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Are your “sugar-free” choices really helping you, or quietly sabotaging your goals? With over 43 names for artificial and low ...
Study shows aspartame affects gut microbiome and gene expression in glioblastoma, highlighting potential links to cancer ...
High-protein snacks are all the rage these days, but is high protein actually healthy? Dietitians reveal whether ...
Sweet tooth or not, it’s all too easy to consume more added sugar than we realize. It sneaks in through unexpected sources ...
BlueTree’s tech cuts sugar in juice by up to 30% - no sweeteners, no compromise on taste. Now expanding into dairy and beer ...
When you’re looking for a sweet treat, you often have two options: eat something with real sugar or something with an artificial sweetener. This isn’t entirely the case, though, according to ...
When you’re looking for a sweet treat, you often have two options: eat something with real sugar or something with an artificial sweetener. This isn’t entirely the case, though, according to ...
When you’re looking for a sweet treat, you often have two options: eat something with real sugar or something with an artificial sweetener. When it comes to sugar, it’s hard to ignore that, when ...
And because sugar substitutes or artificial sweeteners come in such different forms, it makes the health benefit-risk profile even harder to pin down. Here's what to know.
Yes, they can. Artificial sweeteners are just as sweet — and sometimes, up to 700 times sweeter — than regular sugar, but they have no calories and don’t affect your blood sugar (glucose).
Saccharin, the artificial sweetener used in diet foods like yogurts and sugar-free drinks, can kill multidrug-resistant bacteria—including one of the world's most dangerous pathogens.
Sucralose, an artificial sweetener that’s often found in low- and no-calorie sweeteners and diet drinks, boosted feelings of hunger instead of curbing appetite, a large new study found.