Soy Nómada on MSN
The hidden sugar that could be causing your digestive problems: are you overlooking fructose?
Unexplained bloating, gas, and sudden digestive discomfort may not come from junk food, but from a natural sugar commonly ...
FODMAP Everyday® on MSN
The overlooked sugar behind gut symptoms
A significant share of people with unexplained digestive issues may actually be reacting to fructose, a common sugar hiding ...
Whether you’ve been scrolling through food content on social media in the past year or you’re someone who’s always tuned in to wellness trends, it’s likely you’ve heard about people eating certain ...
Turn on the TV and there's an ad promoting it, or a different ad promoting its absence. In a grocery store, choose your Raisin Bran with - or proudly without - it. But what exactly is high-fructose ...
Fructose, a common sugar found in the U.S. diet, may cause changes in the brain that trigger a person to overeat, a new brain imaging study shows. After drinking a fructose beverage, the brain doesn't ...
NEW YORK -- Although it negates the dumping of glucose directly into the bloodstream, fructose may not be an ideal sweetener for diabetics, researchers said here. Its links with hypertension, ...
The soaring rates of diabetes in the United States and many other developed countries over the past three decades has been generally blamed on obesity. We're getting fatter, and that puts us at risk ...
A study published last week in the journal Philosophical Transactions found that fructose intake fuels obesity and conditions such as diabetes and fatty liver disease. The World Health Organization ...
Fructose is under fire. In recent years, the simple sugar has endured close scrutiny from scientists who claim that it increases the risk of obesity more than its cousin glucose does. Now, some ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. David DiSalvo writes about science, tech and culture. The study is the first to examine all of the gene networks affected by ...
A meta-analysis of all available human trials says fructose in and of itself is not to blame for the increase in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. Since the disease is closely linked to obesity and ...
Fructose, a form of sugar linked to obesity and diabetes, is converted in the human brain from glucose, according to a new study. The finding raises questions about fructose's effects on the brain and ...
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