Sugar and Your System – Get off the Fat Track

December 22, 2016

Your body has two primary fuel sources: fat and sugar, also called glycogen. Carbohydrates–all carbohydrates–turn into sugar in your body. This sugar becomes the fuel source glucose and then glycogen.

Here’s the Kicker…
Glucose gets converted into glycogen and stored in your muscles and liver to be used as fuel. Once these stores are full the excess is then rerouted– it’s like a waterfall spilling over into your fat stores. It’s actually the easiest way for your body to produce and store fat. This is one of the reasons why low-carbohydrate diets are so popular. When the body reduces carbohydrates to a certain level, it causes glycogen depletion and causes your body to burn primarily fat as its fuel source.

It’s SAD
Unfortunately, these days fast burning carbs are a major part of the SAD (Standard American Diet); and it is this diet that is creating a generation at risk for fatty liver disease. These quickly digested foods include breads, cereals, quick oats, white rice, potatoes and a host of other packaged foods. These are the same types of foods fed to fatten geese to make foie gras (goose liver paté). High-glycemic diets send our blood sugar soaring, triggering a boom in insulin by the pancreas, and eventually toward the liver, which in turn causes the liver to absorb the sugar (carbs) to store as fat.

What to Eat
The best thing we can do for ourselves is steer away from high-glycemic foods and incorporate low-glycemic, fibrous foods, in their natural state, with minimal processing. Your daily diet includes fresh, non-starchy fruits and vegetables like apples, pears, peaches and berries. When buying “whole grain” foods, opt for foods in their most natural state: old fashioned oatmeal instead of instant oatmeal, brown rice instead of white rice, and whole wheat pasta instead of regular pasta.

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