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Eating too much sugar can lead to weight gain, heart disease, and even cognitive decline - here are all the risks you face

Erin Brodwin   

Eating too much sugar can lead to weight gain, heart disease, and even cognitive decline - here are all the risks you face
LifeThelife1 min read

  • Sugar lurks in dozens of unsuspecting foods, from yogurt and salad dressings to granola bars and sauces.
  • Another big source of sugar in our diets is high-carbohydrate food like bagels and rice, which are quickly broken down into sugar in our bodies.
  • Occasionally indulging in a sweet treat isn't a problem, but continuously eating high-sugar foods has been linked with a wide range of health issues.


Sugar lurks in dozens of unsuspecting foods, from yogurts and salad dressings to juices and sauces. Even when sucrose - the popular form of table sugar is not present in a food item, sugar's cousins fructose and dextrose can likely be found somewhere on the label.

To truly avoid sugar, you'd also have to cut out simple carbohydrates, including the ones found in bagels and white rice, since they break down quickly into sugar in the body.

Thankfully, the bulk of scientific research suggests that you don't have to go sugar-free see benefits for your brain and body. Instead, most experts simply recommend cutting back.

Still, given sugar's omnipresence in our lives, reducing your consumption can be hard work. Here are some of the problems that can result when you consistently overindulge your sweet tooth.

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