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Re: Artificial sweeteners linked to two fold increase in diabetes

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Re: Artificial sweeteners linked to two fold increase in diabetes

Tiger Lily04 Jul 2009 03:52
much snipped.........
> Why do you assume "obese" people eat a "large order of fast food?"  

as a person who hasn't had 'fast food' as a rule (ok, once or twice a
year, i have a Peter's Hamburger, with only the bottom bun) and i
subsequently went from 125/135 lbs and gained 100 lbs over 3 years due
to untreated hypothyroid.............. i'm curious about this too

oddly enough, the people i have met at 'fast food' joints are skinny
folk who don't have to count/care (ok, maybe 0.5% are overweight, but
not the majority that i've seen)

kate

Peppermint Patootie04 Jul 2009 02:09
> >>The association may reflect the increased use of artificial sweeteners
> >>by obese and/or diabetic study participants. "This is a cross-section
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
>
> Cheri

Why do you assume "obese" people eat a "large order of fast food?"  

PP

Cheri03 Jul 2009 16:39
>>The association may reflect the increased use of artificial sweeteners
>>by obese and/or diabetic study participants. "This is a cross-section
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
> In fact it makes more sense to suggest that people who are obese look
> towards artificial sweeteners to reduce their calorie intake.

Yep...as we have all noticed, the large order of fast food, with a diet
soda. It's better than the sugared soda though, since that just adds more
calories to an already calorie laden order, which if using regular soda
could account for more pounds gained over time. I never was a big soda
drinker at all, but I do prefer the taste of diet soda over regular soda
when I have one.

Cheri

Quentin Grady03 Jul 2009 05:50
>The association may reflect the increased use of artificial sweeteners
>by obese and/or diabetic study participants. "This is a cross-section
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
>researcher with the Clinical Research Branch at the National Institute
>of Aging (NIA), National Institutes of Health (NIH).

In fact it makes more sense to suggest that people who are obese look
towards artificial sweeteners to reduce their calorie intake.
Signature

Quentin Grady       ^  ^  /
New Zealand,       >#,#< [
                   / \ /\    
"... and the blind dog was leading."

http://homepages.paradise.net.nz/quentin


Susan24 Jun 2009 21:56
This is association, not established causation.

Susan

Artificial Sweeteners Linked to Two-Fold Increase in Diabetes

People who use artificial sweeteners are heavier, more likely to have
diabetes, and more likely to be insulin-resistant compared with nonusers.
Results show an inverse association between obesity and diabetes, on one
side, and daily total caloric, carbohydrate, and fat intake, on the
other side, when comparing artificial sweetener users and control subjects.

The association may reflect the increased use of artificial sweeteners
by obese and/or diabetic study participants. "This is a cross-section
study, so there are limitations — we cannot say that artificial
sweetener use causes obesity, we can say it is associated with it,"
stated first author Kristofer S. Gravenstein, a postbaccalaureate
researcher with the Clinical Research Branch at the National Institute
of Aging (NIA), National Institutes of Health (NIH).

******Artificial sweeteners activate sweet taste receptors in
enteroendocrine cells, leading to the release of incretin, which is
known to contribute to glucose absorption. Recent epidemiologic studies
in Circulation (2008;117:754-761) and Obesity (2008;16:1894-1900) showed
an association between diet soda consumption and the development of
obesity and metabolic syndrome.*****

This report tested whether participants in the Baltimore Longitudinal
Study of Aging (BLSA), which began in 1958, differ in anthropometric
measures, daily caloric intake, and glucose status, separating them into
three different groups: artificial sweetener users, artificial sweetener
nonusers, or controls.

A total of 1,257 participants, with a mean age of 64.8 years (range, 21
- 96 years), had data on self-reported 7-day dietary intake, 2-hour oral
glucose tolerance test (OGTT), and anthropometric measures. The major
artificial sweetener consumed was aspartame, preferred by 66% of BLSA
participants, followed by saccharin (13%), sucralose (1.0%), and
combinations of the three (21%).

"In our study, we were actually able to isolate what type of sweetener
was used at a certain point in time, as we used food diaries, and not
food questionnaires."

"When we first did this analysis, we found that people ate more fat
before 1983, which is the year [of] a big increase in artificial
sweetener consumption in the American population — it was actually when
aspartame was approved and diet Coke was introduced," he explained.

******As a result, the study further analyzed data from a subset of
participants, starting in 1983. Compared with 550 people who did not use
artificial sweeteners, the 443 people who did were younger, heavier, and
had a higher body mass index (BMI), yet they did not consume more
calories from people who did not use artificial sweeteners. Fat,
carbohydrate, protein, and total caloric intake were not different
between the two groups (users vs nonusers).******

Furthermore, Mr. Gravenstein noted that people who used artificial
sweeteners "were less likely to have a normal OGTT, or they were less
likely to be diagnosed as having a normal glucose homeostasis."

In terms of glucose status (the impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), and/or
impaired fasting glucose (IFG)) the data show that artificial sweetener
users "were not different than the prediabetics, i.e., they had the same
prevalence of prediabetes," he said, adding that "in our population,
people who used artificial sweeteners were twice as likely to have
diabetes, 8.8% compared to 4.4% for controls."

Analyzing the data further, the investigators focused on a
subpopulation, in which fasting insulin values were available from 374
nonusers and 311 artificial sweetener users. The users had a higher
fasting glucose levels, higher fasting insulin levels, and a higher
measure of insulin resistance, as measured by the homeostasis model
assessment, but glycosylated hemoglobin A1c levels were similar between
the two groups.

The researchers suggest an alternative hypothesis, that artificial
sweeteners modulate the metabolic rate through enteroendocrine cells,
therefore contributing to the development of diabetes and/or obesity.
However, this hypothesis needs further testing in longitudinal analysis
and intervention studies, said the investigators.

"Also, it could be that artificial sweeteners are causing diabetes, or
it could be that there is a higher use of them because a lot of
physicians actually recommend people to use artificial sweeteners to
prevent diabetes" Mr. Gravenstein said. The researchers are planning to
address this question with a prospective analysis.

Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Endocrine Society: Abstract
P2-478. Presented June 11, 2009

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