{"id":1198,"date":"2006-06-10T18:27:18","date_gmt":"2006-06-10T18:27:18","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/drconnieamundson.com\/?p=1198"},"modified":"2006-06-10T18:27:18","modified_gmt":"2006-06-10T18:27:18","slug":"artificial-sweeteners","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/heartmountainchiropractic.com\/es\/artificial-sweeteners\/","title":{"rendered":"Artificial Sweeteners (June 2006)"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong><em>What are  artificial sweeteners?<br \/> <\/em><\/strong>Artificial sweeteners<strong> <\/strong>are low calorie substances used to replace sugar  and other caloric sweeteners.  Some  common artificial sweeteners include:  Aspartame (Equal, Nutrasweet);  Acesulfame K (Sunette, Sweet One); Saccharin; Sucralose (Splenda); Xylitol;  Sorbital; Maltilol<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>Where are artificial sweeteners found?<br \/> <\/em><\/strong>Artificial  sweeteners are found in many foods.  Some  common products that contain artificial sweeteners include, but are not limited  to, chewing gum [some gums contain 3-4 artificial and non-artificial  sweeteners], chewable vitamins, drinks, toothpaste, mouth wash, cereals, candy,  and \u201csugar free\u201d items.  Check your  ingredient labels.<\/p>\n<h2>Why should I avoid artificial sweeteners?<\/h2>\n<p><strong>Saccharin<\/strong> has had a very controversial past. The FDA  tried to ban it in 1977 because some animal studies showed that it caused  cancer (mainly bladder cancer, but also uterine, ovarian, skin, and others).  Saccharin stayed on the market because of pressure from the diet food industry  (and the dieters themselves). However, it carried a warning label that stated  it had been shown to cause cancer in laboratory animals until the late 1990s.  In 2000, the National  Cancer Institute [NCI] stated that people who were  heavy saccharin users (six or more servings of saccharin or two or more 8-ounce  servings of diet drink daily) had \u00absome evidence of an increased risk of  bladder cancer, particularly for those who heavily ingested the sweetener as a  tabletop sweetener or through diet sodas.\u00bb Because of this study and other  research with laboratory animals, it was decided that saccharin was not a major  risk factor for bladder cancer in humans.   We cannot explain this \u201clogic\u201d.<\/p>\n<p>Research in animals has shown that <strong>Sucralose<\/strong>, commonly known as  Splenda, can cause many problems such as shrunken thymus glands (up to 40  percent shrinkage), enlarged liver and kidneys, atrophy of lymph follicles in  the spleen and thymus, reduced growth rate, decreased red blood cell count,  hyperplasia of the pelvis, extension of the pregnancy period, aborted  pregnancy, decreased fetal body weights and placental weights, and  diarrhea. <br \/> <em>-Ecologist Online, Life After Aspartame, Sept 8, 2005<\/em><br \/> <em>-Food  and Drug Administration \u00abFinal Rule \u00bb for Sucralose, 21 CFR Part 172,  Docket No. 87F-0086.<\/em><br \/> <em>-Lord  GH, Newberne PM. Renal mineralization &#8212; a ubiquitous lesion in chronic rat  studies.<\/em><br \/> <em>&#8211;  Food Chem Toxicol 1990 Jun;28:449-55.<\/em><br \/> <em>-Labare MP, Alexander M. Microbial co-metabolism of  sucralose, a chlorinated disaccharide, in environmental samples. Appl Microbiol  Biotechnol. 1994 Oct;42:173-8. <\/em><br \/> <em>-Hunter BT. Sucralose. Consumers&#8217; Research Magazine, Oct90,  Vol. 73 Issue 10, p8, 2p.<\/em><br \/> <em>-Sucralose &#8212; a new artificial sweetener. Medical Letter on  Drugs &amp; Therapeutics, 07\/03\/98, Vol. 40, Issue 1030, p67, 2p.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><strong>Aspartame<\/strong>, which is sold commercially as Equal  and NutraSweet consists of three components: Aspartic acid, Methanol, and  Phenylalanine.  These components break  down into formaldehyde, formic acid and diketopiperazine, a chemical which can  cause brain tumors.  All of these  substances are known to be toxic to humans.   A seven-year study in which rats were given the equivalent of four to five  bottles a day for a human indicated that aspartame consumption correlates with  high rates of leukemias, lymphomas, and other cancers in rats.  However, the carcinogenic effect of aspartame  was found at levels as low as 20 milligrams a day for humans, which is far less  than current daily limits in America  at 50 milligrams and the UK  at 40 milligrams.<br \/> <em>-New York Times, The Lowdown on Sweet, Feb 12, 2006<strong><br \/> <\/strong><\/em><em>-Environmental<strong> <\/strong>Health  Prospectives<strong>, <\/strong><\/em><em>First Experimental  Demonstration of the Multipotential Carcinogenic Effects of Aspartame  Administered in the Feed to Sprague-Dawley Rats, <\/em><em>March 2006; 114(3): 379-385<\/em><br \/> <em>-News  Target, The Link Between Aspartame and Brain Tumors: What the FDA Never Told  You About Artificial Sweeteners, Sept 22, 2005<\/em><\/p>\n<h2><strong>Independent  research finds problems with aspartame<\/strong>.<\/h2>\n<p>An analysis of peer reviewed medical literature  using MEDLINE and other databases was conducted by Ralph G. Walton, MD,  Chairman, The Center for Behavioral Medicine, Professor of Clinical Psychiatry,  Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine. Dr. Walton analyzed 164  studies which were felt to have relevance to human safety questions. Of the 90  non-industry-sponsored (independent) studies, 83 (92%) identified one or more  problems with aspartame. Of the 74 aspartame industry-sponsored studies, all 74  (100%) claimed that no problems were found with aspartame.  There appears to be  more controversy over the safety of aspartame than any other artificial  sweetener. As of 1995 when the FDA was quoted as saying they stopped  accepting adverse reaction reports on aspartame, over 75% of the adverse  reactions reported to the FDA Adverse Reaction Monitoring System (ARMS) were  due to aspartame.  In addition, the FDA  believes that only about 1% of adverse reactions  [whether drug or food product related] are actually reported.<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>Are there any artificial sweeteners or sugar  substitutes that are safe?<\/em><\/strong><br \/> Substitute Stevia<strong>, <\/strong>an  herbal leaf that tastes like an artificial sweetener. The crude Stevia leaves  and herbal powder (green) are reported to be 10-15 times sweeter than table  sugar. The refined extracts of Stevia called steviosides claim to be 200-300  times sweeter than table sugar.  It does not affect glucose levels like sugar nor  does it have the side effects of artificial sweeteners, and it is safe for  diabetics. As with any  food, Diabetics should always check their glucose when consuming a new food  product.  Some substances can cause a  certain individuals glucose to spike whereas it may not affect others.  Stevia is virtually calorie free and totally  natural, and it can be found in most health stores.<strong> <\/strong><em>-San Francisco Independent Media   Center, Stevia: The  Best and Safest Natural Sweetener, Nov 4, 2002 <br \/> <\/em><\/p>\n<h2>Mixed Communication?<\/h2>\n<p>What  is a person to believe?  You hear from  the natural healthcare community that artificial sweeteners are bad and then  you hear from the FDA that artificial sweeteners are safe.  Are we getting all worked up over  nothing?  The fact that on average, in the US, men have a  1 in 2 lifetime risk of developing cancer and women, a 1 in 3 risk is not what we would consider\u2026\u201cnothing\u201d.  In fact, in 1999 cancer was the 2nd  leading cause of death in the US,  exceeded only by heart disease. [National Institutes of Health [NIH] and NCI Science Education Teachers  Handbook Grades 9-12, 1999].  Cancer is now the #1 cause of death. Billions of tax payer dollars are used each year to fund  cancer research.  In fact, The NCI\u2019s  investment in kidney cancer research has increased from $19.2 million in fiscal  year 2000 to an estimated $30.5 million in fiscal year 2005.  THIS IS ONLY ONE TYPE OF CANCER!  Only about 10% of those dollars goes to  prevention.<\/p>\n<p>However, the NCI\u2019s idea of  \u201cprevention\u201d is more testing\/early detection\u2026it has nothing to do with actual  prevention at all.  Early  detection is not \u201cprevention\u201d nor does it correlate with decrease in  mortality.  You have to watch these  cancer \u201cstatistics\u201d carefully.  While  cancer diagnosis is increasing, the NIH and NCI will state that cancer deaths  are reducing.  However, the <em>Journal of American Medical Association<\/em> [<em>Vol. 283 No. 22, June 14, 2000<\/em>]  stated that \u201c<em>Although 5-year survival is  a valid measure for comparing cancer therapies in a randomized  trial, our analysis shows that changes in 5-year survival over time  bear little relationship to changes in cancer mortality. Instead,  they appear primarily related to changing patterns of diagnosis.\u201d <\/em>Basically,  they may be detecting it earlier with their \u201ctesting\u201d but overall outcome  [death] is virtually unchanged.<\/p>\n<p>We have  increased consumption of artificial sweeteners over the last 70 years, greatly  increased funding of cancer research, cancer diagnosis continues to rise as  well as mortality rates.  Still think  we\u2019re getting all worked up over \u201cnothing\u201d?   Please don\u2019t misinterpret\u2026artificial sweeteners aren\u2019t the only culprit  in the cancer battle but they absolutely put a large \u201cchink\u201d in your  armor.  How much abuse can your body take  before it gives into disease?<\/p>\n<h2>SIMPLE LOGIC: Are You Losing Weight?<\/h2>\n<p>The pressing issue is understanding the fact that artificial  sweeteners have not helped us keep our weight down.  According to Consumers&#8217; Research Magazine  \u00ab<strong>There is no clear-cut evidence that sugar substitutes are useful in  weight reduction. On the contrary, there is some evidence that these substances  may stimulate appetite<\/strong>.\u00bb In fact, it was found in research funded by  The National Institute of Child Health and Development, National Institute of  Digestive Diseases and Kidney Disorders, and Purdue School of Liberal Arts,  that drinking diet soft drinks might actually be part of the problem. Professors  in the Department of Psychological Sciences found that artificial sweeteners  may interfere with the body&#8217;s natural ability to \u00abcount\u00bb calories.  Our bodies&#8217; ability to match how many calories we need with how many calories  we take in is partially based on how sweet a food is. The sweeter and denser it  is, the higher it is in calories. Our bodies use this as a gauge to tell us  when to stop eating.<\/p>\n<p>So, we have increased obesity, consumption of artificial  sweeteners, greatly increased funding of cancer research, cancer diagnosis  continues to rise as well as mortality rates.   We hope after reading this article that you are starting to get worked  up over \u201cnothing\u201d.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>What are artificial sweeteners? Artificial sweeteners are low calorie substances used to replace sugar and other caloric sweeteners. Some common artificial sweeteners include: Aspartame (Equal, Nutrasweet); Acesulfame K (Sunette, Sweet One); Saccharin; Sucralose (Splenda); Xylitol; Sorbital; Maltilol Where are artificial sweeteners found? Artificial sweeteners are found in many foods. Some common products that contain artificial [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_et_pb_use_builder":"","_et_pb_old_content":"","_et_gb_content_width":""},"categories":[7],"tags":[],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v19.6.1 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Artificial Sweeteners (June 2006) - heartmountainchiropractic.com<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/heartmountainchiropractic.com\/es\/artificial-sweeteners\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"es_ES\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Artificial Sweeteners (June 2006) - heartmountainchiropractic.com\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"What are artificial sweeteners? Artificial sweeteners are low calorie substances used to replace sugar and other caloric sweeteners. Some common artificial sweeteners include: Aspartame (Equal, Nutrasweet); Acesulfame K (Sunette, Sweet One); Saccharin; Sucralose (Splenda); Xylitol; Sorbital; Maltilol Where are artificial sweeteners found? Artificial sweeteners are found in many foods. 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