Can Eating Too Much Sugar Cause Diabetes?

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Can Eating Too Much Sugar Cause Diabetes?

You know that diabetes is linked to high blood sugar, but can sugar alone give you the disease? Find out about the relationship between diet and diabetes.

By Leon Vorobeichik

Medically reviewed by Farrokh Sohrabi, MD



Diabetes: Sugar Intake

Because type 2 diabetes is linked to high levels of sugar in the blood, it may seem logical to assume that eating too much sugar is the cause of the disease. But of course, it’s not that simple.

Studies do show that sweetened foods can up diabetes risk, but sugar alone isn’t necessarily enough to cause the disease on its own. With more than 20 million Americans living with diabetes and millions more at a high risk for the disease, understand how sugar affects diabetes, as well as other risk factors, is essential to reversing the diabetes epidemic.

The Sugar Story: Not So Sweet

The sugars in food are known as simple carbohydrates and are a natural component of many fresh foods, such as the lactose in milk and the fructose in fruits. A healthy, well-balanced diet will always have these sugars in it.

However, the problem with sugar is the sheer amount of it that’s in the typical American diet. Added sugars — the sucrose in table sugar as well as the sugars in foods such as sodas, cereals, packaged foods, and snacks — when consumed in excess, cause weight gain, heart disease, mood swings, and more.

Research has found that a high-sugar diet certainly increases diabetes risk — adding just one serving of a sweetened beverage each day to your diet ups risk by 15 percent, a study at the Harvard School of Public Health found — but calories that come from both carbohydrates and fats also contribute to the development of diabetes.

One particular type of sugar that has attracted a lot of negative attention is high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS). Because it’s a relatively cheap ingredient, it’s become the most commonly used sweetener in processed foods. Like table sugar, HFCS causes blood-sugar spikes and contributes to weight gain.

Although HFCS has been vilified for decades, researchers are now finding that added sweeteners of all kinds affect the body similarly — and all are bad. In one recent study, scientists found that drinking three sweetened drinks a day for 10 weeks resulted in a nearly 4-pound weight gain and nearly an extra inch to the waistline, regardless of whether the sweetener was fructose or glucose. Even worse, consuming these sweeteners, and fructose in particular, led to decreased insulin sensitivity and higher blood sugar levels, the hallmark predictors of diabetes.

Other Diabetes Risk Factors to Consider

Although this research may prompt you to ditch the soda and avoid sweets, remember that consumption of too much fat can have the same effect as sugar on your diabetes risk. Obesity or being overweight, as well as family history is another important predictor for the disease. People who exercise fewer than three times a week and women who have been diagnosed with gestational diabetes, or diabetes that develops while a woman is pregnant, also have an increased chance of a type 2 diabetes diagnosis.

Certain ethnic groups, including American Indians, African-Americans, Asian-Americans, and Hispanics, are more likely to get diabetes than Caucasians — a phenomenon researchers currently attribute to both lifestyle factors and genetics.

While assessing your risk, keep in mind that not every instance of diabetes is from diet. Type 1 diabetes occurs when, for unknown reasons, the body’s immune system attacks its own pancreas at a young age, hurting this organ’s ability to produce insulin. The end result is similar to type 2 diabetes, with blood sugar levels staying high if you don’t get the necessary treatment.

In type 2 diabetes, the cells in the body do not respond well to insulin, a hormone responsible for keeping blood sugars low. The disease affects the body’s ability to sweep up sugars from the blood and store them away and causes sugar levels to rise. Many people with diabetes take drugs, such as metformin, to help keep blood sugar in check.

The bottom line? You don’t have to avoid any food group entirely to prevent diabetes, but monitoring your intake of sugar and sugar substitutes is essential for managing your risk and your overall health.

For more diabetes news and facts, follow @diabetesfacts on Twitter from the editors of @EverydayHealth.
 

Aapa

Mirajmom
Assalaam walaikum,

Good foods do help. Cinnamon, almonds, and I just read an article on the curative properties of virgin coconut oil. It is recommended to build up to five tablespoons a day.

What is not reported is the fatigue associated with diabetes. The spikes cause a person to tire often and quickly.

Water and exercise are critical. Activity is the key.

Although not seen widely the onset of diabetes can cause significant weight loss.
 

strive-may-i

Junior Member
Assalaam walaikum,

Good foods do help. Cinnamon, almonds, and I just read an article on the curative properties of virgin coconut oil. It is recommended to build up to five tablespoons a day.

What is not reported is the fatigue associated with diabetes. The spikes cause a person to tire often and quickly.

Water and exercise are critical. Activity is the key.

Although not seen widely the onset of diabetes can cause significant weight loss.
:wasalam:

Last month a person I know lost significant weight and is now diagnosed to be suffering from diabetes, and it remained undetected for quite sometime.

Symptoms of Diabetes
Diabetes Type 1:
Losing Weight Without Trying:This symptom is more noticeable with Type 1 diabetes. In Type 1, the pancreas stops making insulin, possibly due to a viral attack on pancreas cells or because an autoimmune response makes the body attack the insulin producing cells. The body desperately looks for an energy source because the cells aren't getting glucose. It starts to break down muscle tissue and fat for energy. Type 2 happens gradually with increasing insulin resistance so weight loss is not as noticeable.

Diabetes Type 2:
Increased fatigue : Due to inefficiency of the cell to metabolize glucose, reserve fat of body is metabolized to gain energy. When fat is broken down in the body, it uses more energy as compared to glucose, hence body goes in negative calorie effect, which results in fatigue.
Polydipsia : As the concentration of glucose increases in the blood, brain receives signal for diluting it and, in its counteraction we feel thirsty.
Polyuria: Increase in urine production is due to excess glucose present in body. Body gets rid of the extra sugar in the blood by excreting it through urine. This leads to dehydration because along with the sugar, a large amount of water is excreted out of the body.
Polyphegia : The hormone insulin is also responsible for stimulating hunger. In order to cope up with high sugar levels in blood, body produces insulin which leads to increased hunger.
Weight flactuation : Factors like loss of water (polyuria), glucosuria , metabolism of body fat and protein may lead to weight loss. Few cases may show weight gain due to increased appetite.
Blurry vision : Hyperosmolar hyperglycemia nonketotic syndrome is the condition when body fluid is pulled out of tissues including lenses of the eye, which affects its ability to focus, resulting blurry vision.
Irritability : It is a sign of high blood sugar because of the inefficient glucose supply to the brain and other body organs, which makes us feel tired and uneasy.
Infections : The body gives few signals whenever there is fluctuation in blood sugar (due to suppression of immune system) by frequent skin infections like fungal or bacterial or UTI (urinary tract infection).
Poor wound healing : High blood sugar resists the flourishing of WBC, (white blood cell) which are responsible for body immune system. When these cells do not function accordingly, wound healing is not at good pace. Secondly, long standing diabetes leads to thickening of blood vessels which affect proper circulation of blood in different body parts.
 

Shak78

Junior Member
:salam2:

Type I diabetes is when the pancreas stops working. No one is sure why this happens and it tends to happen in children thus normally coined as Juvinelle Diabetes. There is no way to prevent this type.

Type II diabetes is preventable and usually due to poor diet, lack of exercise and being overweight. This is the most common type and can be revered with weight loss, diet changes and exercise.
 
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