Is sugar even worse than saturated or trans fat or sodium, as some nutrition experts and news reports claim? That's difficult to say, but sugar is definitely a major concern, primarily because we're consuming so much more of it than we used to—mainly in the form of added sugar, which is overwhelmingly sucrose (white table sugar) or high-fructose corn syrup, which are liberally added to as much as three-quarters of all packaged foods and beverages in the U.S.—not only "sweets" like candies and cookies, but also staples like breakfast cereal, pasta sauce, ketchup, baked beans, sweetened yogurt, bread, and soups.
Large intakes of added sugar have adverse effects in the body via multiple pathways—notably by increasing inflammation, oxidative stress, and triglycerides, by impairing insulin regulation, and by raising blood pressure.
A sprinkling of recent research
Researchers have found that sugar impacts heart health in several key areas:
What to do
Some simple steps can help reduce sugar intake, such as limiting your consumption of sugar-laden yogurt (add your own fruit to plain yogurt), choosing breakfast cereals with little or no sugar, and avoiding sugary soft drinks and processed foods containing high-fructose corn syrup. Still, if you are generally careful and the rest of your diet is healthful, consuming small amounts of added sugar is unlikely to be harmful. You needn't worry about foods naturally containing sugar, such as fruit (though fruit juice should be limited) or milk.
How much sugar?
The current Dietary Guidelines for Americans, for the first time, recommend a limit on added sugar: no more than 10 percent of a person's daily calories should come from added sugar. That amounts to about 12 teaspoons (50 grams) for someone consuming 2,000 calories a day (1 teaspoon contains about 4 grams of sugar). The recommendations from the American Heart Association are more stringent: no more than 6 teaspoons of added sugar a day for most women and 9 teaspoons for most men.