Do Artificial Sweeteners Induce Sugar Cravings?

August 19, 2007

This is an interesting follow-up question on post #83: Diet Sodas and Metabolic Risks: “I have heard that the intense sweet flavor of artificial sweeteners signals the body that there are a lot of carbohydrates coming. Since the diet soft drink provides none, a craving for them may be stimulated - hence the weight gain associated with sodas, diet or not. Have you heard this explanation before?”

Indeed, I have. I’ve seen a couple of studies suggesting that artificial sweeteners encourage the taste for sweet. I think these are preliminary and need further confirmation but the idea is consistent with trends. As I explain in the chapter on diet drinks in What to Eat, rates of overweight have risen in parallel with the increase in use of artificial sweeteners, so on a population basis, the chemicals don’t seem to do any good for weight trends. Individuals may find them helpful to control calorie intake, but on average most people seem to compensate–and overcompensate–for calorie savings from artificial sweeteners. After all, a teaspoon of sugar is only 16 calories and it doesn’t take much to compensate. When it comes to food, I don’t like anything artificial and I don’t like the way artificial sweeteners taste, so they are pretty low on my recommended list. I much prefer sugar, especially the brown crystalline kind.


5 Comments

  1. When I was in college in the 80s, I waitressed at the local Friendly’s restaurant, a sandwich and ice cream shop. I used to find it ironic when customers (usually on the large side) would order the largest sundaes on the menu (4-5 scoops of ice cream plus several sweet toppings) and a large TAB diet soda.

    Comment by Anna — August 20, 2007 @ 12:52 pm

  2. I agree! And aspartame is potentially unsafe (although the FDA fails to recognize these studies) & Splenda has no long term human studies.

    Moderate sugar-in-the-raw for all!

    Comment by drea — April 30, 2008 @ 6:02 pm

  3. What is your take on Stevia? I use that to make desserts/drinks for my friend who has type 1 diabetes. I prefer that to other artificial sweetners.

    Comment by Antoinette — May 8, 2008 @ 3:38 pm

  4. I talk about Stevia in my book, What to Eat, and also on a blog post that you can find if you click on the cloud listing for Sweeteners. I don’t think anything has changed since the last post. Thanks for asking.

    Comment by Marion — May 12, 2008 @ 11:33 am

  5. I did just find the post stating that coke was patenting for stevia use in other countries. Also I got the book today and am looking forward to it! Thank you for the response.

    Comment by Antoinette — May 12, 2008 @ 10:40 pm

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