this post was submitted on 05 Nov 2023
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[–] BitSound@lemmy.world 9 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I constantly see people bickering about this online, but that's not at odds with CICO. Yes, the overarching limits is CICO, but most people don't track calories. Fructose makes you more hungry and so you eat more food, and therefore CICO means you gain weight. From the article:

When these cellular powerhouses are slowed, the cells get stuck in a low-energy state, triggering hunger and thirst

So you're correct, but it's an unhelpful response. Kind of like saying "No, the Earth still isn't flat" when people are trying to figure out exactly how round it is.

EDIT: To your other comment:

At no point is fructose a direct cause of obesity, a byproduct yes.

"direct cause" is the wrong way to look at this. Even if the mechanism by which it acts doesn't cause obesity itself, it can be a root cause if, without it, people wouldn't engage in behaviors that lead to obesity, i.e. overeating. The difference between "he died because he ran into a tree" vs "he died because he was texting and not paying attention".