Reconfirmed: Artificial Sweeteners Make You Fat and Sick from Dr. Mercola
Reconfirmed: Artificial Sweeteners Make You Fat and Sick
May 08, 2018 • 123,302views
Story at-a-glance
A
growing body of research shows artificial sweeteners raise your risk of
both obesity and Type 2 diabetes — perhaps even to a greater degree than
sugar
Recent
research shows both sugar and artificial sweeteners damage vascular
function and cause cellular changes that “may be important during the
onset and progression of diabetes and obesity”
Unlike
sugar, artificial sweeteners were found to accumulate in blood, leading
to more significant damage to blood vessels. Acesulfame potassium
appeared to be worse than aspartame in this regard
The
artificial sweeteners were also found to trick the body into using
alternative sources of glucose, such as muscle. Evidence of protein
break down was found in the animals’ blood
The
results indicate artificial sweeteners alter how your body processes fat
and produces energy at the cellular level, and while working on
different chemical pathways, they produce the same kinds of health
consequences as sugar
By Dr. Mercola
If you’re still holding out hope that science will eventually prove
artificial sweeteners to be beneficial, or at the very least harmless,
you’re likely to be disappointed. Again and again, research shows
no-calorie sweeteners such as aspartame and sucralose cause the same
problems as excess sugar, and then some.
According to the latest statistics1
nearly 40 percent of American adults, over 18 percent of teens and
nearly 14 percent of young children are now obese, not just overweight,
and processed foods and sweetened beverages are clearly driving factors.
Unfortunately, many make the mistake of thinking artificially sweetened
products are a healthier option as it cuts down your calories, but
nothing could be further from the truth.
The international trend of taxing sugary beverages to discourage
sugar consumption has also had the unfortunate side effect of causing
beverage makers to switch to artificial sweeteners rather than sugar and
other calorie-rich sweeteners. However, when it comes to health,
artificial sweeteners cause just as many health problems as sugar does.
Artificial Sweeteners Again Linked to Obesity and Diabetes
Over the years, an ever-growing number of studies have shown
artificial sweeteners raise your risk of both obesity and Type 2
diabetes — perhaps even to a greater degree than sugar does. Most
recently, animal research2,3
presented at the annual Experimental Biology conference in San Diego
again confirmed that artificial sweeteners raise your risk of obesity
and diabetes.
The study, which explored how different sweeteners affect the way
food is used and stored in the body, and how they affect vascular
functioning, found both sugar and artificial sweeteners result in
impairments, albeit through different pathways. As noted by the authors:
“This study tested the response of the vascular endothelium in
vitro and the in vivo response of a diabetes susceptible … rat model to
glucose, aspartame, and acesulfame potassium supplementation … Through
this set of experiments we have identified unique signatures of
alterations in lipid metabolism, among others, following artificial
sweetener consumption.
Overall, results of this study suggests that exposure to high
glucose and artificial sweetener administration lead to unique
mechanisms of vascular impairment and homeostatic alterations that may
be important during the onset and progression of diabetes and obesity.”
Sugar Versus Artificial Sweeteners — Different Mechanisms of Action, Similar Results
After being fed a diet high in either artificial sweeteners (aspartame or acesulfame potassium) or sugars (glucose or fructose)
for three weeks, detrimental effects were seen in all groups. All had
increased blood lipids (fats), but the artificial sweeteners also
accumulated in the blood of the animals, which harmed the blood vessel
lining to a greater degree. Of the two artificial sweeteners, acesulfame
potassium appeared to be the worst.
The results of the study — which used unbiased high-throughput
metabolomics, a technique that allows you to investigate how something
affects cellular metabolism — indicate that artificial sweeteners alter
how your body processes fat and produces energy at the cellular level.
So, while operating on completely different chemical pathways, they
produce the same kinds of health consequences as sugar.
As noted by lead author Brian Hoffmann, Ph.D., assistant professor in
the department of biomedical engineering at the Marquette University
and Medical College of Wisconsin,4
“In moderation, your body has the machinery to handle sugar; it is when
the system is overloaded over a long period of time that this machinery
breaks down.”
Artificial sweeteners, on the other hand, wear the machinery down.
“Sweeteners kind of trick the body. And then when your body’s not
getting the energy it needs — because it does need some sugar to
function properly — it potentially finds that source elsewhere,” he
says.5
One alternative sugar source is muscle, and indeed, evidence of
protein break down was found in the animals’ blood. Essentially, the
rats were burning muscle as a source of energy when given artificial
sweeteners. Hoffman also notes that this research is different from
previous attempts to conclusively tie artificial sweeteners to health
problems:
“Most of these sweeteners were approved well before we had the
technology to perform studies like my lab is doing. So they weren’t able
to look as in-depth at some of the potential effects being caused. By
knowing what biochemical changes these are causing through these
large-scale studies, we can take an unbiased approach and see what’s
changing to give us a better direction.
What I like to tell people is that most things in moderation are
going to be fine … It’s when people start to chronically consume these
[drinks] — say, a person drinks two, three, four … every day — that we
should start to be concerned. Because you’re starting to introduce these
biochemical changes and the body has no time to recover.”
Artificial Sweeteners Trick Your Body Into Storing Fat
Contrary to industry claims, research over the last 30 years have shown that artificial sweeteners stimulate appetite, increase cravings for carbs,
and produce a variety of metabolic dysfunctions that promote fat
storage and weight gain, often to the researchers’ great surprise. Below
is a sampling of some of the studies published through the years.
This study examined nearly 78,700 women aged 50 to 69 for one year.
Artificial sweetener usage increased with relative weight, and users
were significantly more likely to gain weight compared to those who did
not use artificial sweeteners, regardless of their initial weight.
According to the researchers, the results “were not explicable by
differences in food consumption patterns. The data do not support the
hypothesis that long-term artificial sweetener use either helps weight
loss or prevents weight gain.”
In this study, they determined that no- or low-calorie sweeteners can
produce significant changes in appetite. Of the three sweeteners
tested, aspartame produced the most pronounced effects.
Here, they found that aspartame had a time-dependent effect on
appetite, “producing a transient decrease followed by a sustained
increase in hunger ratings.”
Journal of the American Dietetic Association 19919
In a study of artificial sweeteners performed on college students,
there was no evidence that artificial sweetener use was associated with a
decrease in their overall sugar intake either.
International Journal of Food Sciences and Nutrition 200310
This study, which looked at 3,111 children, found that diet soda, specifically, was associated with higher body mass index (BMI).
International Journal of Obesity and Metabolic Disorders 200411
This Purdue University study found that rats fed artificially sweetened liquids ate more
high-calorie food than rats fed high-caloric sweetened liquids. The
researchers believe the experience of drinking artificially sweetened
liquids disrupted the animals' natural ability to compensate for the
calories in the food.
Data gathered from the San Antonio Heart Study, which went on for 25
years, showed drinking diet soft drinks increased the likelihood of
serious weight gain far more so than regular soda.13
On average, for each diet soft drink the participants drank per day,
they were 65 percent more likely to become overweight during the next
seven to eight years, and 41 percent more likely to become obese.
Journal of the American College of Nutrition 200514
In this two-year-long study, which involved 166 school children,
increased diet soda consumption was associated with higher BMI at the
end of the trial.
The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Growth and Health Study
followed 2,371 girls aged 9 to 19 for 10 years. Soda consumption in
general, both regular and diet, was associated with increase in total
daily energy intake.
This review offers a summary of epidemiological and experimental
evidence concerning the effects of artificial sweeteners on weight, and
explains those effects in light of the neurobiology of food reward. More
than 11,650 children aged 9 to 14 were included in this study.
Each daily serving of diet beverage was associated with a BMI
increase of 0.16 kg/m2. It also shows the correlation between increased
usage of artificial sweeteners in food and drinks, and the corresponding
rise in obesity.
“[F]indings suggest that the calorie contained in natural
sweeteners may trigger a response to keep the overall energy
consumption constant ... Increasing evidence suggests that artificial
sweeteners do not activate the food reward pathways in the same fashion
as natural sweeteners … [A]rtificial sweeteners, precisely because they
are sweet, encourage sugar craving and sugar dependence.”
This report highlights the fact that diet soda drinkers suffer the
same exact health problems as those who opt for regular soda, such as
excessive weight gain, Type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease and
stroke.19,20 The researchers speculate that frequent consumption of artificial sweeteners may induce metabolic derangements.
This study demonstrated that your body is not fooled by sweet taste
without accompanying calories, which is yet another reason why
artificial sweeteners promote obesity. When you eat something sweet,
your brain releases dopamine, which activates your brain’s reward
center. The appetite-regulating hormone leptin is also released, which
eventually informs your brain that you are “full” once a certain amount
of calories have been ingested.
When you consume something that tastes sweet but doesn’t contain any
calories, your brain’s pleasure pathway still gets activated by the
sweet taste, but there’s nothing to deactivate it, since the calories
never arrive. Artificial sweeteners basically trick your body into
thinking that it’s going to receive calories, but when the calories fail
to arrive, your body continues to signal that it needs more, which
results in carb cravings.
This important study was able to clearly show causality, revealing
there’s a direct cause and effect relationship between consuming
artificial sweeteners and developing elevated blood sugar levels. People
who consumed high amounts of artificial sweeteners were found to have
higher levels of HbA1C — a long-term measure of blood sugar — compared
to nonusers or occasional users of artificial sweeteners.
Seven volunteers who did not use artificial sweeteners were then
recruited, and asked to consume the equivalent of 10 to 12 single-dose
packets of artificial sweeteners daily for one week. Four of the seven
people developed “significant disturbances in their blood glucose,”
according to the researchers.
Some became prediabetic within just a few days. The reason for this
dramatic shift was traced back to alterations in gut bacteria. Some
bacteria were killed off, while others started proliferating.
This study, which was done on rats, using aspartame, also found an
increased risk of glucose intolerance. Animals that consumed artificial
sweeteners ended up with raised levels of propionate — short-chain fatty
acids involved in sugar production. Consumption of artificial
sweeteners shifted gut microbiota to produce propionate, which generated
higher blood sugar levels.
Other Ways Artificial Sweeteners Harm Your Health
Artificial sweeteners have also been linked to a number of other adverse effects. For example, the amino acids in aspartame
attack your cells, even crossing the blood-brain barrier to attack your
brain cells, creating toxic cellular overstimulation (excitotoxicity),
and sucralose (sold under the brand name Splenda) has been linked to:
Decreased red blood cells, a sign of anemia, at levels above 1,500 milligrams per kilo per day
Increased male infertility by interfering with sperm production and vitality, as well as brain lesions at higher doses
Kidney enlargement and calcification
Significantly increased risk for miscarriage (in rabbits,
spontaneous abortions affected nearly half the rabbit population given
sucralose, compared to zero aborted pregnancies in the control group)
Significantly increased death rate (a 23 percent death rate in rabbits, compared to a 6 percent in the control group)
Artificial Sweeteners Destroy Your Gut Microbiome, and Much More
An in-depth scientific review25
of sucralose published in the Journal of Toxicology and Environmental
Health also reveals an extensive list of safety concerns, including
toxicity, DNA damage and heightened carcinogenic potential
when used in cooking. It turns out that when heated, sucralose releases
chloropropanols, which belong to a class of toxins known as dioxins, known to cause cancer and endocrine disruption.
Importantly, this review also concluded that sucralose destroys gut bacteria. In fact, animal research26
published in 2008 found it could kill as much as 50 percent of your
microbiome, and appeared to targeted beneficial microorganisms to a
greater extent than pathogenic and more detrimental bacteria. This is
really important, as any time you destroy healthy intestinal bacteria
you open yourself up to unfriendly microorganisms that can cause health
problems.
Studies have also found that sucralose alters glucose, insulin and glucagon-like peptide-1 levels and responses,27
thereby raising your risk for diabetes. Besides worsening insulin
sensitivity and promoting weight gain, aspartame and other artificial
sweeteners also promote other health problems associated with excessive
sugar consumption, including:
Alzheimer’s disease.
While poor diet is a major driver of Alzheimer’s in general, the key
mechanism of harm here appears to be methanol toxicity, a problem
associated with aspartame in particular. In a previous interview,
toxicology expert Dr. Woodrow Monte (author of the book “While Science
Sleeps: A Sweetener Kills”31) explains the links between aspartame and methanol toxicity and the formation of toxic formaldehyde
In related news, researchers have also found an intriguing link
between processed foods and drug-resistant disease. Here, a sugar called
trehalose is a preferred fuel for two of the most problematic strains
of clostridium difficile (C. diff), microbes that cause severe gut
infection and can lead to death. Deaths associated with this infection
increased fivefold between 1999 and 2007, in part due to C. diff strains
having developed resistance against antibiotics.
Moreover, researchers found that more virulent strains of C. diff
were outcompeting less harmful strains inside the human gut. To
determine how and why, they tested more than 200 different sugars and
amino acids to see whether these more virulent strains were somehow able
to use some food sources more efficiently than others — and this is
precisely what they found.32 As reported by The New York Times:33
“Trehalose occurs naturally in mushrooms, yeasts and
shellfish, among other things. It has historically been expensive to
use, but in the late 1990s a new manufacturing process made the sugar
cheap. That was good news for companies that manufactured prepackaged
foods, because trehalose works great for stabilizing processed foods,
keeping them moist on the shelf and improving texture.
Since about 2001, we’ve added loads of it to everything from
cookies to ground beef. What Dr. [Robert] Britton and his colleagues
contend is that, in doing so, we’ve inadvertently cultivated the most
toxic C. diff strains, driving what has become a scourge of hospitals.
As evidence, he points to the timing of recent C. diff epidemics. The
virulent strains existed before 2000, but they didn’t cause as many
outbreaks.
Only after large quantities of trehalose entered the food supply
did they become this deadly … Britton also found that mice infected with
those virulent strains of C. diff that consumed the sugar fared worse
than infected mice that were not fed the sugar … ‘What this research
shows is that people should be considering the ecological impacts of
food stuffs,’ Britton [says]. ‘Our gut bacteria are being bombarded with
things that we never ate — or never ate in the concentrations we eat
now.’”
For Optimal Health, Drink More Clean Water
I firmly believe ditching soda and other sweetened beverages is one
of the most important steps you can take to improve your weight and
health, and this includes artificially sweetened beverages as well,
which may in fact be worse for your health than regular soda.
As you can see, the scientific evidence shows artificial sweeteners
can stimulate your appetite, increase carb cravings, stimulate fat
storage and promote weight gain just like regular soda. As noted above,
diet soda is associated with a 50 percent increased risk of obesity
while regular soda (at a rate of one can per day) is associated with a
60 percent increased risk.
In addition to that, aspartame is associated with a long list of
other harmful effects, ranging from brain damage to pre-term delivery,
while sucralose has been found to be particularly damaging to your
intestines.34,35
Unfortunately, many are still in the dark about these health risks.
Sugar also promotes unhealthy bacterial growth, and many are already
deficient in healthy bacteria due to consuming too many highly-processed
foods.
This is why I recommend eating fermented vegetables every day, or at
the very least taking a high-quality probiotic. Remember, pure water is a
zero-calorie drink. You cannot find a beverage that contains fewer
calories. If you want some flavor, just squeeze a little bit of fresh
lemon or lime into mineral water. In instances where your cooking,
baking or beverage needs a little sweetener, be mindful of your choice.
For more information, see “Sugar Substitutes — What’s Safe and What’s Not.”
Scientific evidence, including human clinical trials, has shown that beverages containing low- and zero-calorie sweeteners can be a useful tool as part of an overall weight management plan. Low-calorie sweeteners have been proven safe by worldwide government safety authorities as well as hundreds of scientific studies and there is nothing in this research that counters this well-established fact.
America's beverage companies are committed to reducing the amount of sugar and calories consumed from beverages offering a range of beverage choices - including products in smaller portions and without calories and sugar.
Scientific evidence, including human clinical trials, has shown that beverages containing low- and zero-calorie sweeteners can be a useful tool as part of an overall weight management plan. Low-calorie sweeteners have been proven safe by worldwide government safety authorities as well as hundreds of scientific studies and there is nothing in this research that counters this well-established fact.
ReplyDeleteAmerica's beverage companies are committed to reducing the amount of sugar and calories consumed from beverages offering a range of beverage choices - including products in smaller portions and without calories and sugar.