Fructose Poses Gout Risks Even in Women

Soft drinks implicated as a potent source

November 10, 2010 RSS Feed Print

By Janet Raloff, Science News

Women don't develop gout—an arthritic condition prone to excruciatingly painful flare-ups—at nearly the same rate as men. But as in men, its incidence has been creeping up in women, according to a new report. Also as in men, a second new report finds, fructose-sweetened beverages appear to pose a particularly potent gout risk for women.

Potentially aggravating this trend: New data indicate that sweetened soft drinks appear to be a richer source of fructose than had been assumed.

The new data signal a dietary trend that can trigger pain and can potentially cripple joints—but is avoidable, says Martin Underwood of the University of Warwick Medical School in Coventry, England, who is unaffiliated with the new studies. Moreover, he adds, gout's growing incidence potentially points to an even bigger threat because studies have begun to point to gout as an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease.

Gout develops when the blood becomes saturated with uric acid, a breakdown product of purines, which are a constituent of many foods, especially red and organ meats. When uric acid precipitates out into the joints and crystallizes, intense pain develops. Researchers consider severely elevated uric acid levels in blood, or hyperuricemia, a silent indicator of gout.

At the American College of Rheumatology meeting in Atlanta, Hyon Choi of the Boston University School of Medicine and his colleagues reported November 9 that incidence of hyperuricemia increases with age and now afflicts some 31 percent of U.S. adults 65 and older—an estimated 8.4 million people. Their data came from the most recent National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, which interviewed and took health measurements from more than 24,000 adults selected to offer a representative cross section of Americans.

Women seldom develop gout pain prior to menopause, because female sex hormones help keep uric acid levels low, notes Choi. But after menopause, women's risk of the disease rises to about half of the rate in older U.S. men, he reports.

Over the past decade, Choi's team has uncovered a host of gout triggers. Two years ago, for instance, he and Gary Curhan of Harvard Medical School linked risk of the disease in men with elevated consumption of fructose—a principal sugar in fruit that is present in all sugar-sweetened beverages. It made sense, the researchers pointed out, since fructose independently triggers the body's production of uric acid from adenosine triphosphate, a molecule that stores and transports energy.

At a November 10 presentation at the rheumatology meeting, Choi, Curhan and Walter Willett of the Harvard School of Public Health now extend fructose's gout risk to women. Based on data collected from roughly 79,000 postmenopausal participants of the long-running Nurse's Health Study, the team shows that downing one sugar-sweetened soft drink per day increased a woman's risk of gout compared to women drinking less than one serving a month. Upping the consumption of sugary soft drinks to two or more servings a day appeared to have an even bigger effect.

The team's findings also appear online in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

In the United States, soft drink manufacturers almost invariably sweeten their nondiet offerings with high-fructose corn syrup. Unlike sucrose, or table sugar, which is a 50:50 combination of fructose and glucose, high-fructose corn syrup contains these sugars in a mix dominated by fructose.

Although the corn syrup industry has argued that the amount of extra fructose is small, with 55 percent fructose and 45 percent glucose, a new paper in Obesity challenges that. Michael Goran's team at the University of Southern California's Keck School of Medicine, in Los Angeles, locally collected samples of 23 different sugar-sweetened beverages. The researchers purchased most as canned or bottled drinks, but also collected six samples of soda-fountain beverages.

Tags:
bone joint health,
women's health,
gout,
sugar,
heart health,
food and drink,
heart disease

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Mexican coke, Canadian coke, UK coke, Austrailian coke European coke, Asian coke all use sugar. Only USA coke made after the 1970s uses high fructose corn syrup. We all noticed the difference when it was forced upon us and we all hated it. Corn syrup tastes like corn and is definetely not the same as sugar. Up until now that it has been the only option (except for Mexican coke that is now imported to our some supermarkets in the Ethnic foods area) too bad but sugar sweetened soda pop has only been put back into circulation a few times in recent years under the name "throwback" for some pepsi products. In the south the use of corn syrup in sweet tea indicates cheap tea and is only purchased if the good sweet tea is all sold out and there is no time to make your own before a party. Corn syrup is not a suitable substitute for sugar and should have been left as topping for cornbread and cornpone. No one actually prefers the taste of high fructise corn syrup over sugar in any taste test ever given and there are not many because the makers of corn sweeteners don't like that people are noticing the bad taste is coming from them. Gout is just another reason to remove this bad taste from our mouths. High fructose corn syrup = Fail

Bleech of MI 3:43PM November 14, 2011

Anyone else find it a little weird how all the comments are from corn refiners-affiliated folks? If anything that actually makes me wonder why they are so concerned about this one article...a little too reminiscent of the tobacco lobby's "there's no proven link between smoking and lung cancer" line, methinks.

Me, I'll be staying away from high-fructose corn syrup -- better safe than sorry. I love corn, but I'll be eating it in vegetable form :)

J. Lin of WA 12:20AM December 08, 2010

To Janet, on behalf of the Corn Refiners Association, I want to submit some interesting information below. Thanks.

Independent Review Debunks USC Fructose Content Study

Independent review of the fructose content of HFCS-55 confirmed that production of this natural sugar made from corn adheres to tightly calibrated industry standards for its sugar content, both fructose and glucose. Allegations made in a recent study by University of Southern California researchers claiming that the fructose content exceeds normal averages were disproven in this review.

All HFCS-producing facilities in the United States and Canada maintain rigorous production records analyzing the sugars content and other specifications of high fructose corn syrup. “The claims made in the USC paper were unfounded, and were off the mark in suggesting that high fructose corn syrup, or corn sugar, contains ‘excess’ fructose," said said Audrae Erickson, President of the Corn Refiners Association. " Clearly, these researchers did not properly analyze the samples or use standardized analytical methods for determining sugars content. Consumers can rest assured that high fructose corn syrup, or corn sugar, is produced according to long established standards.”

Cameron of DC 5:54PM November 16, 2010

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