Author Topic: does fructose get transported to muscle cells?  (Read 3140 times)

healthiswealth

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does fructose get transported to muscle cells?
« on: January 24, 2006, 11:17:18 PM »
my friend and I are having a debate. I said that drinking a can of coke post workout, or even during a work-out is not that bad of an idea, since soda contains fructose, which is a simple sugar. he says that fructose does not even get transported to muscle cells. please shine some light on this...

Bast000

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Re: does fructose get transported to muscle cells?
« Reply #1 on: January 25, 2006, 12:21:31 AM »
Soda doesn't contain fruit juice.   Where'd you get that idea?   Cola contains sugar which is good postworkout, supposedly.

Bear03

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Re: does fructose get transported to muscle cells?
« Reply #2 on: January 25, 2006, 06:50:20 AM »
Soda doesn't contain fruit juice.   Where'd you get that idea?   Cola contains sugar which is good postworkout, supposedly.

i don't think he said fruit juice....he said fructose.  That's correct, Soda does contain High Fructose Corn Syrup.

To answer the question, both you and your friend are right.  It is indeed right to consume simple sugars Post-Workout, and, in a pinch, soda will do.  Unlike sucrose, dextrose, and maltodextrin, fructose must be transported to the liver before it can be converted to glucose and subsequently used as glycogen to replace muscle stores of the very same.  Your friend is right in that this process significantly impedes what the muscles can absorb from fructose, but more temporally than anything else.  Fruit, for example (which as Bast observed) contains fructose yet is still often consumed first thing in the morning to "fill" the liver glycogen stores. 

You really shouldn't drink soda, ever, even postworkout, because there are plenty of options that are just as cheap and more effective.  But, if you just have GOT to have a soda, it'll be ok PW every now and again.
:-)

Bast000

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Re: does fructose get transported to muscle cells?
« Reply #3 on: January 25, 2006, 12:24:57 PM »
high fructose corn syrup is derived from corn not fruit though.

Bear03

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Re: does fructose get transported to muscle cells?
« Reply #4 on: January 25, 2006, 01:37:55 PM »
high fructose corn syrup is derived from corn not fruit though.

yeah but he never once mentioned the word "fruit" in his post, just fructose.  I assumed he meant the fructose derived from HFCS. 
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Princess L

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Re: does fructose get transported to muscle cells?
« Reply #5 on: January 25, 2006, 02:52:01 PM »
high fructose corn syrup is derived from corn not fruit though.

Thank you! 
Yes ~ fructose and HFCS are NOT at all the same thing.
:

jdead

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Re: does fructose get transported to muscle cells?
« Reply #6 on: February 01, 2006, 11:00:41 PM »

Thank you! 
Yes ~ fructose and HFCS are NOT at all the same thing.


true but the sugar fructose, a monosacharide, is organically the same no matter what it is derived from, be it corn syrup or fruit,  and yes it is the only monosacharide that must be transported to the liver before it can be utilized

Bast000

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Re: does fructose get transported to muscle cells?
« Reply #7 on: February 02, 2006, 10:59:06 PM »
true but the sugar fructose, a monosacharide, is organically the same no matter what it is derived from, be it corn syrup or fruit,  and yes it is the only monosacharide that must be transported to the liver before it can be utilized

bullshit,

fructose is digested slower than corn sugar.

Brutal_1

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Re: does fructose get transported to muscle cells?
« Reply #8 on: February 12, 2006, 06:26:25 PM »
my friend and I are having a debate. I said that drinking a can of coke post workout, or even during a work-out is not that bad of an idea, since soda contains fructose, which is a simple sugar. he says that fructose does not even get transported to muscle cells. please shine some light on this...


Alright, I think everyone here has the right idea, but the facts are wrong.

1. High Fructose Corn Syrup does contain fructose.  By composition, it is 45% glucose/ 55% fructose.

2. Your friend is right and wrong.  Fructose DOES get transported into the muscle cell by a protein transporter known as GLUT-5.

BUT, what is different about fructose metabolism is that it doesn't raise insulin levels, as compared to glucose which is insulin dependant for glu uptake.  This is probably useful for weightloss.

SO, actually soda is not really a good idea post workout, what you want is mostly a glucose or other sugar based drink which does increase insulin levels.  Increase in insulin will also increase uptake of other nutrients into the cell.  ALso, personally, soda slows digestion after a workout which is a big NO NO after a workout. 

my two pesos
just not good enough