- ALLERGY, RESPIRATORY
- Using Music and Sports to Improve Kids' Asthma
- Obesity May Raise Kids' Allergy Risk
- Overweight Moms More Likely to Have Asthmatic Kids
- ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE
- Ginger Can Ease Nausea From Chemotherapy Treatments
- Meditation May Boost Short-Term Visual Memory
- Bitter Melon Extract May Slow, Stop Breast Cancer
- ANIMAL CARE
- Beware of Dog Bites
- Rest Easy. When It Comes to Swine Flu, Your Pet Is Safe
- Separation Anxiety, Canine-Style
- BONES & JOINTS
- Rheumatoid Arthritis Rising Among U.S. Women
- Tai Chi May Help Ward Off Knee Pain in Seniors
- Exercise Key Player in Knee Replacement Recovery
- CANCER
- Smokeout '08: The Perfect Time to Quit
- Mineral May Reduce High-Risk Bladder Disease
- Meditation May Reduce Stress in Breast Cancer Patients
- CAREGIVING
- Child's Food Allergies Take Toll on Family Plans
- ER Less Likely to Diagnose Stroke in Younger Folks
- Coordination Has Led to Quicker Heart Treatment
- CIRCULATORY SYSTEM
- Common Antioxidant Might Slow Parkinson's
- Secondhand Smoke Quickly Affects Blood Vessels
- Health Tip: Are You Anemic?
- COSMETIC
- Science May Banish Bad Hair Days
- Gum Chewing May Cut Craving for Snacks
- Get Sugared!.... Its a sweet choice for hair removal
- DENTAL, ORAL
- Health Tip: At Risk for Gingivitis
- Acupuncture May Ease Anxiety Over Dental Work
- Laser Technology Spots Cavities Before They Start
- DIABETES
- Boosting Vitamin D Can Do a Heart Good
- Insulin Resistance Tied to Peripheral Artery Disease
- Chamomile Tea May Ward Off Diabetes Damage
- DIET, NUTRITION
- Healthy Eating While On Vacation
- Mercury in Fish Linked to High Blood Pressure
- Oregano Shown to be the Most Powerful Culinary Herb
- DISABILITIES
- Could Your Cell Phone Help Shield You From Alzheimer's?
- Review Finds Marijuana May Help MS Patients
- ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
- Scorpion Anti-Venom Speeds Children's Recovery
- Skin Woes Take Toll on U.S. Combat Troops
- Gas Stove Emissions Boost Asthma in Inner-City Kids
- EYE CARE, VISION
- Brain Adapts to Age-Related Eye Disease
- Autistic Children Make Limited Eye Contact
- Stem Cells Repair Damaged Corneas in Mice
- FITNESS
- Exercise Helps Reduce Falls in Young and Old
- Brisk Walk Can Help Leave Common Cold Behind
- Vigorous Exercise Can Cut Breast Cancer Risk
- GASTROINTESTINAL PROBLEMS
- Olive Oil May Protect Against Bowel Disease
- Intestinal Bacteria Trigger Immune Response
- New Yogurt May Ease Stomach Ulcers
- GENERAL HEALTH
- Life Expectancy in U.S. Hits New High
- Poor Restroom Cleaning Causes Cruise-Ship Sickness
- Fructose Boosts Blood Pressure, Studies Find
- HEAD & NECK
- Ski Helmets Encouraged for All
- Zen May Thicken Brain, Thwart Pain
- Many Children Will Outgrow Headaches
- HEALTH & TECHNOLOGY
- 'Comfort Dogs' Come to Emotional Rescue
- Study Suggests Link Between Cell Phones and Brain Tumors
- Save Your Aging Brain, Try Surfing The Web
- HEART & CARDIOVASCULAR
- Heart Disease May Be Prevented By Taking Fish Oils, Study Shows
- Ginkgo Won't Prevent Heart Attack, Stroke in Elderly
- Dark Chocolate May Lower Stroke Risk
- INFECTIOUS DISEASE
- Grapefruit Compound Inhibits Hepatitis C Virus
- More Medicinal Uses for Pomegranate
- Swine Flu Closes Three Schools in NYC
- KID'S HEALTH
- Should Your Child Be Seeing a Chiropractor?
- Coconut Oil May Help Fight Childhood Pneumonia
- Babies Cared For In Others Homes Might Become Heavy Toddlers
- MEN'S HEALTH
- Soy Linked to Low Sperm Count
- Eating Fast Until Full Triples Overweight Risk
- Drinking Green Tea May Slow Prostate Cancer
- MENTAL HEALTH
- 17 Ways to Create the Perfect Workday
- Have a Goal in Life? You Might Live Longer
- Keeping Mentally Active Seems To Keep The Brain Active
- PREGNANCY
- Heart Defects in Newborns Linked to Antidepressants
- Obesity May Affect Fertility in Young Womene
- Music of Mozart Soothes the Preemie Baby
- SENIORS
- Tai Chi May Help Ward Off Knee Pain in Seniors
- For Older Walkers, Faster Is Better
- Vitamin D May Help Keep Aging at Bay
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Fructose Boosts Blood Pressure, Studies Find
By eHolistic.com Published: 09/24/2009
(HealthDay News) -- America's sweet tooth may be contributing to the ever-increasing number of people with high blood pressure.
Two new studies link fructose, the kind of sugar in soft drinks and many sweetened foods, to high blood pressure, which is a major risk factor for heart attack, stroke and other cardiovascular diseases.
"It raises the possibility that fructose may have a role in the pathogenesis of hypertension," said Dr. Richard J. Johnson, professor and head of the division of renal diseases and hypertension at the University of Colorado and a co-author of one of the studies. Both were scheduled to be presented this week at an American Heart Association conference in Chicago on blood pressure research.
"It shows that if you ingest a certain amount of fructose, you can raise blood pressure" to the level of hypertension, Johnson said.
Fructose makes up about half of ordinary table sugar; the other half is glucose. Fructose is widely used by food and beverage manufacturers because it is inexpensive. "Americans are eating large amounts of this, three or four times more than we did 50 years ago," Johnson said.
The study, led by Johnson and Dr. Santos Perez-Pozo, a nephrologist at Mateo Orfila Hospital in Minorca, Spain, included 74 men, average age 51, who ate a diet that included 200 grams of fructose a day. That is far more than the average U.S. consumption of 50 to 70 grams, but "some people are getting as much as 150 grams a day, so we are not that far off," Johnson said.
Half the men also took daily doses of allopurinol, a drug for gout that reduces blood levels of uric acid, and the others took a placebo, an inactive substance.
After two weeks, men on the high-fructose diet who were taking the placebo had an average increase of six points in systolic blood pressure (the first number in a reading of, for instance, 120/80) and three points in diastolic blood pressure (the second number). The men taking allopurinol along with their high-fructose diet had only a one-point increase in systolic pressure.
The study results appear to confirm the belief that fructose raises blood pressure by increasing uric acid levels, Johnson said, but he stressed that the finding is preliminary.
"Clearly we need additional trials," he said. "We need larger population-based trials to see if there is a causal relationship."
In the United States, one in three adults has high blood pressure, which was the cause of death or a contributing factor in about 319,000 U.S. deaths in 2005, according to the heart association.
The second study scheduled for presentation at the heart meeting found that the timing as well as the amount of fructose that's consumed affected blood pressure. The study was done on mice.
For the study, the mice, who slept during the day, had either unrestricted access to fructose-enriched water or access restricted to either daytime or nighttime hours. Monitors were implanted in the mice to measure their blood pressure.
All the mice consumed large amounts of the sweetened water, said Mariana Morris, assistant vice president for graduate studies and chairwoman of the pharmacology and toxicology department at Wright State University's Boonshoft School of Medicine in Dayton, Ohio, who led the experiment.
The mice that consumed fructose continuously or at night had an increase in blood pressure, with a spike at night, when they were awake. The pattern was reversed in mice that consumed fructose in the daylight hours -- high during the day and low at night. The reversal in the day-night rhythm "is similar to the pattern seen in human diabetics," Morris said. This suggests that the timing of fructose intake is important in cardiovascular pathologies, she said.
All of the mice gained weight. "If you give them fructose at the wrong time, when they are supposed to be sleeping, it has a greater pathological effect on blood pressure and body weight," Morris said. "But they love it, no matter when they get it."
The results paralleled those of a study reported Sept. 3 online in Obesity in which mice were put on a high-fat diet. Some were fed during their normal daytime sleeping hours, and others were fed at night. The mice that ate during the day (when they were supposed to be sleeping) averaged a 48 percent weight gain, compared with 20 percent for those fed at night.
What happens in mice probably happens in people, Morris said. "We have 99 percent of the same genome," she said.
SOURCES: Richard J. Johnson, M.D., professor and head, division of renal diseases and hypertension, University of Colorado, Denver; Mariana Morris, Ph.D., assistant vice president, graduate studies, and chairwoman, Pharmacology and Toxicology Department, Boonshoft School of Medicine, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio; Sept. 23-24, 2009, presentations, American Heart Association High Blood Pressure Research Conference, Chicago Published on: September 24, 2009

