Artificial sweeteners

This forum made possible through the generous support of SDN members, donors, and sponsors. Thank you.

sozme

Full Member
10+ Year Member
Joined
Oct 9, 2010
Messages
191
Reaction score
109
Have artificial sweeteners like Splenda/sucralose or Aspartame ever actually been shown to be harmful in any way? Just curious because I've met a lot of people who believe they are in some way harmful.
 
No. There is some biochemical reaction/metabolite from using aspartame, but I don't remember the reaction. We talked about it in undergrad biochemistry. But, you need to eat like an ounce or something of aspartame at one time for the methanol to build up enough to kill you.
 
yes they're really bad for you and the FDA got paid off in order to not ban them by Big Sweetener

/s

Nope, they're just fine.
 
In reality, they may be fine in small quantities, but they should not be consumed in appreciable quantities. I've learned more about toxicology than I expect to learn in med school, and chemicals should account for a very small part of our consumption. That to me seems logical, regardless of what is taught.
 
In reality, they may be fine in small quantities, but they should not be consumed in appreciable quantities. I've learned more about toxicology than I expect to learn in med school, and chemicals should account for a very small part of our consumption. That to me seems logical, regardless of what is taught.


I'll stop consuming "chemicals" right away.
 
There's a good amount of mouse model evidence that they alter gut microbiota composition/function in negative ways, amounting to unanswered questions about the impact of artificial sweeteners in humans.
There's also some preliminary evidence regarding artificial sweeteners negatively affecting satiety. In addition, observational data has shown that those who drink diet beverages don't end up with any lower of a risk of metabolic syndrome (etc) and may end up higher. That said, observational data has a lot of confounders and the satiety evidence has no clear mechanism at this time (and lots of proposed ones).

Regardless, I love diet sodas (especially diet mt. dew), and while I've significantly cut back, I feel it's like most things in life: everything in moderation. Regular soda is just too syrupy after 20 years of drinking diet.
 
I believe aspartame breaks down into phenylalanine so it could be a issue if someone has PKU.
 
Top