Date post: | 01-Dec-2014 |
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Health & Medicine |
Upload: | chelsea-obrien |
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Artificial
Sweeteners... This might make you
queasy
www.bingeeatingbreakthrough.com
If you're like me or one of the millions of people around the globe that use
artificial sweeteners in order to avoid consuming excess calories (and
perhaps shed a few pounds), the latest research might make you queasy.
The science journal, Nature, recently
published a comprehensive study
completed by a team of scientists from the
Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel.
They studied mice and humans, and were
initially surprised by their results. So they
repeated their studies multiple times.
Their studies
showed each time
that artificial
sweeteners could
very likely raise your
blood sugar levels
MORE than if you
simply ate sugar -
sweetened desserts
and sodas.
Segal and Elinav, two scientists from the group, added saccharin, sucralose,
or aspartame to the drinking water of mice and found that their blood sugar
levels were higher than those of mice who drank sugar water no matter
whether the animals were on a normal diet or a highfat diet.
When the sweetener fed mice were given antibiotics to clear their gut of
bacteria, their blood sugar levels dropped back down to normal.
The scientists also studied nearly 400 people and found the bacteria in the guts of those
who ate and drank artificial sweeteners were different from those who did not. People who
used artificial sweeteners also tended to have higher fasting blood sugar levels and
impaired blood sugar tolerance.
Finally, the researchers recruited seven volunteers, five men and two women, who normally
didn’t eat or drink products with artificial sweeteners and followed them for a week, tracking
their blood sugar levels. The volunteers were given the FDA’s maximum acceptable daily
intake of saccharin from day two through day seven. By the end of the week, blood sugar
levels had risen in four of the seven people.
What does this mean for you?
In laymen's terms, this means that the diet stuff might be what's causing your weight to
increase...and your cravings for sweet stuff to get stronger.
If you notice that you've been using sweeteners or drinking diet soda but it doesn't seem to
be helping you lose weight or curb your urges to binge on sweet stuff, then you're likely
someone who's blood sugar is affected by sweeteners and not in the way you want it to be.
I obsessively used sweeteners for 14 years,
refusing to believe any of the negative hype about
them. No matter how much my family or friends
suggested that the fake sugars were doing more
harm than good, I was certain that they were
helping me to maintain or lose weight.
They were the way I tried to make up for binge
eating...if I used nocalorie sweeteners and drank
diet soda to fast for a day after a binge, surely it
would balance out.
After 3 years of gaining weight from this, I could no longer deny that this was not working.
Even a year after breaking my habit with binging, I still would find myself pining for sweets
every night before bed. It didn't matter if I was full from dinner I still wanted something
sweet. And my weight wasn't shifting though I was no longer binging.
The huge insight came while traveling in Italy. I decided to eat gelato and desserts
while I was there, since I would return to "normal" after a few weeks. Eating sugar was
something I'd avoided for so long, I expected I would go nuts and be unstoppable.
To my surprise, I discovered how satisfied I was after eating desserts...and normal portions of
them. For all the years of avoiding eating sugar, I'd overeaten sugar free foods. How ironic that
eating sugar would help me achieve what I'd wanted all along: to feel satisfied and at peace
with food.
Eating tons of sugar is not the key, but switching to sugar from sugar free was the turning point.
Our bodies know how to metabolize minimal amounts of sugar; it's gobs of chemically
concocted pseudosugar that it doesn't know what to do with.
Thanks to references from WebMD for this article, originally posted here:
http://www.webmd.com/diet/news/20140917/artificialsweetenersbloodsugar?page=2
For useful support to help with sugar addiction or binge eating (and if conventional advice
hasn't worked for you), get a FREE course and further resources at
http://www.bingeeatingbreakthrough.com.