May 20, 2024 Puzzle Piece
How Ultraprocessed Foods Are Slowly Killing Us
STORY AT-A-GLANCE - An as is reprint from Dr. Mercola
· In a lecture
at The Royal Institute, Chris van Tulleken shared details of how
ultraprocessed foods impact human health, tracing a timeline from the
mid-1970s when childhood obesity was a mere 2% to the present day, just
50 years later, when it now hovers at 20%
· Van Tulleken
notes that processed foods are not the same as ultraprocessed foods
because processing is ancient and people have been grinding, salting,
smoking, curing and fermenting food for hundreds of thousands of years.
As he says, humans are the “only obligate processivores”
· Food products
are not just a sum of the nutrient parts, as has been demonstrated in
multiple studies, including a case study by van Tulleken in which he
discovered that after just four weeks of eating 80% ultraprocessed food,
he experienced heartburn, anxiety, 15.4-pound weight gain and poor
sleep
· Based on
research, van Tulleken proposes the brain is a prediction engine, and
taste is an early warning system that your body uses to warn of toxins
and predict the nutrients that are on the way to the stomach. When the
tongue signals sugar, fat, or protein that doesn't arrive, it may
trigger a stress response that causes you to eat more
· Ultraprocessed
food manufacturers propose that obesity is caused by not getting enough
exercise or not having enough willpower. Yet, the evidence suggests
these theories are invalid and that obesity and other diseases are
linked to consuming ultraprocessed foods that may be slowly killing us
Consumption of ultraprocessed foods in the U.S. grew from 53.5% of the
total calories consumed between 2001 to 2002 to 57% of the total
calories consumed between 2017 to 2018.
During a lecture at the Royal Institution in October 2023, Dr. Chris van
Tulleken from the University College London cited 60% of the total
calories in Great Britain are consumed from ultraprocessed foods and
1-in-5 people consume 80% of their calories from ultraprocessed food.
A 2024 systematic review of the literature confirmed what multiple past
studies have also shown — the higher your intake of ultraprocessed food,
the higher your risk of adverse health outcomes. Many of these adverse
health events are closely linked to obesity and van Tulleken finds
strong associations between consuming ultraprocessed food and obesity.
During his lecture, he presented a slide illustrating the meteoric rise
in obesity that began in the mid-1970s, calling the situation "pandemic
obesity." At the time, childhood obesity was a mere 2% but now it’s more
than 20%.
Data Confirms Ultraprocessed Food Is Killing Us
To fully understand how ultraprocessed food is altering human health, it
is crucial to understand what it is. The concept of ultraprocessed food
didn't become part of nutritional conversations until the NOVA system
was first proposed in 2009 by Carlos Monteiro. Researchers now use this
system to classify types of foods used in interventional studies.
Van Tulleken notes that the category definitions are long and involved,
so he simplified ultraprocessed food as: "Wrapped in plastic with at
least one ingredient you wouldn't normally find in a standard home
kitchen." However, while van Tulleken notes that ultraprocessed food
does drive excess consumption and weight gain, it doesn't just cause
obesity.
There is also a strong association with a long list of other diseases
such as cardiovascular disease, certain cancers, Type 2 diabetes, high
blood pressure, fatty liver disease, inflammatory bowel disease, mood
disorders, frailty and other "complaints that we all just think are part
of growing old."
The 2024 analysis included 45 unique pooled analyses and 9,888,373
participants. There was a direct association between 32 health
parameters and exposure to ultraprocessed food. These health outcomes
included metabolic, cancer, mental, respiratory, heart, gastrointestinal
and all-cause mortality.
According to this study and others, this increasing exposure is
contributing to rising rates of chronic disease and illness in the
population. In other words, eating ultraprocessed foods is slowly
killing us and, we really are what we eat.
Humans Have Always Processed Food
Van Tulleken notes that processed foods are not the same as
ultraprocessed foods because processing is ancient. He calls humans the
"only obligate processivores," or mammals that must process their food
before eating. Compared to other mammals of similar size and weight,
humans have much smaller jaws and teeth with shorter digestive tracts.
The kitchen became our extended gastrointestinal system where knives and
grinders are used to cut and chop food and cooking is used to process,
mash and extract to make food more easily digestible.
"For hundreds of thousands of years, we've been grinding it and
mashing it and extracting it and salting it and curing it and fermenting
it and smoking it and doing all of these wonderful things that make
diets edible and delicious," van Tulleken said.
A 2022 paper noted that a food product is not simply the sum of the
nutrients and that "Human diets are progressively incorporating larger
quantities of industrially processed foods." Throughout his lecture, van
Tulleken agreed. In the early 2000s when Carlos Montero proposed the
NOVA system, he also proposed that food is more than the sum of its
parts and that how we process food matters to how our body processes
food.
What We Do to Food Matters
As an example of why processing is important, van Tulleken recounted an
experiment done in the 1970s by a group of scientists in Bristol. The
group used apples. They left some unprocessed, some chopped into chunks,
some pureed and some were squashed with the fiber out. The processing
was done immediately before the participants consumed them and what they
found was revealing.
"If you eat a whole apple, it leaves you feeling fuller for longer,
it doesn't spike your blood sugar, and you don't get a sort of rebound
hypoglycemia. If you drink the apple juice, you get a big spike of blood
sugar, you don't feel full at all. Now, when you back-add the fiber, so
it's whole pureed apple, you still get that sugar spike, and you still
don't feel satisfied.
So even when we have a pureed whole apple, it's very, very different
to eating the whole apple, to dismantling the apple with your teeth.
Eating, the act of chewing, of manipulating food with your tongue,
causes all sorts of internal physiological changes that are really,
really important. So we do need to process food with our mouths."
In 2016, Kevin Hall, a scientist and nutrition researcher with the
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, was at
a conference with a representative from PepsiCo. They discussed the
recent NOVA classifications and Brazil's food guidelines to avoid
ultraprocessed foods. Hall believed it was a silly rule because obesity
had nothing to do with food processing.
He was attracted to the idea that food is the sum of its nutrient parts.
Yet, there was damning evidence in the scientific literature that
appeared to be correlative rather than causative. He believed that
ultraprocessed foods were being wrongly blamed and so at the end of 2018
he and his colleagues were the first to test whether diet could cause
overeating and weight gain.
In a randomized controlled, crossover study, participants ate either an
unlimited amount of ultraprocessed food or an unprocessed diet matched
for equal amounts of salt, fat, sugar and fiber for two weeks. The
researchers found that while on the ultraprocessed food, the
participants gained roughly 1 kilogram (2.2 pounds) and lost the same
amount on the unprocessed diet.
Van Tulleken was also curious about how ultraprocessed foods affect the
body. So, over one month, the 42-year-old increased his daily intake
from 30% of ultraprocessed products to 80%, which mimicked how 20% of
the U.K. population eats. By the end of four weeks, van Tulleken
experienced a myriad of changes, including:
"I
felt 10 years older, but I didn't realize it was all [because of] the
food until I stopped eating the diet," van Tulleken told the BBC. This
is significant since the physician recognized that he had purposely
changed his diet, and yet he did not recognize that feeling 10 years
older after only four weeks was associated with the food he was eating.
Your Brain Predicts Nutrition From Taste
Van Tulleken makes the point that "The brain is a prediction engine.
It's constantly making predictions about the world. And when you get a
mismatch between a prediction … there may be a stress response."
In his first example, he uses artificial sweeteners and Diet Coke. He
notes that these artificial sweeteners are not linked to weight loss and
the phosphoric acid in the beverage doesn't just dissolve teeth, it
also reduces bone density. He frames it as a way of "commodifying ill
health."
Looking at the labels on ultraprocessed foods, he noticed a theme. Each
begins with four commodity crops — rice, corn, soy and wheat. The crops
are broken down into powder, so they have "a nearly infinite shelf life
and cost very, very little." These are then mixed with commodity oils
such as vegetable, sunflower and palm oils. These can be mixed with a
little meat if needed and then the additives are included.
"In the UK and in Europe we have around two and a half thousand
additives that we use in food, and they're somewhat regulated. In the
United States, there are between 5,000 and 15,000 additives. No one has a
list. The FDA who regulate, or are supposed to regulate additives,
don't have a list of all the additives that are added to food."
Finally, whey powder, which was once a waste product of the dairy
industry, and sugars may be added. Many of these ultraprocessed foods
are being sold as healthy. The rating Diet Coke receives is an
interesting example, which "gets four green traffic lights on the
bottle. So, this isn't just a health food. This is the healthiest
product you can possibly buy. Very few foods get four green traffic
lights."
As van Tulleken notes, the body has evolved a sophisticated system for
understanding what food does. This may have been the basis for
manufacturers developing the "bliss point," or the point where salt,
sweetness and richness were perceived as being just right on the tongue.
When you taste sweetness, it prepares the body for sugar and
carbohydrates.
The initial theory was that the taste released insulin, which dropped
blood glucose and made you hungry. Van Tulleken notes that more recent
research has demonstrated that artificial sweeteners increase blood
glucose, which may be part of a stress response when the body predicts
sugar and doesn't receive it.
And the same may be happening with fat. In the 1980s when fat was
demonized, food manufacturers began producing low-fat products. The food
manufacturers also created the sensation of fatty textures but without
real fat. Van Tulleken notes that your mouth isn't tasting for fun, it's
an early warning system.
So bitter taste identifies toxins and sweetness tells your body that
sugar is on its way. If your mouth detects fat in food that doesn't have
fat or savory tastes without protein, he and others believe this is one
factor that drives excess consumption. The flavor tells your body a
nutrient is coming, but it never arrives. This throws off the
homeostatic mechanisms built into mammals.
"And remember, we do all have an internal mechanism that is able to
say ‘I am full.’ There is no obesity in wild animals, and that is not to
do with scarcity of food. Many animals live with very plentiful food,
but they have homeostatic mechanisms …
We all have a way of keeping all of our internal physiology the
same. Our temperature, our blood pressure, our oxygen levels, our carbon
dioxide levels, our blood pH, our sodium, our potassium, we regulate it
all tightly. It would be bizarre if we didn't do the same for calorie
intake, and we can if we eat real food."
Debunking Food Manufacturers Reasons for Obesity
As the manufactured food industry became a primary driver of obesity and
ill health, they also began proposing reasons that people were obese
that had nothing to do with the ingredients in the manufactured
products. However, as van Tulleken notes throughout his lecture to The
Royal Institution, these reasons have since been debunked.
•Calories in, calories out — The theory is that if you
eat more calories than you burn, you will gain weight. Van Tulleken
notes that the phrase "exercise is medicine" was trademarked by the
Coca-Cola Company and developed in partnership with the American College
of Sports Medicine.
However, through study of different populations, researcher Herman
Pontzer found the benefits people spend roughly the same number of
calories no matter the activity level. The difference is in where the
calories are expended. In people in Western society, calories are spent
on inflammation, anxiety, and toxic hormone levels. The benefits of
exercise appear to be dampening those factors, which explains why you
cannot out exercise a bad diet.
•Willpower — The second reason trotted out to explain obesity is a lack of willpower, which has been used as a proxy for poverty.
During the lecture, in addition to other evidence to debunk the theory,
van Tulleken points listeners back to the graph presented at the start
of lecture demonstrating the meteoric rise in obesity at nearly the same
point that ultraproccessed foods became popular, noting that "unless
you propose that simultaneously there was some failure of moral
responsibility in all those different communities, the willpower
argument doesn't stack up."
The Most Destructive Ingredient in Ultraprocessed Food
While ultraprocessed foods contain a wide variety of harmful
ingredients, including synthetic and/or genetically engineered compounds
and contaminants like pesticides, one of the most harmful ingredients
found in most processed and ultraprocessed foods is the omega-6 fat linoleic acid (LA), thanks to the liberal use of seed oils in the making of these products.
One significant problem with polyunsaturated fats (PUFAs) like LA is
that they are chemically unstable, which makes them highly susceptible
to being damaged by oxygen species generated from the energy production
in your cells.
This damage causes them to form advanced lipoxidation end-products
(ALEs), which in turn generate dangerous free radicals that damage your
cell membranes, mitochondria, proteins and DNA. LA also breaks down into
harmful metabolites such as oxidized LA metabolites (OXLAMs), which
have a profoundly negative impact on your health. These ALEs and OXLAMs
then go on to cause mitochondrial dysfunction, which is a hallmark of
most all chronic disease.
The video above reviews the health risks associated with vegetable oils
and seed oils, which are found in most processed foods. It shows how
chronic diseases such as heart disease began to skyrocket after the
introduction of these oils to the market.
Seed Oils Are Far Worse Than Sugar
While most nutritional experts blame the epidemic of chronic disease on
the increase in sugar consumption, the role of sugar is relatively minor
when compared to the impact of seed oils.
Processed foods typically contain about 21% sugar. However, up to 50% or
more of the overall calories contained in most processed foods come
from seed oils. The connection is further confirmed by looking at the
U.S. carb consumption. It’s been declining since 1997, yet obesity and
Type 2 diabetes have steadily increased. Interestingly, this continued
rise coincides with the surge of seed oil consumption.
Another major reason why seed oils are exponentially more pernicious to
your health than sugar is that they last much longer in your body. The
half-life of LA is around 600 to 680 days, or approximately two years.
This means it will take you about six years to replace 95% of the LA in
your body with healthy fats. This is the primary reason for keeping your
LA intake low as possible.
Meanwhile, your glycogen stores will be exhausted in about one to two
days. So, if you go on a sugar binge, that sugar doesn’t stick around
for years destroying your health like the LA in seed oils does. Seed
oils also play a far greater role in obesity than sugar.
Obesity Is a State of Energy Deficiency
It’s important to understand that obesity is a state of energy
deficiency due to inhibited mitochondrial respiration, which causes
calories to be stored as fat instead of being burned for fuel. The
solution is to optimize your mitochondrial function and raise your
metabolic rate.
This inefficient burning of fuel (metabolizing of food) is why people
who are obese typically also struggle with other health issues, such as
low energy, fatigue, an inability to maintain focus, digestive problems
and poor immune function.
It is important to note there is a difference between energy and fuel.
Your body uses food for fuel to create energy, which it uses in bodily
functions, including muscle contraction, digestion, and cognitive
function. An important misconception about weight gain is that you are
converting your fuel from food into energy, which is adenosine
triphosphate (ATP).
Without activity to burn the energy, your body converts ATP into body
fat. In other words, you're not producing enough energy and you're in an
energy-deficient state, but you have enough fuel. The fuel is stored
because your body cannot efficiently metabolize it.
The result is body fat and insufficient energy which forces your body to
down-regulate other systems, such as reproductive hormones, thyroid
activity, and systems that are not essential for survival.
Unfortunately, you also experience perpetual hunger because the hunger
signal is predominantly regulated by energy availability.
This in turn leads to overeating, resulting in a vicious cycle of low
energy and weight gain. The goal is to fix your metabolism or low energy
production. Several strategies can help. You’ll find a deeper
discussion about this vicious cycle, several suggestions to fix it and
links to more help in "Obesity Study: ‘Fat but Fit’ Is a Myth."
Yours in Health and Wellness,
John W Brimhall, DC, BA, BS, FIAMA, DIBAK, Formulator, Patent Holder