12 Common Questions About Sugar and Your Health — Answered

Sugar is nearly everywhere in the typical American diet — and not just in cupcakes and cookies but condiments and beverages too. The average American consumes about 34 teaspoons of sugar every day (17 of which are added). This amounts to more than 100 pounds of sugar per person, per year.

Perhaps it’s not so surprising then that 93 percent of Americans also struggle with some aspect of metabolic health, whether it’s obesity, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, or insulin resistance. Sugar alone is not to blame, but it is one of the main ingredients in the ultraprocessed foods that make up nearly 60 percent of the average person’s daily calories.

“We know something is going on with the food supply because this massive increase in obesity, diabetes, and cardiometabolic disease tracks so closely to the introduction of ultraprocessed foods,” says Laura Schmidt, PhD, MSW, MPH, a professor of health policy in the School of Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco. “The American public is pretty clear now that sugar is not something you should eat in excess.”

Yet despite what we know, scaling back our sugar intake can be surprisingly difficult.

Reducing sugar starts with recognizing where it’s hiding. And understanding its potential health consequences — while a little depressing — can give us additional inspiration to kick excess sugar to the curb. To that end, here are some answers to common questions about sugar and health.

1) What is sugar?

Sugar is a carbohydrate, one of the three major dietary nutrients called macronutrients (the other two being fat and protein). Sugar is easy to vilify, but it’s a macronutrient for a reason — and our biological requirement for it demands nuanced understanding and respect.

Sugar is either a monosaccharide or a disaccharide. A monosaccharide, such as glucose, is the smallest unit of sugar. A disaccharide is a combination of two monosaccharides. Sucrose, commonly known as table sugar, is a disaccharide made up of glucose and fructose. It’s typically refined from sugarcane or sugar beets.

“Glucose is so essential that if you don’t eat it, your body turns other things into glucose just so you have it.”

Glucose fuels each one of the body’s approximately 30 trillion cells. “Glucose is so essential that if you don’t eat it, your body turns other things into glucose just so you have it,” says pediatric endocrinologist Robert Lustig, MD, MSL, author of Metabolical: The Lure and the Lies of Processed Food, Nutrition, and Modern Medicine.

Still, when it comes to table sugar, glucose is only half of the picture. The other half is fructose.

Until the 1960s, most of the fructose in the American diet came from fruit, which is why fructose is also called “fruit sugar.” Yet as the price of refining sugar rose, food makers turned to corn for a cheaper, sweeter alternative, and high-fructose corn syrup entered the marketplace for use mostly in sodas and ultraprocessed foods.

Unlike glucose, fructose plays no essential role in the body, Lustig says. And in high quantities, it can be addictive, contribute to cellular aging, and damage the liver. (More on fructose and the liver in question No. 3.)

2) How does sugar affect insulin?

Like glucose, insulin is essential to life. This hormone acts like a key, unlocking cells so glucose — their main source of fuel — can enter.

Insulin is effectively an energy-storage hormone. Because glucose fuels cellular energy, the body is wired to detect sweetness. When sensors in the tongue taste something sweet, they signal the pancreas to release insulin. That insulin spritz relocates sugar from the blood to the cells in anticipation of incoming nutrients, including more sugar.

When sensors in the tongue taste something sweet, they signal the pancreas to release insulin. That insulin spritz relocates sugar from the blood to the cells in anticipation of incoming nutrients, including more sugar.

Called anticipatory insulin response, this process is critical for our health, says Paul Breslin, PhD, a nutritional sciences professor at Rutgers University and researcher at Monell Chemical Senses Center. He likens it to how an airport prepares for a plane’s arrival.

“Imagine what air travel would be like if every time a plane landed at the airport, it was a big surprise. It would be total chaos,” he says. “The same is true for human physiology. If you wait for nutrients to show up in your blood, it’s too late — you would have sky-high blood sugar that requires a huge amount of insulin to move out of the blood.”

The body keeps blood-sugar levels within a narrow range, says integrative psychiatrist Henry Emmons, MD, author of The Chemistry of Calm. “If blood sugar is consistently elevated, even by a slight amount, it can create long-term problems.”

Consistently elevated blood sugar can weaken the ability of cells to respond to insulin in the bloodstream. This is known as insulin resistance, a hallmark of most metabolic disorders. If cell doors stay closed when insulin knocks, glucose builds up in the bloodstream. This is what spurs type 2 diabetes: The body loses its ability to regulate blood-sugar levels without supplemental insulin. (Here are “6 Strategies to Manage High Blood Sugar.”)

3) What’s the impact of sugar on the liver?

Maintaining liver health may be among the best reasons to avoid excess fructose. Glucose can be metabolized by every cell, while fructose is processed only by the small intestine and the liver. So when large quantities of fructose hit the system, especially in the form of soda or energy drinks, the liver bears much of the burden.

In the short term, fructose depletes cellular energy and triggers the production of uric acid, a waste product that, in excess, can damage the kidneys and the heart. (For more on uric acid, visit “Uric Acid: A New Metric for Heart Health.”)

Over the long term, a diet high in fructose can contribute to liver complications. That’s because the liver turns excess fructose into fat, explains Lustig. Visceral liver fat may be exported to other parts of the body, where it can contribute to obesity, heart disease, and other metabolic conditions; it can also stay in the liver and contribute to a condition called nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. NAFLD can lead to an inflammatory condition called nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, which can culminate in cirrhosis and even liver failure.

Experts predict that more than half of all adults worldwide will have NAFLD by 2040 — and many believe this is at least partly due to the current high consumption of fructose. (For more on NAFLD, see “The Hidden Liver Crisis.”)

4) Does sugar impact the microbiome?

In a broad sense, unhealthy microflora are most likely to thrive when our diet is high in sugar. But again, it matters where that sugar is sourced.

In a small but rigorous study published in 2020, scientists examined the impact of a high-fructose diet on the microbiome. They enrolled 12 healthy women and fed them variations of high- and low-fructose diets for one week each, comparing the effects of 100 grams of daily fructose from fruit to the equivalent — 100 grams of fructose — sourced from high-fructose corn syrup.

On the high-fructose corn syrup diet, the subjects’ microbiomes experienced a notable drop in helpful bacteria and a surge of harmful bacteria. On the fruit-based fructose diet, however, their microbiomes shifted toward a healthier balance

The researchers analyzed the subjects’ micro­biomes each week. On the high-fructose corn syrup diet, the subjects’ microbiomes experienced a notable drop in helpful bacteria and a surge of harmful bacteria. On the fruit-based fructose diet, however, their microbiomes shifted toward a healthier balance.

5) How does sugar influence mood?

To understand the impact of sugar on the brain, consider that the organ constitutes 2 percent of the body’s weight but burns 20 percent of its glucose.

“The brain takes up a huge percentage of blood sugar,” says Emmons. He adds that it relies so heavily on glucose because it can’t make energy from other sources, unlike other parts of the body.

Excess sugar consumption can lead to systemic inflammation anywhere in the body, which also affects how we feel. Inside the brain, systemic inflammation disrupts the ability of neurotransmitters to balance mood, he explains. (Our bodies need inflammation to fight off infection, but too much of it for too long can spur a wide range of illnesses. Learning to manage it effectively is key. See “How Chronic Inflammation Affects Your Health” for more.)

Especially important is the balance between glutamate, an activating neurotransmitter, and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), a calming neurotransmitter. One reason people with sugar-fueled mood disorders often have too much brain activity — a cardinal sign of anxiety — may be because glutamate is driving the bus.

People also crave simple sugars when they are anxious, says nutritional psychiatrist Drew Ramsey, MD. “It’s easy to get into a maladaptive pattern with sugar because it’s so very pleasurable, and in nature, when something tastes sweet, it’s ripe and it’s usually safe,” he says. “And more than anything, our brain wants to feel safe.”

Growing evidence points to depression as an inflammatory disease, says Emmons. “That may be one of the reasons why antidepressants offer relief to so many people — they are in part anti-inflammatory.”

Numerous studies show a connection between high-sugar diets and depression risk. One of the most significant correlations was seen in a 2017 scientific trial. Researchers found that men who ate more than 67 grams of sugar a day were 23 percent more likely to be diagnosed with depression and other mental health challenges after five years than those who ate less than 40 grams a day. The authors suspected inflammation.

Growing evidence points to depression as an inflammatory disease, says Emmons. “That may be one of the reasons why antidepressants offer relief to so many people — they are in part anti-inflammatory.”

6) What makes sugar so hard to resist?

Blame human biology: We’re drawn to sweets because the body recognizes glucose as a rich source of energy. Sugar was a rare treat for our early ancestors. When they did find a tree of ripe fruit or a beehive full of honey, they indulged without reservation. Who knew when they’d get their next opportunity?

7) So, can I eat fruit?

Fruit contains fructose as well as fiber — and fiber is the game-changer. An essential nutrient, fiber moves food through the gut, signals feelings of fullness, and slows the body’s absorption of sugars.

Apples, for instance, have two kinds of fiber: soluble, which is jelly-like, and insoluble, which has more structure. Both types are important. (Insoluble fiber, soluble fiber, and prebiotic fiber are all essential to our health and well-being. Learn more at “The 3 Types of Dietary Fiber You Need.”)

Lustig compares insoluble fiber to a fishing net and soluble fiber to a coating of slippery kelp plugging the holes. “Together they form a barrier that prevents the fructose from touching the intestinal walls and being transported into the bloodstream.”

Fruit inches closer to the danger zone when it’s turned into fruit juice, which includes no fiber to slow the impact of its sugars. (Learn more about the importance of fiber at “Why You Need to Eat Fiber.”)

8) Does food combining reduce sugar’s impact?

The short answer is yes. Embracing a wide variety of foods at mealtime, including foods across the glycemic index, helps moderate the blood-sugar impact of the entire meal. Authors of a study published in 2019 found that combining rice (a high-glycemic-index food) with egg, bean sprouts, and sesame or olive oils lowered the overall glycemic index of the meal.

“Adding a healthy protein and lots of vegetables to your favorite starches, like rice, can cause less of a spike in your blood sugar.”

Uma Naidoo, MD, director of nutritional, lifestyle, and metabolic psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital and author of Calm Your Mind With Food, explains how simple this can be. “Adding a healthy protein and lots of vegetables to your favorite starches, like rice, can cause less of a spike in your blood sugar.” (Learn more about food combining here.)

9) Where does added sugar hide?

Whole foods, like vege­tables and fruits, are a balanced package of micro- and macronutrients. The fiber in whole foods slows the absorption of their sugars, so generally speaking, whole foods on the sweeter end of the spectrum are not the problem.

Added sugars, on the other hand, most definitely are — in part because it’s not always easy to know where to find them, which makes it hard to know how much of them you’re eating.

Up to 75 percent of packaged foods contain sugars added during processing. For food manufacturers, these added sugars are a veritable Swiss Army knife. They create volume, retain moisture, extend shelf life, and enhance texture.

“Without added sugars, most processed foods would taste like cardboard,” says Schmidt.

The U.S. Food and Drug Admin­istration mandated in 2016 that ­nutrition-facts labels show added ­sugars. But because food makers now employ 262 names for sugar (here are 61 of those names), those added sugars are harder than ever to detect.

If a food manufacturer embeds a variety of sugars into foods as the fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth ingredients, for example, sugar can easily add up to be the dominant ingredient without topping the list, Lustig says. Even savory foods like salsa, tomato sauce, and salad dressings often contain sugars (though often it’s to balance sour, salty, and spicy flavors).

Because food makers now employ 262 names for sugar, those added sugars are harder than ever to detect.

And then there are the beverages: Nearly half of the added sugars in the American diet are sipped, slurped, and gulped in the form of soft drinks, fruit drinks, sports drinks, and sweetened coffee and tea. (Here are seven “healthy” beverages — and how much sugar they actually contain.)

A meta-analysis published in 2023 looked at 85 studies on children and adults and found sugary beverages lead to weight gain. Researchers suspect it has to do with how the liver turns fructose into visceral fat. Soda sales are decreasing, but well over half of Americans still drink at least one a day.

“We, and especially our kids, are eating and drinking dessert all day long,” says Lustig.

10) Are honey and maple syrup any different?

On the list of sugars to avoid, honey and maple syrup are comfortably at the bottom. Both are lower on the glycemic index than table sugar, meaning they won’t send blood-sugar levels soaring as quickly. They also contain other nutrients.

“Although healthier for you, at the end of the day it’s still sugar.”

Quality honey contains more than 200 components, many of which have antibacterial, antimicrobial, and anti-inflammatory properties. Pure maple syrup contains potassium, calcium, magnesium, and iron. So, a drizzle of honey in a cup of tea or maple syrup on yogurt can satisfy a sweet tooth, says Naidoo, but moderation is still key. “Although healthier for you, at the end of the day it’s still sugar.”

11) Are artificial sweeteners better?

Though sugar alternatives might seem a safer bet, the research on their health implications suggests otherwise.

In 2023, the World Health Organization (WHO) released guidelines advising against using nonsugar sweeteners for weight control or to lower disease risk. The recommendation was based on a review of 283 studies showing that short-term use of the sweeteners could lead to a small reduction in body weight but have no benefit with regard to other sugar-induced health issues, such as elevated blood-glucose levels.

In July 2023, the WHO labeled aspartame a possible carcinogen. And in June 2024, xylitol, a rising star among sugar substitutes, made headlines when scientists discovered that people with the highest levels of xylitol in their blood plasma had a roughly 50 percent higher risk of experiencing a cardiovascular event over three years than people with the lowest levels.

Other studies have detected links between sugar alternatives and metabolic obesity, heart disease, and cancer.

12) How do I have a healthy relationship to sugar?

As with so many of life’s pleasures, moderation is your best bet.

It’s impractical to quit sugar cold turkey, says Emmons. “Unlike other addictions, you can’t avoid food. It’s better to find ways to moderate how much [sugar] you eat and soften the blow with other foods that slow digestion.”

Multiple studies suggest the body is better able to maintain insulin balance when encountering all three macronutrients together. This can be as straightforward as including protein, fat, and carbohydrates in every meal and snack.

This doesn’t mean you can never have a cookie or a piece of cake. Just eat them after meals to moderate their impact. “If you want to eat a comfort food, go ahead, but make sure you are also eating it with a decent amount of protein and healthy fats,” says Emmons.

Ramsey also recommends taking a cue from nature and pairing sugar with fiber — satisfying a sweet tooth with whole fruits or accompanying a sweet treat with a handful of nuts.

If you tend to eat emotionally, work with, instead of against, that urge, Ramsey suggests. He sees food as a useful tool for combating anxiety, especially if you use it to slow down. “You can chop vegetables, blend some homemade pesto, sit with a cup of tea, or make a little pasta that you then eat slowly and savor.”

Emmons suggests extending the window between your last meal and the first one the next day to help stabilize blood sugar. “It doesn’t have to be dramatic,” he says. “Just 11 or 12 hours, which is pretty easy for most of us, can help the system recalibrate and reset insulin levels.”

A healthy relationship to sugar might boil down to this simple advice from Emmons: “Have modest portions of sugar, not too many times a day, and not all by itself.”

The post 12 Common Questions About Sugar and Your Health — Answered appeared first on Experience Life.

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