The debate over whether diet sodas are good, bad or just OK for us never seems to end.
Some research suggests zero-calorie drinks can help people cut calories and
fend off weight gain
But in recent years, the idea that artificial sweeteners may trick the brain and lead to "metabolic derangements," as one researcher has
theorized
Now, a new
study
In the paper, researchers at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel describe what happened when they fed zero-calorie sweeteners, including saccharin, aspartame and sucralose, to mice.
"To our surprise, [the mice] developed glucose intolerance," Weizmann researcher
Eran Elinav
Intrigued by the findings, Elinav and his colleague
Eran Segal
First, they analyzed data collected from a group of about 400 people who are enrolled in an ongoing
nutrition study
Next, they recruited seven volunteers — people who were not in the habit of drinking diet drinks — and asked them to start consuming the equivalent of 10-12 of those fake sugar packets during a one-week experiment.
"What we find is that a subgroup [four of the seven people] developed significant disturbances in their blood glucose even after short-term exposure to artificial sweeteners," Elinav says.
For example, results of a
glucose tolerance test
"This was a surprise to us," Elinav says.
And how it's happening may be even more surprising. Their experiments showed that artificial sweeteners can alter the mix of bacteria in the guts of mice and people in a way that can lead some to become glucose intolerant.
"I found this work exciting, because to me it's a new idea," says physician
Martin Blaser
After reading the paper, he says: "I can just tell you ... as a middle-aged man who's concerned about his diet and his waistline — and [as] somebody who drinks diet soda — I didn't drink any yesterday."
While the findings are preliminary, the paper could begin to explain why studies of diet soda point in opposite directions.
"All of us have a microbiome" made up of trillions of organisms. "[It's] extremely complex. Everybody's microbiome is a little different," Blaser says.
And the ways our microbiomes respond to what we eat can vary, too.
In the study, the Israeli researchers find that as mice and people started consuming artificial sweeteners, some types of bacteria got pushed out, and other types of bacteria began to proliferate.
It could be that for some people who responded negatively to the artificial sweetener, the bacteria that got crowded out were helping to keep glucose in check.
How it's happening isn't clear, and Blaser says a lot more research is needed.
"So that's the next step," Blaser says. "Firstly, for [researchers] to confirm this, to see if it's really true." And the next challenge is to understand the mechanism. "How does the change in the microbial composition — how is it causing this?"
Lots of researchers agree they'd like to see a large-scale study.
"It's much too early, on the basis of this one study, [to conclude that] artificial sweeteners have negative impacts on humans' [risk for diabetes]," says
James Hill
He points to a randomized controlled trial
published
Hill also points to a study of people on the
National Weight Control Registry
So expect the debate over diet sodas to continue — and also anticipate hearing more about the role of our microbiomes.
It's clear that our gut microbes are not just passive organisms hitching a ride on our bodies, says
Kirsten Tillisch
Tillisch's take on the new research: It's hypothesis-generating.
She says many patients come in asking about diet sodas. Some keep drinking them, even while complaining that diet drinks give them headaches or make them feel bloated.
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