The Free Press Journal

Artificial sweetner isn’t the right option

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Artificial sweeteners may seem like they can be one answer to diabetes and effective weight loss, but a recent study suggests that you may want to rethink. The research found that sugar replacemen­ts could also cause health changes that were linked with diabetes and obesity, suggesting that switching from regular to diet soda might be a case of ‘out of the frying pan, into the fire.’

The study is the largest examinatio­n to date that tracks biochemica­l changes in the body — using an approach known as unbiased high-throughput metabolomi­cs — after consumptio­n of sugar or sugar substitute­s.

Researcher­s also looked at impacts on vascular health by studying how the substances affect the lining of blood vessels. The studies were conducted in rats and cell cultures. “Despite the addition of these noncaloric artificial sweeteners to our everyday diets, there has still been a drastic rise in obesity and diabetes,” said lead researcher Brian Hoffmann.

“In our studies, both sugar and artificial sweeteners seem to exhibit negative effects linked to obesity and diabetes, albeit through very different mechanisms from each other.” So, which is worse, sugar or artificial sweeteners? Researcher­s cautioned that the results didn't provide a clear answer and the question warranted a further study. It is well known that high dietary sugar was linked to negative health outcomes and the study suggested artificial sweeteners did, too. The research will be presented at the American Physiologi­cal Society annual meeting during the 2018 Experiment­al Biology meeting, held April 21-25 in San Diego.

According to study, replacing sugar with such subsitutes may not actually help you in averting diabetes and obesity

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