JAMA study on effects of fructose vs glucose by Page et al. (2013)

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  • #5929

    This study was just released by Page et al. (2013), and is making waves across the news. I thought it was relevant to this thread and DH. Sample size (n=20) is relatively small, but the findings fall within observations/findings made by Kiefer & wider community.Effects of Fructose vs Glucose on Regional Cerebral Blood Flow in Brain Regions Involved With Appetite and Reward PathwaysJAMA Study URL: http://bit.ly/TFqpjdPopular media URL: http://bit.ly/12WiaEo

    Importance  Increases in fructose consumption have paralleled the increasing prevalence of obesity, and high-fructose diets are thought to promote weight gain and insulin resistance. Fructose ingestion produces smaller increases in circulating satiety hormones compared with glucose ingestion, and central administration of fructose provokes feeding in rodents, whereas centrally administered glucose promotes satiety.Objective To study neurophysiological factors that might underlie associations between fructose consumption and weight gain.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsTwenty healthy adult volunteers underwent 2 magnetic resonance imaging sessions at Yale University in conjunction with fructose or glucose drink ingestion in a blinded, random-order, crossover design.Main Outcome Measures Relative changes in hypothalamic regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) after glucose or fructose ingestion. Secondary outcomes included whole-brain analyses to explore regional CBF changes, functional connectivity analysis to investigate correlations between the hypothalamus and other brain region responses, and hormone responses to fructose and glucose ingestion.Results  There was a significantly greater reduction in hypothalamic CBF after glucose vs fructose ingestion (−5.45 vs 2.84 mL/g per minute, respectively; mean difference, 8.3 mL/g per minute [95% CI of mean difference, 1.87-14.70]; P = .01). Glucose ingestion (compared with baseline) increased functional connectivity between the hypothalamus and the thalamus and striatum. Fructose increased connectivity between the hypothalamus and thalamus but not the striatum. Regional CBF within the hypothalamus, thalamus, insula, anterior cingulate, and striatum (appetite and reward regions) was reduced after glucose ingestion compared with baseline (P < .05 significance threshold, family-wise error [FWE] whole-brain corrected). In contrast, fructose reduced regional CBF in the thalamus, hippocampus, posterior cingulate cortex, fusiform, and visual cortex (P < .05 significance threshold, FWE whole-brain corrected). In whole-brain voxel-level analyses, there were no significant differences between direct comparisons of fructose vs glucose sessions following correction for multiple comparisons. Fructose vs glucose ingestion resulted in lower peak levels of serum glucose (mean difference, 41.0 mg/dL [95% CI, 27.7-54.5]; P < .001), insulin (mean difference, 49.6 μU/mL [95% CI, 38.2-61.1]; P < .001), and glucagon-like polypeptide 1 (mean difference, 2.1 pmol/L [95% CI, 0.9-3.2]; P = .01).Conclusion and RelevanceIn a series of exploratory analyses, consumption of fructose compared with glucose resulted in a distinct pattern of regional CBF and a smaller increase in systemic glucose, insulin, and glucagon-like polypeptide 1 levels.

    ReferencesPage KA, Chan O, Arora J, et al. Effects of Fructose vs Glucose on Regional Cerebral Blood Flow in Brain Regions Involved With Appetite and Reward Pathways. JAMA. 2013;309(1):63-70.

    #129709

    Richard Schmitt
    Moderator

    I love seeing these studies and trying to thoroughly read them through. To get an understanding of how science based studies work and are laid out in paper. I'm glad to see you posted this study up here as well, thank you. Your thoughts on this?

    #129710

    Your thoughts on this?

    The study is too small, it needs to be expanded to include a larger sample size to be relevant IMPO.I would also like to see a control group.What would really be interesting is if there was a study that measured brain/hormonal activity of different groups of people that consumed a wide range of commercially available sweeteners.

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JAMA study on effects of fructose vs glucose by Page et al. (2013)

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