Mary MacVean
L.A. Times
August 14, 2013
When mice were fed a diet that was 25% added sugars – an amount
consumed by many humans – the females died at twice the normal rate and
the males were less likely to reproduce and hold territory, scientists
said in a study published Tuesday.
The study shows “that added sugar consumed at concentrations
currently considered safe exerts dramatic impacts on mammalian health,”
the researchers said in the study, published in the journal Nature
Communications. “Many researchers have already made calls for
reevaluation of these safe levels of consumption.”
The study’s senior author, University of Utah biology professor Wayne
Potts, said earlier studies fed mice sugars at levels higher than
people eat in sodas, cookies, candy and other items. The current study
stuck to levels eaten by people.
No comments:
Post a Comment