If you're scarfing down lots of excess sugar, you're probably skipping over the things you should be eating instead.
"High-sugar foods displace whole foods (eg, soft drinks displace milk and juice consumption in children) and contribute to nutritional deficiencies," according to a statement released by the American Heart Association (AHA). American children, for example, eat too many calories — especially sugar — but don't get enough Vitamin D, calcium, or potassium.
Those deficiencies can lead to symptoms like fatigue, brittle bones, and muscle weakness.
In a study of 568 10-year-olds, as sugar intake increased, levels of essential nutrients decreased. And in a 1999 study, researchers from the Department of Agriculture found that when people got 18% or more of their calories from sugar, they had the lowest levels of essentials like folate, calcium, iron, Vitamin A, and Vitamin C.
Source: Family Economics and Nutrition Review, 1999; Journal of the American College of Nutrition, 1998; Circulation, 2002; American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2003; Nutrients, 2014