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Dr. Robert Lustig, M.D., M.S.L, - Pediatric Endocrinologist - Desktop

Main web page for: Dr. Robert Lustig, M.D., M.S.L, Department of Clinical Pediatrics, University of California

Main web page: http://www.robertlustig.com/

Robert H. Lustig is an American pediatric endocrinologist at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) where he is a Professor of Clinical Pediatrics.

By focusing on real food, we can beat the odds against sugar, processed food, obesity, and disease.

Robert H. Lustig, M.D., M.S.L.is Professor emeritus of Pediatrics, Division of Endocrinology at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). He specializes in the field of neuroendocrinology, with an emphasis on the regulation of energy balance by the central nervous system. His research and clinical practice has focused on childhood obesity and diabetes. Dr. Lustig holds a Bachelor’s in Science from MIT, a Doctorate in Medicine from Cornell University. Medical College, and a Master’s of Studies in Law from U.C. Hastings College of the Law.

Robert Lustig

Dr. Lustig has fostered a global discussion of metabolic health and nutrition, exposing some of the leading myths that underlie the current pandemic of diet-related disease. He believes the food business, by pushing processed food loaded with sugar, has hacked our bodies and minds to pursue pleasure instead of happiness; fostering today’s epidemics of addiction and depression.

"Processed Food: An Experiment That Failed"

The Center for Hospitality and Culinary Arts at George Brown College: Published on 11 Sep 2017



(61 minutes)

If the video won't play this link should work.

The Resistance - Researchers, Practitioners, Educators, Advocates

Working together, we can solve this pandemic of diet-related disease. I am fortunate to be part of a movement that includes many amazing organizations, institutions, and talented individuals (researchers, practitioners, educators, advocates, journalists, policy makers, etc.). While we may represent a diversity of opinions and positions on metabolic health, nutrition, food, policy, etc., we are all moving the agenda forward in ways that are making a difference in the lives of millions.

"Politicians have to come in and reset the playing field. Alcohol, cigarettes, cocaine and sugar, are substances that are toxic, commonly used and with negative consequences for society," he says. "The businesses the produce and sell these products have a responsibility. They cannot be allowed to make money by making people sick."

Lustig argues that eating sugar creates a demand for more sugar. This is like an addiction, it's driven by physiology it's not about your willpower, or lack of it. He argues that the hormone related to stress, cortisol, is partly to blame. "When cortisol floods the bloodstream, it raises blood pressure; and increases the blood glucose level. Human research shows that cortisol specifically increases caloric intake of comfort foods." High cortisol levels during sleep, interfere with restfulness, and increase the hunger hormone ghrelin the next day.

"Sugar; The Newest and Bitterest Truth"

Berkeley-Haas: Published on 8 Mar 2016



(67 minutes)

The hunger hormone ghrelin, and the satiety hormone leptin operate like a switch turning the desire to eat on and off. But excess glucose in the blood stream is an emergency situation, which elevates insulin levels, because insulin's main purpose is to remove excess glucose form the blood. High insulin levels block the action of the ghrelin/leptin hunger switch.

Telling people to simply lose weight, "is physiologically impossible and it's clinically dangerous. It's a goal that's not achievable." He explains that, "Biochemistry drives behaviour." So the problem is embedded in our society, it's not one's personal fallibility that makes one sick and fat. That is now "normal" for our society, and as a society we have to do something about it. There isn't a fat person on earth that doesn't know that the problem is in the diet. The problem is also in our political system, because politicians don't want to fight with industry, they don't want to impose regulations on the food supply, and they don't want to restrict the growth of sales.

"The Case For and Against Food Addiction"

University of California Television (UCTV): Published on 6 Jan 2017



(23 minutes)

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