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Calorie-conscious
consumers who opt for diet sodas may gain more weight than if
they drank sugary drinks because of artificial sweeteners contained in
the diet sodas, according to a new study.
Story

A Purdue University study
released Sunday in the journal Behavioral Neuroscience reported that
rats on diets containing the artificial sweetener saccharin gained more
weight than rats given sugary food, casting doubt on the benefits of
low-calorie sweeteners.
"There's something about diet
foods that changes your metabolic limit, your brain chemistry," said ABC
News' medical contributor Dr. Marie Savard.
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"The truth is, if you're consuming a drink or more a day,
you know it. You know that you're taking it, and you really
have to think about eliminating it." |
Though Savard said more
research needs to be done to uncover more information, the study does
hint at the idea that the sweeteners alter a person's metabolism.
Savard said another recent
study, which included more than 18,000 people, found healthy adults who
consumed at least one diet drink a day could increase their chance for
weight gain.
In the Purdue study, the rats
whose diets contained artificial sweeteners appeared to experience a
physiological connection between sweet tastes and calories, which drove
them to overeat.
"The taste buds taste sweet,
but there's no calorie load that comes with it. There's a mismatch here.
It seems it changes your brain chemistry in some way," Savard said.
"Anything you put in your mouth, your body has a strong reaction to it.
It's much more than counting calories. It seems normally with sweet
foods that we rev up our metabolism."
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""The taste buds taste sweet, but there's no calorie load
that comes with it. There's a mismatch here. It seems it
changes your brain chemistry in some way,"" |
The information may come as a
surprise to the 59 percent of Americans who consume diet soft drinks,
making them the the second-most-popular low-calorie, sugar-free products
in the nation, according to a consumer survey from the Calorie Control
Council, a nonprofit association that represents the low-calorie and
reduced-fat food and beverage industry.
Because so many foods today
contain artificial sweeteners, the study results may go beyond diet
drinks.
"The truth is, we're putting
artificial sweetener in so many different things in water, in yogurt,"
Savard said. It's unclear if the results only adhere to diet sodas, she
said.
"We have to rethink what this
artificial stuff does to us. If we put this in water it might not be so
good," she added.
The Calorie Control Council
issued a statement that disagreed with the findings of the Purdue study
and noted that past studies indicated low-calorie sweeteners benefit
weight control.
But Savard said people who
consume a drink or more a day should think about cutting back their
consumption.
"The truth is, if you're
consuming a drink or more a day, you know it. You know that you're
taking it, and you really have to think about eliminating it. You're
probably the very person who needs to change those health behaviors to
prevent the diabetes, heart disease and stroke," Savard said.
"If you're just taking it
once in a while, fine -- no big deal. If you're consuming one or more
drinks a day, you should rethink what you're doing. You might be
negating the whole reason in the first place."
Source:
ABC News.com
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