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<blockquote data-quote="Yorksman" data-source="post: 476194" data-attributes="member: 55568"><p>Trees have loads and loads of carbs as does hay and straw and many, many other things. None of these carbs will be available nor nourishment, they will all pass straight through you. Most brans contain between 60 and 70 g of carbohydrate per 100g, corn bran contains 86g. It is not digested. There are many types of carb and the body does not process them all into glucose: <a href="http://csi.chemie.tu-darmstadt.de/ak/fwlicht/PAPERS/paper300.pdf" target="_blank">Carbohydrates: Occurrence, Structures and Chemistry</a></p><p></p><p>Truvia for example contains 99g of carbs per 100g of product. None of it is digested which is why it has zero calories.</p><p></p><p>Milk has carbs, in the lactose, but this is not available to most of the world who do not produce the necessary enzyme lactase. Not all carbs are the same and not everybody's biochemistry is the same. </p><p><img src="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/news-articles/1003/fig1" alt="" class="fr-fic fr-dii fr-draggable " style="" /></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Yorksman, post: 476194, member: 55568"] Trees have loads and loads of carbs as does hay and straw and many, many other things. None of these carbs will be available nor nourishment, they will all pass straight through you. Most brans contain between 60 and 70 g of carbohydrate per 100g, corn bran contains 86g. It is not digested. There are many types of carb and the body does not process them all into glucose: [URL='http://csi.chemie.tu-darmstadt.de/ak/fwlicht/PAPERS/paper300.pdf']Carbohydrates: Occurrence, Structures and Chemistry[/URL] Truvia for example contains 99g of carbs per 100g of product. None of it is digested which is why it has zero calories. Milk has carbs, in the lactose, but this is not available to most of the world who do not produce the necessary enzyme lactase. Not all carbs are the same and not everybody's biochemistry is the same. [IMG]http://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/news-articles/1003/fig1[/IMG] [/QUOTE]
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