Sweet: the quest for a sugar alternative
Sweet: the quest for a sugar alternative
https://theconversation.com/sweet-the-quest-for-a-sugar-alternative-277770
Publish Date: 2026-05-15 10:46:00
Source Domain: theconversation.com
- Sweetened trials highlight the complexities of replacing sugar in food and its influence on taste, texture, and health outcomes.
- Sweeteners, once niche, are now ubiquitous and central to debates on obesity, diabetes, and nutrition.
- Sweeteners range from “artificial” compounds like aspartame to natural options like stevia and monk fruit; each has trade-offs.
- The World Health Organization recently advised against sweeteners for weight control or disease prevention due to mixed evidence, contrasting with randomized trials that show promising outcomes.
- Mechanistic, observational, and randomized controlled trials provide differing insights into sweeteners’ effects on the body, revealing gaps in fully understanding their impact on health.
- Randomized controlled trials suggest that replacing sugar with sweeteners lowers blood sugar and insulin spikes without increasing appetite or energy intake, and may aid in weight management.
- Concerns about sweeteners, like aspartame being “possibly carcinogenic,” lack strong human evidence at current consumption levels.
- Future research focuses on long-term effects, especially on specific populations like children and diabetics, and the development of better sweetener blends via advanced technologies like artificial intelligence.