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  2. Public perception of high fructose corn syrup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_perception_of_high...

    Popular campaigns by nutritional experts and belief by a rapidly increasing faction of the consuming public in the United States that high-fructose corn syrup has harmful health effects continues to result in increasing reformulation of popular processed foods and reduced sales of HFCS by 9% in 2009 as compared with 2007.

  3. Added sugar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Added_sugar

    In the United States, added sugars may include sucrose or high-fructose corn syrup, both primarily composed of about half glucose and half fructose. [7] Other types of added sugar ingredients include beet and cane sugars, malt syrup, maple syrup, pancake syrup, fructose sweetener, liquid fructose, fruit juice concentrate, honey, and molasses.

  4. High-fructose corn syrup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-fructose_corn_syrup

    In the United States, HFCS is among the sweeteners that have mostly replaced sucrose (table sugar) in the food industry. [7] [8] Factors contributing to the increased use of HFCS in food manufacturing include production quotas of domestic sugar, import tariffs on foreign sugar, and subsidies of U.S. corn, raising the price of sucrose and reducing that of HFCS, creating a manufacturing-cost ...

  5. Sweetened beverage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweetened_beverage

    Added sugars [4] include brown sugar, corn sweetener, corn syrup, dextrose (also known as glucose), fructose, high fructose corn syrup, honey, invert sugar (a mixture of fructose and glucose), lactose, malt syrup, maltose, molasses, raw sugar, sucrose, trehalose, and turbinado sugar.

  6. Sucralose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sucralose

    Sucralose is used in many food and beverage products because it is a non-nutritive sweetener (14 kilojoules [3.3 kcal] per typical one-gram serving), [3] does not promote dental cavities, [7] is safe for consumption by diabetics and nondiabetics [8] and does not affect insulin levels. [9]

  7. Sucrose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sucrose

    Sucrose is particularly dangerous as a risk factor for tooth decay because Streptococcus mutans bacteria convert it into a sticky, extracellular, dextran-based polysaccharide that allows them to cohere, forming plaque. Sucrose is the only sugar that bacteria can use to form this sticky polysaccharide.

  8. Talk:High-fructose corn syrup/Archive 7 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:High-fructose_corn...

    It is true that the cited paper says right in the abstract that "Panelists preferred sucrose-sweetened yoghurts over those sweetened with high-fructose corn syrup and honey (P < 0.05)." But the data given in Table 2 contradicts this claim.

  9. Talk:High fructose corn syrup and health - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:High_fructose_corn...

    This page is not a forum for general discussion about High fructose corn syrup and health. Any such comments may be removed or refactored. Please limit discussion to improvement of this redirect. You may wish to ask factual questions about High fructose corn syrup and health at the Reference desk.