RRM wrote:djkvan wrote:Regarding depletion you make the point yourself, RRM, by saying:
Only if you would not eat anything; no fruits, no juices, no fish; just sugar and oil.
What point am i making?
That if you do not consume any vitamins / minerals, you will lack those vitamins / minerals?
Seems logical to me, no?
since refined sugars contain none of these "helpers" additional help is recruited from the body's available resources in the blood stream.
Whatever food you consume, the body will always use vitamins / minerals present in the blood for subsequent various conversions of various ingredients.
If that food contains little of a specific vitamin / mineral involved in conversions, that level will go down a bit, until repleted.
If that food contains no such vitamin/ mineral, the level of all vitamins / minerals involved in subsequent conversions will go down a bit until repleted.
RRM wrote:
The concern for me becomes the tipping point
The tipping point is not absolute, and will be different for everybody.
If you are concerned, simply stay on the safe side (250 g/day) or even lower.
Orange juice is sugar with the "supporting cast"
It doesnt contain
everything in abundance, so, it will too 'tax some reserve'.
All foods tax some reserves, but sugar more so.
And all foods contribute to those reserves, including sugar.
RRM wrote:If it is true that each food that we eat is packaged with enough vitamins/minerals, etc..., to aid in its digestion alone
Its not. All foods contribute at least something, but not everything, including sugar, which contributes glucose and sucrose.
I would have to hope that there is a bunch of extra helpers in OJ and yolks or salmon for this purpose (redundancy)
Of course there is.
Why?
Because in nature we never had abundance daily.
So that even when we lacked the proper foods, our body still had to be able to function normally.
Redundancy to compensate for starvation.
The diet warns of consuming too much protein as well: ...
So are not these required for digestion of naked sugar?
For the conversion of protein (B2, for example) and sugars (B1, for example) not the same vitamins / minerals are used.
Warning against excess protein was more about the influence of elevated blood protein levels on depression and sleeplessness,
as protein (amino acids) levels may vary greatly (100 to 900%).
The latter part of that warning is kind of unlikely, unless your diet is inadequate.
What observation (health, mood, etc.) made it your daily maximum?
Catching a mild cold that didnt subside and poor wound healing,
which both were eliminated after reducing sugar intake and increasing OJ intake to normal.
djkvan wrote:RRM wrote:djkvan wrote:When sugar is consumed, the bacteria in the intestines, which manufacture B vitamin complexes, begin to die
Well, then we must forbid all fruits, as virtually all fruits contain sugar (=sucrose).
No, because fruits have the supporting cast of vitamins and minerals, etc...,.
That 'supporting cast' is primarily required for the conversion of (metabolizing) sugars in the blood,
after they have been taken up in the blood, and that 'supporting cast' is primarily obtained from the blood pool,
and replenished by consumed foods (that have been digested, and its nutrients taken up) throughout the day.
Its about sugar in the intestines, right?
There will always get some sugars from digested food in your intestines.
The good thing about white sugar is that it does not contain any ant-nutrients, fiber etc.,
and also does not require any enzymatic digestion, so that its readily absorbed from the digestive tract.
Particularly whole foods are much harder to digest, so that particularly complex sugars end up in our bowels.
In the bowels they are partially decomposed bacterially (causing gasses), releasing more simple sugars.
Only if sugar is added to hard-to-digest-foods, or when digestion is hindered (by extreme physical activity, for example)
more sugar might end up in the bowels.