The Healthier Life
Receive valuable daily health tips and advice FREE by email
The Daily Health
Nutrition and Healing
Search our database of articles.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
Keyword Search
 

Related products

PainSolv

PULSE PAIN AWAY IN 14 DAYS

Breakthrough pain relief device for joint and limb pain
more info...
Dr Jonathan Wright

Dr Jonathan Wright

America's 'miracle' medic is now writing exclusively for our readers in the UK. Claim his 6-volume 'Library of Natural Healing' FREE!
more info...

PAIN-FREE FOREVER

157 safe, natural pain relief remedies MORE effective than prescription painkillers
more info...
Super Foods Book

NEW! . . . SUPER FOODS FOR A SUPER-HEALTHY YOU

Unleash the secret healing power of Nature's ultimate foods - & 'programme' your body to remain free of illness
more info...

Weight Loss

Why Refined Carbohydrates Are Bad For You


Date: 18/09/03
 
All carbohydrates are not the same. Refined carbohydrates are bad and complex carbohydrates are good. So if you're trying to cut back on the carbohydrates in your diet, then it's useful to know which ones are the real culprits, and why. With the 'refined simple' carbohydrates not only does the refining process remove nutrients, but it also concentrates the sugar within the simple carb food...

I recently saw an advert for a beer that is low in carbohydrates. I was struck by the fact that a mainstream advert was actually implying that it's good to lower your intake of carbohydrates.

Of course, it's much too early to assume that the mainstream may be catching on to the fact that if everyone put as much effort into cutting their carbohydrate intake as they put into cutting cholesterol, the obesity epidemic, the type 2 diabetes epidemic, and the cardiovascular disease epidemic might eventually become non-epidemics.

But as an HSI member reminded me in a recent e-mail, all carbohydrates are not the same. So if you're trying to cut back on the carbohydrates in your diet, then it's useful to know which ones are the real culprits, and why.

Carbohydrates 101

The e-mail came from a member named John who said, 'You should be educating the people about the difference between refined carbohydrates and complex carbohydrates. Refined carbohydrates are bad and complex carbohydrates are good.'

John is on the right track here, but we need to tweak the terminology a little bit. I asked our nutrition specialist, DR Allan Spreen, to elaborate on John's e-mail, and he started out by noting that carbohydrate foods are basically broken down into two groups: 'simple' and 'complex' carbohydrates. And both of these groups can be further broken down into 'refined' and 'unrefined.'

Nutrient needs

Let's start with the 'refined simple' carbohydrates - what Dr. Spreen calls 'the sweet stuff' - which includes 'all the sugars of one form or another.' And as he points out, the key word is 'refined' because it represents the removal of nutrients required for the metabolism of the contained sugar. Without those nutrients, Dr. Spreen says, 'Your body must draw from body stores of nutrients to metabolise the sugar. And draw it will. Once those stores are overtaxed disease sets in, or at least undesirable symptoms that hit wherever your body's weakest link happens to be. This removal of nutrients is the key to our demise, in my opinion.

'But, it gets worse. Not only does the refining process remove nutrients, but it also concentrates the sugar within the simple carb food. This causes overstress on the pancreas, the organ responsible for removing sugar (glucose) from the bloodstream and shoving it into muscle cells to be burned as fuel. This overstress manifests as insulin over-secretion, causing (for a while, anyway, until it gives up) low blood sugar swings with a subsequent vicious cycle of blood sugar over-shooting and under-shooting as the body tries to auto-regulate.

'Ah, but it gets even worse. Another problem in most refining processes of simple carbohydrates is the fact that nearly all fibre is removed. The fibre slows the release of the sugar into the system, easing the signal to the pancreas to release too much insulin too fast.'

And it's the fibre in fruits - which are unrefined simple carbohydrates - that helps make the sugar in fruit so much healthier than the sugar in refined carbohydrates. That's why, as Dr. Spreen points out, the same healthy benefits are not found in fruit juice, 'which is concentrated almost universally, and processed in other ways. It's better to eat your fruit, with clean edible skins. That way you've lowered the amount of sugar taken in, along with the fact that the natural fibre is still on board and the sugars are not as concentrated as they would be otherwise.'

The good and the bad

As John stated in his e-mail, 'complex carbohydrates are good.' And generally speaking, there is some truth in that. But Dr. Spreen points out that, 'going complex' may not be all it's cracked up to be.

'The basic complex carbohydrates are the edible starches. That's cereals, grains and the like, along with most vegetables. Most of this group makes up the huge 'base' of the so-called Food Pyramid; that moronic image from government bureaucrats, which is in large part responsible for the unimaginable amount of obesity rampant in this country.

'Starches are simple carb molecules (sugars) that are linked together by special bonds before they can be used by the body as sugar. That can be a good thing, since the enzyme process needed for that breakdown takes time to work, and that delay slows the release of the sugars into our system (the same problem caused by refined simple carbohydrates).

'Unfortunately, the same principles apply in the case of refined complex carbohydrates as to the simple ones: the sugars can be concentrated; they can have the necessary nutrients as well as the fibre removed.

'As soon as a starch hits enzymes in your mouth, the starches begin the digestion process, and breaks down to (you guessed it) sugar. If those starches start without the nutrients and especially the fibre they originally contained, they are not only inferior foods, but they're also inferior foods with automatically concentrated starches, because the fibre's gone. As soon as the starch breaks down to sugar, you're back to a refined simple carb.'

Hot potato

Nearly all our starches today are refined. And according to Dr. Spreen, it's extremely difficult (if not impossible) to find 100% unrefined pastas, breads or cereals. Yet we're told that pasta and bagels are excellent 'diet foods'!

And then there's the baked potato. Writing about this 'third food item thrown into the daily 'diet' lunch,' Dr. Spreen says, 'The baked potato is as close to a pure, refined starch as you can get without actually refining it. I'd tell patients, if they felt obliged to eat a baked potato, to shell out most of it, add some butter, and eat the remainder, including the skin. That's not only where the fibre is, but also where much of the nutrition is, too.

'So, be careful when you dig into a load of pasta or bagels. In terms of trying to lose weight, you're literally playing with a 'hot potato'.'

Back to top

Click here to send to a friendShare thisPrinter friendly version

Comments

andrew Posted 30/08/2008

i had to read this several times to understand it, and i've come to a decision that theres probably not one truly healthy person out there.

Ruth Posted 04/10/2008

I concur with Andrew.

liam holdich Posted 12/11/2008

this is cool

liam holdich Posted 12/11/2008

i canbt understand this because

liam the man Posted 15/11/2008

this is helping me do my homework thank you for writing this my teacher is very happy with me lol.

liam the man Posted 15/11/2008

this has helped me do my homework thamk you so much and my teacher gave me an A* lol.

typichall Posted 09/03/2009

what, i really like potatoes though. must i have spots for the rest of my little life? i'm not happy.

Jodie Parry Posted 27/05/2009

Thanks, good information, explained well.

orlissimo Posted 24/07/2009

Very well explained- thanks a lot.

 Posted 03/09/2009

 Posted 05/11/2009

hotel in der T�rkei buchen Posted 29/01/2010

Sun Sky,development criticism commercial occasion murder worker school whom fast end good cut argue cause leader answer attention directly can pull chain weapon revenue measure towards flower maybe work skill institution favour particularly revenue plan read morning actual revenue institution spirit be picture revenue council royal standard cause lie family ride labour teacher site develop there opinion disappear offence telephone memory index reference specific intend fine consequence legal estate previously method operation mechanism guide state transfer think result truth soil regulation national while wave few situation conservative admit domestic step

Great stuff Posted 22/02/2010

Great!!!!! Thanks for the info. I amy not completely agree, but it is good to see a different perspective.

Charis Posted 10/03/2010

Wow this is great info just hope I can find a book on it so that I can start to eat a healthier and more planned diet...

susan Posted 17/11/2010

Really interesting. Brilliantly explained. thank you!

Yasmin Posted 16/02/2011

Refined carbs are really bad for anyone ,they take time to give up because are vicious! I do not even wana hear about them! If i want to eat something closer ,well there is recipes for patato bread or simply patato ,but i try using the red patato or sweet patato i think that they have more fiber ! But i cannot eat this everyday ,just once a month other wise u have to excersize a lot to burn the carbs!fruits are also good but cannot be everyday snack in a weightloss programme is still carbs!

philip Posted 08/05/2011

When I go with the high carbohydrate diet I have no problem staying lean. I do stay away from the sugars in candy,soda, yogurt,bagels and anything that taste especially sweet to me. Most of my diet does consist of pasta,cereals,grains,vegetables and fruits. I am a vegan now and I do not eat any foods that come from an animal source. For some good reasons this type of diet works very well for me. I do exercise every day with an active job,cycling,weightlifting and a total gym. I eat many times a day and don't really keep track of how many times a day. I eat when I am hungry. It's really that simple for me. I really like the article because it's going to make me pay more attention to staying away from refined types of foods and I will always make sure that I get a lot of fiber. I know that the information has merit because I once tried to have a diet that consisted mainly of yogurt and bagels and I got as big as a pig. I got fat real fast too. I was very shocked that eating yogurt and bagels many times a day got me fat. I thought that it was healthy food. There is a lot of bad information out there and I'm glad that you have some good information for me. I really like the way you explain how our bodies break down sugars. I'm going to tell a lot of people about that .



Post your comment

Name
 

Comment
(please add your comment
up to 1000 characters
Comments may take up to
4 hours to appear)
 

Email Address (not published)

Security Question
To prevent spam-related
comments please enter the
characters shown in the
CAPTCHA box to the right.
captcha




 Registered Office - Curzon House, 24 High Street,  Banstead,  Surrey SM7 2LJ.

Agora Health Limited is registered in England and Wales
with company number 7141826 and VAT number GB 629 7287 94.

Copyright 2011  © Agora Health Ltd