Sweet burden weighs down JJ

What are the dangers of sugar? There are logical lies that are so true that sometimes people don’t even want to question them. For example, “Saturated fatty acids have a more direct effect than sugar and can lead to higher blood cholesterol, which increases the risk of coronary heart disease.” However, this is not the case. One clinical study found that when dietary saturated fatty acids were substituted for sugar with the same amount of energy (sucrose or fructose syrup; a common additive to sugary beverages), it was found that LDL and triglycerides were elevated and HDL was decreased, changes that were associated with an increased risk of coronary heart disease. In other words, intake of sugar of equal energy has a greater effect on blood lipids than saturated fatty acids. A meta-analysis of 173,753 people examined the relationship between sugar-sweetened beverages and coronary heart disease. The study found that consuming one additional serving of a sugary drink per day (1 serving = 330 mL, the amount of sugar in one drink) increased the risk of CHD by 16%, with the risk increasing the more you drank. In contrast, limiting the intake of saturated fatty acids did not reduce all-cause and cardiovascular deaths, nor did it reduce the risk of coronary heart disease. Relationship between Coronary Heart Disease and ED Sugar increases the risk of developing coronary heart disease, which is more closely related to ED, and changes in erectile function may be the initial clinical manifestation of systemic atherosclerosis. Penile blood vessels are part of the systemic blood vessels, and their diameter is 1/2-1/3 of the diameter of the coronary arteries. due to the narrower diameter, their sensitivity to risk factors such as hypertension, hyperglycemia, and coronary atherosclerosis is higher than that of the coronary blood vessels. Atherosclerosis occurs from the coronary arteries, the aorta, to the penile arteries. Since the incidence of heart disease increases with age, after age-adjusted analysis, heart disease patients had a 39% chance of developing complete ED, significantly higher than the 9.6% incidence in the total male population, and even in 40 year old men, 33.3% suffered from at least moderate ED. The sweet burden of the weight that ultimately translates into weight, crushes the heart, and even ED. Crush the heart, even ED. and how many of them, the general public, are injured by sugar?