Consuming glucose-sweetened, not fructose-sweetened, beverages increases fasting insulin in healthy humans

JN Kuzma, G Cromer, DK Hagman… - European journal of …, 2019 - nature.com
Abstract Fructose-, compared to glucose-, sweetened beverages increase liver triglyceride
content in the short-term, prior to weight gain. In secondary analyses of a randomized cross …

Consuming glucose-sweetened, not fructose-sweetened, beverages increases fasting insulin in healthy humans.

JN Kuzma, G Cromer, DK Hagman, KL Breymeyer… - 2019 - cabidigitallibrary.org
Abstract Fructose-, compared to glucose-, sweetened beverages increase liver triglyceride
content in the short-term, prior to weight gain. In secondary analyses of a randomized cross …

Consuming glucose-sweetened, not fructose-sweetened, beverages increases fasting insulin in healthy humans

JN Kuzma, G Cromer, DK Hagman, KL Breymeyer… - 2019 - pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Fructose-, compared to glucose-, sweetened beverages increase liver triglyceride content in
the short-term, prior to weight gain. In secondary analyses of a randomized cross-over …

[HTML][HTML] Consuming glucose-sweetened, not fructose-sweetened, beverages increases fasting insulin in healthy humans1

JN Kuzma, G Cromer, DK Hagman… - European journal of …, 2019 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Abstract Fructose-, compared to glucose-, sweetened beverages increase liver triglyceride
content in the short-term, prior to weight gain. In secondary analyses of a randomized cross …

Consuming glucose-sweetened, not fructose-sweetened, beverages increases fasting insulin in healthy humans.

JN Kuzma, G Cromer, DK Hagman… - European Journal of …, 2018 - europepmc.org
Abstract Fructose-, compared to glucose-, sweetened beverages increase liver triglyceride
content in the short-term, prior to weight gain. In secondary analyses of a randomized cross …

Consuming glucose-sweetened, not fructose-sweetened, beverages increases fasting insulin in healthy humans

JN Kuzma, G Cromer, DK Hagman… - European Journal of …, 2019 - go.gale.com
Fructose-, compared to glucose-, sweetened beverages increase liver triglyceride content in
the short-term, prior to weight gain. In secondary analyses of a randomized cross-over …

[PDF][PDF] Consuming glucose-sweetened, not fructose-sweetened, beverages increases fasting insulin in healthy humans

JN Kuzma, G Cromer, DK Hagman, KL Breymeyer… - 2018 - researchgate.net
Abstract Fructose-, compared to glucose-, sweetened beverages increase liver triglyceride
content in the short-term, prior to weight gain. In secondary analyses of a randomized cross …