4.7 • 3.4K Ratings
🗓️ 2 June 2025
⏱️ 75 minutes
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0:00.0 | Hi everyone, Drew Brode here. We all know that sugar can be a huge driver of weight gain and chronic |
0:06.6 | disease, especially when it's tied into excess calories. But the truth is, as we're all |
0:13.6 | starting to learn in this nuanced world, sugar itself is not the enemy. It's when we eat it in the |
0:19.3 | form of added sugars tucked into over 60% of the |
0:23.5 | ultra-processed foods that make up the modern, especially American diet that we run into problems. |
0:29.6 | I'm talking about the added sugars that big food mixes into everyday foods like salad |
0:35.3 | dressing, pasta sauces, and protein bars, just to name a few. And our |
0:39.7 | overconsumption of added sugar in our diets, in excess, huge levels of metabolic diseases, |
0:46.0 | including, as a lot of experts on my podcast have talked about, insulin resistance, fatty liver, |
0:51.9 | and there's even a strong argument to be made that there's a connection |
0:56.1 | to Alzheimer's disease. So on today's episode, I talked to two experts on the podcast about |
1:01.6 | the links that are there between insulin resistance, fatty liver, and Alzheimer's disease. |
1:06.4 | First off, we have Dr. Robert Lustig, a neuroendocrinologist with an expertise in metabolism, |
1:12.2 | obesity, and nutrition. In our conversation, Dr. Lustig breaks down the ways that sugar |
1:17.3 | acts as a metabolic disruptor. In our conversation, Dr. Lustig breaks down the ways that |
1:22.6 | excess sugar, that's the key, excess sugar. We're not fearmongering sugar in general, |
1:28.7 | especially from whole foods, but excess sugar and how it acts as a metabolic disruptor damaging the liver disrupting hormonal |
1:35.2 | signaling and over time laying the groundwork for cognitive decline especially when you add on top of the |
1:41.2 | excess sugar a sedentary lifestyle. He also explains the fascinating |
1:44.9 | ways that our body stores fat. And I'm also speaking with in today's episode, Dr. Richard Johnson, |
1:51.0 | a professor of medicine at the University of Colorado, Denver, who is internationally recognized |
1:55.5 | for his seminal work in the role of fructose and obesity, diabetes, and now even potentially Alzheimer's disease. |
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