History suggests that tasteful properties of sugar have been domesticated as far back as 8000 BCE. With origins in New Guinea, the cultivation of sugar quickly spread over centuries of conquest and trade. The product, which quickly integrated into common foods and onto kitchen tables, is sucrose, which is made up of glucose and fructose dimers. While sugar is commonly associated with flavor, there is a myriad of biochemical properties that explain how sugars as biological molecules function in physiological contexts. Substantial research and reviews have been done on the role of glucose in disease. This review aims to describe the role of its isomers, fructose and mannose, in the context of inborn errors of metabolism and other metabolic di...
There has been much concern regarding the role of dietary fructose in the development of metabolic d...
Glucose, fructose, and sucrose are natural nutritive sweeteners; sucrose is composed of one molecule...
In 2004, Dr. Popkin and his team published an article reporting a correlation between the spread of ...
Fructose is one of the main sweetening agents in the human diet and its ingestion is increasing glob...
The consumption of fructose as sugar and high-fructose corn syrup has markedly increased during the ...
While virtually absent in our diet a few hundred years ago, fructose has now become a major constitu...
The rapid increase in metabolic diseases, which occurred in the last three decades in both industria...
Fructose consumption has dramatically increased in the last 30 years. The principal form has been in...
Fructose has always been present in our diet, but its consumption has increased markedly over the pa...
Purpose of reviewThe effects of dietary sugar on risk factors and the processes associated with meta...
Compared with other carbohydrates, fructose-containing caloric sweeteners (sucrose, high-fructose co...
Consumption of excessive amounts of added sugars and their effects on human health has been a major ...
Fructose and simple sugars are a substantial part of the western diet, and their influence on human ...
We welcome the submission of manuscripts, either describing original research, or reviewing scientif...
Fructose-containing sugars, including fructose itself, high fructose corn syrup (HFCS), and sucrose ...
There has been much concern regarding the role of dietary fructose in the development of metabolic d...
Glucose, fructose, and sucrose are natural nutritive sweeteners; sucrose is composed of one molecule...
In 2004, Dr. Popkin and his team published an article reporting a correlation between the spread of ...
Fructose is one of the main sweetening agents in the human diet and its ingestion is increasing glob...
The consumption of fructose as sugar and high-fructose corn syrup has markedly increased during the ...
While virtually absent in our diet a few hundred years ago, fructose has now become a major constitu...
The rapid increase in metabolic diseases, which occurred in the last three decades in both industria...
Fructose consumption has dramatically increased in the last 30 years. The principal form has been in...
Fructose has always been present in our diet, but its consumption has increased markedly over the pa...
Purpose of reviewThe effects of dietary sugar on risk factors and the processes associated with meta...
Compared with other carbohydrates, fructose-containing caloric sweeteners (sucrose, high-fructose co...
Consumption of excessive amounts of added sugars and their effects on human health has been a major ...
Fructose and simple sugars are a substantial part of the western diet, and their influence on human ...
We welcome the submission of manuscripts, either describing original research, or reviewing scientif...
Fructose-containing sugars, including fructose itself, high fructose corn syrup (HFCS), and sucrose ...
There has been much concern regarding the role of dietary fructose in the development of metabolic d...
Glucose, fructose, and sucrose are natural nutritive sweeteners; sucrose is composed of one molecule...
In 2004, Dr. Popkin and his team published an article reporting a correlation between the spread of ...