http://www.foodandnutritionresearch.net/index.php/fnr/article/view/5794
As a teaser, here is the abstract:
Objective: The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of
total, chocolate, or sugar candy consumption on intakes of total energy,
fat, and added sugars; diet quality; weight/adiposity parameters; and
risk factors for cardiovascular disease in children 2-13 years of age (n=7,049) and adolescents 14-18 years (n=4,132)
participating in the 1999-2004 National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey. Methods: Twenty-four hour dietary recalls were used
to determine intake. Diet quality was determined using the Healthy
Eating Index-2005 (HEI-2005). Covariate-adjusted means, standard errors,
and prevalence rates were determined for each candy consumption group.
Odds ratios were used to determine the likelihood of associations with
weight status and diet quality. Results: In younger children, total,
chocolate, and sugar candy consumption was 11.4 g?1.61, 4.8 g?0.35, and
6.6 g?0.46, respectively. In adolescents, total, chocolate, and sugar
candy consumption was 13.0 g?0.87, 7.0 g?0.56, and 5.9 g?0.56,
respectively. Total candy consumers had higher intakes of total energy
(2248.9 kcals?26.8 vs 1993.1 kcals?15.1, p<0.0001) and added sugars (27.7 g?0.44 vs 23.4 g?0.38, p<0.0001)
than non-consumers. Mean HEI-2005 score was not different in total
candy and sugar candy consumers as compared to non-consumers, but was
significantly lower in chocolate candy consumers (46.7?0.8 vs 48.3?0.4, p=0.0337).
Weight, body mass index (BMI), waist circumference, percentiles/z-score
for weight-for-age and BMI-for-age were lower for candy consumers as
compared to non-consumers. Candy consumers were 22 and 26%,
respectively, less likely to be overweight and obese than non-candy
consumers. Blood pressure, blood lipid levels, and cardiovascular risk
factors were not different between total, chocolate, and sugar candy
consumers and non-consumers (except that sugar candy consumers had lower
C-reactive protein levels than non-consumers). Conclusion: This study
suggests that candy consumption did not adversely affect health risk
markers in children and adolescents.
Re: A fun Fat Tuesday article
HA!!
No really, I'm gonna eat some tootsie rolls now. LOLOL
Click me, click me!