American adults consume on average about 15% of their calories from  sugars added to foods during processing,          with a whopping 37% of the     added sugar consumed in  sugar-sweetened beverages, suggests an analysis of data extending back          about 25 years. Moreover, the study projects that     regularly  drinking as little as one 12-ounce sugary soda a day may increase          the risk of cardiovascular disease by about 30%—independent of  total calories,     obesity, or other risk factors          [1]. 
"Our findings indicate that most US adults consume more added sugar than is recommended for a healthy diet," write           Dr Quanhe Yang     (Division for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA) and colleagues          in their report published online     February 3, 2014 in           JAMA Internal Medicine.
"Our results support current recommendations to limit the intake of calories from added sugars in US diets."
                   Dr Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo (University of California, San Francisco), who was not involved in the study, commented to                                       heart                wire                                                   that the research suggests that clinicians need     to counsel patients about the health harms from too much sugar. 
"I think that we are just really recognizing that there are  significant health consequences from eating excessive amounts          of sugar that go beyond not     wanting to be overweight, but  go to wanting to make sure that our heart and our kidneys and          our brains are healthy," she said. 
                   Sugar and CVD Death                
Epidemiologic studies have linked high consumption of added  sugar with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes, obesity, and          hypertension, but most studies     focused only on  sugar-sweetened beverages, and none looked at the relationship between          added sugar intake and CVD mortality in a national sample, the      authors observe 
There is disagreement about how much added sugar is acceptable in a healthy diet, they note. Added sugar should be less than          25% of total calories     according to the           Institute of Medicine, but less than 10% of total calories according to the           World Health Organization.     The           American Heart Association has even stricter recommendations: less than 100 calories a day (about 5% of total daily calories) for     women and 150          calories a day (about 7.5% of total daily calories) for men. 
Yang et al analyzed data from three           National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) surveys          —1988–1994, 1999–2004, and     2005–2010          —and examined CVD mortality during a mean follow-up of 14.6 years. 
During the three time periods, among US adults aged 20 and older, the adjusted mean daily calories from added sugar went from          15.7% to 16.8% to 14.9%. 
More than 70% of the added sugar came from sugar-sweetened beverages (37.1%), grain-based desserts (13.7%), fruit drinks (8.9%),          dairy desserts (6.1%), and     candy (5.8%). 
In 2005–2010, most adults (71.4%) consumed 10% or more of calories from added sugar, and about 10% consumed 25% or more calories          from sugar. 
|                                                  Calories from added sugar (% of total)                                               | p | ||
| 0 to <10 | 10.0 to <25 | > 25 | |
| 1.00 | 1.30 (1.09– 1.55) | 2.75 (1.40–5.42) | 0.004 | 
Blacks were more likely than others to consume more than 25% of calories as added sugar, but there was also no significant          link between sugar consumption     and CVD mortality among blacks          —possibly due to the small number of events in this subgroup, the researchers write. 
"Yang et al inform this debate by showing that the risk of CVD mortality becomes elevated once added sugar intake surpasses          15% of daily     calories—equivalent to drinking one 20-ounce Mountain Dew soda in a 2000-calorie daily diet,"           Dr Laura A Schmidt (University of     California, San Francisco) writes in an invited commentary          [2]. The risk rises exponentially as sugar intake  increases, peaking     with a fourfold increased risk of CVD death for  individuals          who consume one-third or more of their daily calories in added  sugar, she adds. 
"Until federal guidelines are forthcoming, physicians may want to caution patients that, to support cardiovascular health,          it is safest to consume less     than 15% of their daily calories as added sugar," she advises. 
References
-                Yang Q, Zhang Z, Gregg EW, et al. Added sugar intake and cardiovascular diseases mortality among US adults.                    JAMA Intern Med 2014;     DOI:10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.13563.                    Abstract                                  
 
-                Schmidt LA. New unsweetened truths about sugar.                    JAMA Intern Med 2014; DOI:10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.12991.                       Commentary 
 source: www.medscape.net
 
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