12,000 stocks down to 880-2200 stocks from which to choose and I chose 35 for my Universe watch-list. I researched those 35 in depth for both fundamental research and technical analysis.

I felt overwhelmed when I considered ways to keep my current notes straight for 35 stocks at a time. I was also stuck on other writing projects due to my inexperience. February 12, I found an e-book by Julie Hood and its website called The Organized Writer, and it has been useful to me for my writing project, Stock Analysis. I followed her suggestions for choosing simultaneous projects and setting up a filing system.

As is the way with so many first steps of an organizing project, both my office and our study looked worse before they looked better. I emptied my file drawers of all project files, discarded what was no longer relevant to the work I wanted to do, put some of my stuff into long-term storage in the garage, and aligned my computer files to match my research files.

I was half-way through The Organized Writer when the February 27 stock market correction occurred. The focus of my writing had to change. This new system helped me adapt when urgent changes and closer deadlines occurred. One priority for my daily writing changed from the project, Portfolio Maintenance, to Trade Evaluations, writing post analysis of the completed trade. Now I am “in cash” until the next market rally begins.

Friday, March 16, 2007

Help with Medicare Part D Coverage Denial

Family members who are Medicare Part D recipients will find a useful form at this link,
http://www.cms.hhs.gov/PrescriptionDrugCovGenIn/Downloads/ModelCoverageDeterminationRequestForm.pdf

The form helps you gather the information you need to request a review of denied prescription drug benefits.