Diabetes and heart associations continue to discourage high intakes of dietary fructose, a constituent part of the sucrose molecule that is found in fruits and vegetables as a natural sugar and in some processed foods and beverages as an added sweetener. The concern relates to its ability to increase certain blood fats and cholesterol, which increase the risk of cardiovascular disease. The evidence for an adverse effect of fructose on these risk factors, however, is inconclusive. To improve the evidence on which nutrition recommendations for fructose are based, the investigators therefore propose to study the effect of fructose on blood fats, cholesterol, sugars, blood pressure, and body weight, by undertaking a systematic synthesis of the data taken from all available clinical studies in humans. This technique has the strength of allowing all of the available data to be pooled together and differences to be explored in groups of different study participants (healthy humans of different sex, weight, and age and in those with diseases which predispose to disturbances in metabolism, such as diabetes) with dietary fructose in different forms, doses, and with differing durations of exposure. The findings generated by this proposed knowledge synthesis will help improve the health of consumers through informing recommendations for the general public, as well as those at risk of diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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Lipid Analysis
Timeframe: June 2012
Body Weight Analysis
Timeframe: November 2011
Glycemic Control Analysis
Timeframe: June 2012
Blood Pressure (BP) Analysis
Timeframe: January 2012
Uric Acid Analysis
Timeframe: February 2012
"Catalytic" Fructose Across Cardiometabolic Endpoints Analysis
Timeframe: January 2012
Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver (NAFL) Analysis
Timeframe: June 2012