Natural Sweetener News
   
 
  What Should We Know About Xylitol?
Xylitol is a sweetener found in many fruits and vegetables and is even produced by the human body during its normal metabolism of glucose.
 
   
 

Consumers Turning Back to Real Sugar (Sucrose) Safety, Taste, Baking Use, and All Natural Attributes Cited by Consumers

 
   
 

Stevia: Not Ready For Prime Time
More Research Needed To Answer Safety Questions About “Natural” Sweetener

 
   
 

Organic Consumers Association Urges California Attorney General to Investigate Splenda Advertising Campaign

 
   
 

Saccharine (Sweet 'N Low)
This product is 200 - 500 times sweeter than cane sugar, and thus very little is needed to properly sweeten foods.

 
   
 

Xylitol Candy - A Refreshing New Product Idea Crystallised Xylitol with a distinctive taste and mouth feel

 
   
 

Stevia Trouble Toxicologists Stevioside “seems to affect the male reproductive organ system,”

 
   
 

NIH Study Examines the Efficacy and Safety of Glucosamine and Chondroitin in Promoting Knee Joint Health

 
   
 

Splenda:
With increasing awareness about the dangers of chemical
sugar substitutes such as aspartame

 
   
 
 

Drink More Diet Soda, Gain More Weight?

Overweight Risk Soars 41% With Each Daily Can of Diet Soft Drink

June 13, 2005 -- People who drink diet soft drinks don't lose weight. In fact, they gain weight, a new study shows.

The findings come from eight years of data collected by Sharon P. Fowler, MPH, and colleagues at the University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio . Fowler reported the data at the annual meeting of the American Diabetes Association in San Diego .

"What didn't surprise us was that total soft drink use was linked to overweight and obesity," Fowler tells WebMD . "What was surprising was when we looked at people only drinking diet soft drinks, their risk of obesity was even higher."

In fact, when the researchers took a closer look at their data, they found that nearly all the obesity risk from soft drinks came from diet sodas.

"There was a 41% increase in risk of being overweight for every can or bottle of diet soft drink a person consumes each day," Fowler says.


More Diet Drinks, More Weight Gain
Fowler's team looked at seven to eight years of data on 1,550 Mexican-American and non-Hispanic white Americans aged 25 to 64. Of the 622 study participants who were of normal weight at the beginning of the study, about a third became overweight or obese.

For regular soft-drink drinkers, the risk of becoming overweight or obese was:

•  26% for up to 1/2 can each day
•  30.4% for 1/2 to one can each day
•  32.8% for 1 to 2 cans each day
•  47.2% for more than 2 cans each day.

For diet soft-drink drinkers, the risk of becoming overweight or obese was:

•  36.5% for up to 1/2 can each day
•  37.5% for 1/2 to one can each day
•  54.5% for 1 to 2 cans each day
•  57.1% for more than 2 cans each day.

For each can of diet soft drink consumed each day, a person's risk of obesity went up 41%.

Fowler is quick to note that a study of this kind does not prove that diet soda causes obesity. More likely, she says, it shows that something linked to diet soda drinking is also linked to obesity.

"One possible part of the explanation is that people who see they are beginning to gain weight may be more likely to switch from regular to diet soda," Fowler suggests. "But despite their switching, their weight may continue to grow for other reasons. So diet soft-drink use is a marker for overweight and obesity."