#570: Fructose: Metabolism, Claims & Context for Risk – Scott Harding, PhD

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Introduction

Fructose has often been labeled a uniquely damaging nutrient, blamed for obesity, diabetes, and other metabolic diseases. But does fructose truly have unique harmful effects or are the risks associated with it related to context and quantity?

The episode explores how fructose is metabolized in the body, why it gained a reputation for being problematic, and what the scientific evidence says about fructose in our diets. You will gain insight into why fructose was singled out in the past (e.g., its unique pathway in the liver and lack of insulin response), and how newer studies put those concerns into context.

It covers important nuances for practitioners and health-conscious individuals, especially given public confusion and fear around fructose (even in fruit).

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His research explores the complex interactions between diet, metabolism, and chronic disease, with a particular emphasis on the metabolic effects of dietary sugars (especially fructose), the role of fats and phytosterols in lipid metabolism, and how public health policies like sugar taxation influence population health outcomes.

Dr. Harding utilizes a variety of research methodologies, including clinical trials, animal models, stable isotope tracers, and mass spectrometry techniques to elucidate nutrient metabolism pathways and their impact on cardiometabolic health.

Throughout his career, Dr. Harding has published extensively in leading scientific journals, significantly contributing to the understanding of dietary impacts on metabolic risk factors such as insulin resistance, liver fat deposition, and cardiovascular disease. In addition to his research and teaching roles at Memorial University, he serves as Editor-in-Chief of the journal Applied Physiology, Nutrition and Metabolism.

Scott Harding, Ph.D
an Associate Professor of Nutritional Biochemistry in the Department of Biochemistry at Memorial University of Newfoundland.
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Introduction to this Episode

Fructose has oen been labeled a uniquely damaging nutrient, blamed for obesity, diabetes, and other metabolic diseases. But does fructose truly have unique harmful effects or are the risks associated with it related to context and quantity?

The episode explores how fructose is metabolized in the body, why it gained a reputation for being problematic, and what the scientific evidence says about fructose in our diets. You will gain insight into why fructose was singled out in the past (e.g., its unique pathway in the liver and lack of insulin response), and how newer studies put those concerns into context.

It covers important nuances for practitioners and health-conscious individuals, especially given public confusion and fear around fructose (even in fruit).

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