Diet Soda and Weight Loss
Options
Replies
-
Think about what aspartame can do... Emotional Disorders... Cancer in the brain... Diabetes.... Epilepsy/Seizures.
Said "CAN" not "WILL" and I apologize to anyone who felt the need to attack me or my opinion. It sounds like you are all experts and I'm an idiot, don't worry, I won't ever post here again.
Its just inappropriate to spread misinformation. Aspartame cannot cause the things you just listed. Pointing out that you are factually incorrect is not an attack on you personally nor is it calling you an idiot. People can be wrong without being idiots. On this, you are wrong...thats okay. I can only speak for myself but for me at least I don't feel like you are an idiot.
Critisism of ones ideas is not akin to personal abuse and I certainly do not want to live in a world where it is somehow socially inappropriate to critisize ideas. I'm sorry but the idea that aspartame in some way causes brian cancer or the implication that it "may" cause brain cancer in a post of someone concerned about it is an idea worthy of critcism.
If you can't handle people questioning the ideas you put forth into a public space then perhaps you are correct that you shouldn't post in public at least until you get you build up that self-esteem. For what its worth I am sorry you felt attacked.20 -
I personally think it might vary from person to person. For me, drinking artificial sweeteners like those do spike my blood sugar levels. Not insane numbers but the spike is there.
A couple years back my BFF who is Type I diabetic tried to convince me to drop splenda, aspartame and stevia in favor of xylitol or erythritol insisting that splenda, aspartame and stevia all cause a higher jump in sugar levels. I thought he was full of it but we were both doing a Vega shake fast so I agreed to test it out while I was staying with him that week. Every morning when I woke up I took my waking blood sugar. I then drank 1 8 oz glass of homemade lemonade from the same batch made on day 1. Every day I used a different sweetener in it. I then logged my blood sugar levels 20 minutes after drinking it and again 2 hours after drinking it before I had my first shake. It's been a few years now so I don't remember the actual readings but he was right. Splenda, aspartame, stevia and even erythritol all caused an increase in my blood sugar levels. Splenda and aspartame gave me the largest spikes. I do recall that. What shocked me the most was my blood sugars dropped after drinking the lemonade with xylitol.
Of course this wasn't done by a lab but my diet was very steady and I'm confident that the sweeteners played the largest role in the blood sugar spikes I got. A few months later I tried to get my BF off the soda and did the same experiment with him, similar results but he didnt care lol. It was eye opening for me and it made sense since I already knew on days I drank diet soda I tended to have a larger appetite and eat more food. For that reason I generally avoid the diet sweeteners completely now. I treat them as a treat. Not something I have every day. I think it helps me keep cravings and appetite under control.1 -
Think about what aspartame can do... Emotional Disorders... Cancer in the brain... Diabetes.... Epilepsy/Seizures.
Said "CAN" not "WILL" and I apologize to anyone who felt the need to attack me or my opinion. It sounds like you are all experts and I'm an idiot, don't worry, I won't ever post here again.
Actually, at least one poster here is an expert on it.
And, since you said to think about what water can do? It can kill you. It's more likely to kill you than aspartame is to cause any of what you think it can.3 -
That was a quick flounce.3
-
youtube crap
And now an example of an ACTUAL source:
http://seriecientifica.org/sites/default/files/scl_enc_butchko.pdf1 -
I personally think it might vary from person to person. For me, drinking artificial sweeteners like those do spike my blood sugar levels. Not insane numbers but the spike is there.
A couple years back my BFF who is Type I diabetic tried to convince me to drop splenda, aspartame and stevia in favor of xylitol or erythritol insisting that splenda, aspartame and stevia all cause a higher jump in sugar levels. I thought he was full of it but we were both doing a Vega shake fast so I agreed to test it out while I was staying with him that week. Every morning when I woke up I took my waking blood sugar. I then drank 1 8 oz glass of homemade lemonade from the same batch made on day 1. Every day I used a different sweetener in it. I then logged my blood sugar levels 20 minutes after drinking it and again 2 hours after drinking it before I had my first shake. It's been a few years now so I don't remember the actual readings but he was right. Splenda, aspartame, stevia and even erythritol all caused an increase in my blood sugar levels. Splenda and aspartame gave me the largest spikes. I do recall that. What shocked me the most was my blood sugars dropped after drinking the lemonade with xylitol.
Of course this wasn't done by a lab but my diet was very steady and I'm confident that the sweeteners played the largest role in the blood sugar spikes I got. A few months later I tried to get my BF off the soda and did the same experiment with him, similar results but he didnt care lol. It was eye opening for me and it made sense since I already knew on days I drank diet soda I tended to have a larger appetite and eat more food. For that reason I generally avoid the diet sweeteners completely now. I treat them as a treat. Not something I have every day. I think it helps me keep cravings and appetite under control.
Did you do the necessary control of drinking the lemonade without any sweetener? Because I'm pretty sure injesting anything will spike your blood sugar momentarily, whether it is sweet or not.4 -
There was actually quite an interesting programme on the BBC here where they conducted an experiment, with admittedly small numbers but did point to saccharin causing increased blood glucose compared to stevia. There was also the suggestion that artificial sweeteners mess up gut flora. And there's been a massive interest recently in how our gut microbiome contributes to health and how it can be modulated by things like breastfeeding and diet. The field is somewhat in its infancy but interesting nonetheless.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/51yxBQyvqpNYPT3PF0LGL3G/are-artificial-sweeteners-bad-for-me0 -
So your evidence is a youtube video?
Can you explain how a methylated dipeptide causes that because that doesn't make a lot of sense to me.
In the meantime here is a metanalysis of aspartame from Critical Reviews of Toxicology:
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/104084407015161841 -
Aaron_K123 wrote: »Think about what aspartame can do... Emotional Disorders... Cancer in the brain... Diabetes.... Epilepsy/Seizures.
Said "CAN" not "WILL" and I apologize to anyone who felt the need to attack me or my opinion. It sounds like you are all experts and I'm an idiot, don't worry, I won't ever post here again.
Its just inappropriate to spread misinformation. Aspartame cannot cause the things you just listed. Pointing out that you are factually incorrect is not an attack on you personally nor is it calling you an idiot. People can be wrong without being idiots. On this, you are wrong...thats okay. I can only speak for myself but for me at least I don't feel like you are an idiot.
Critisism of ones ideas is not akin to personal abuse and I certainly do not want to live in a world where it is somehow socially inappropriate to critisize ideas. I'm sorry but the idea that aspartame in some way causes brian cancer or the implication that it "may" cause brain cancer in a post of someone concerned about it is an idea worthy of critcism.
If you can't handle people questioning the ideas you put forth into a public space then perhaps you are correct that you shouldn't post in public at least until you get you build up that self-esteem.
Sounds like you know me so well. I'm sorry, I had no idea you knew everything about me and myself. I will work on my self-esteem and I'll take all your advice. You sound like the perfect person to listen to. How dare I think anything other than your opinion. I'll also ignore the 900 case studies that made the suggestions I posted. Good luck with your life.
Actually, you got one thing right. With regards to aspartame and its effects, Aaron is the perfect person (or close to it) to listen to.5 -
So your evidence is a 7 minute youtube video then.
So the metaanalysis from Critical Reviews of Toxicology...that is just shills working for the man I assume:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17828671
Also perhaps explain to me how a methylated dipeptide that is metabolically broken down into common amino acids and methanol causes these problems that this video claims.
I also love the dangers of methanol listed. Yes, methanol is dangerous...but you get a lot more methanol from fruit juices than you do from the amount of aspartame in a 1 liter of diet coke. Methanol is found in any fermentable product (like fruits) in addition to anything that contains a methylester which will be metabolized into methanol (most things).
You get phenylalanine and aspartate "Excessively" from aspartame? What the heck? there are literally grams of phenylalanine and aspartate in chicken breasts or ANY protein, in comparison the the amount contained in a diet coke is hundreds of times lower in the range of miligrams.
Here, look, I've already done the math and broken it all down before. Don't feel like repeating myself so there is a link.
http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/1308408/why-aspartame-isnt-scary/p1
5 -
Aaron_K123 wrote: »I personally think it might vary from person to person. For me, drinking artificial sweeteners like those do spike my blood sugar levels. Not insane numbers but the spike is there.
A couple years back my BFF who is Type I diabetic tried to convince me to drop splenda, aspartame and stevia in favor of xylitol or erythritol insisting that splenda, aspartame and stevia all cause a higher jump in sugar levels. I thought he was full of it but we were both doing a Vega shake fast so I agreed to test it out while I was staying with him that week. Every morning when I woke up I took my waking blood sugar. I then drank 1 8 oz glass of homemade lemonade from the same batch made on day 1. Every day I used a different sweetener in it. I then logged my blood sugar levels 20 minutes after drinking it and again 2 hours after drinking it before I had my first shake. It's been a few years now so I don't remember the actual readings but he was right. Splenda, aspartame, stevia and even erythritol all caused an increase in my blood sugar levels. Splenda and aspartame gave me the largest spikes. I do recall that. What shocked me the most was my blood sugars dropped after drinking the lemonade with xylitol.
Of course this wasn't done by a lab but my diet was very steady and I'm confident that the sweeteners played the largest role in the blood sugar spikes I got. A few months later I tried to get my BF off the soda and did the same experiment with him, similar results but he didnt care lol. It was eye opening for me and it made sense since I already knew on days I drank diet soda I tended to have a larger appetite and eat more food. For that reason I generally avoid the diet sweeteners completely now. I treat them as a treat. Not something I have every day. I think it helps me keep cravings and appetite under control.
Did you do the necessary control of drinking the lemonade without any sweetener? Because I'm pretty sure injesting anything will spike your blood sugar momentarily, whether it is sweet or not.
Yes. The batch of lemonade I made for the "experiment" on day 1 (that I used for the remainder of the days) I drank with no sweetener. The unsweetened lemon water had very little effect on my blood sugar level. I noticed a very minor spike at 20 mine out and by 2 hours out I was back to my waking blood sugar. With all the sweeteners except xylitol I still had higher blood sugar levels 2 hours out. Granted they were nothing compared to what sugar sweetened lemonade caused (I didn't try sugar the first time but did when I did the second experiment with my bf cause he drinks a ton of sugar and I wanted him to see the difference) but the elevated levels were still evident. For the record I am pre-diabetic so that may have played a large role in my results.0 -
Aaron_K123 wrote: »I personally think it might vary from person to person. For me, drinking artificial sweeteners like those do spike my blood sugar levels. Not insane numbers but the spike is there.
A couple years back my BFF who is Type I diabetic tried to convince me to drop splenda, aspartame and stevia in favor of xylitol or erythritol insisting that splenda, aspartame and stevia all cause a higher jump in sugar levels. I thought he was full of it but we were both doing a Vega shake fast so I agreed to test it out while I was staying with him that week. Every morning when I woke up I took my waking blood sugar. I then drank 1 8 oz glass of homemade lemonade from the same batch made on day 1. Every day I used a different sweetener in it. I then logged my blood sugar levels 20 minutes after drinking it and again 2 hours after drinking it before I had my first shake. It's been a few years now so I don't remember the actual readings but he was right. Splenda, aspartame, stevia and even erythritol all caused an increase in my blood sugar levels. Splenda and aspartame gave me the largest spikes. I do recall that. What shocked me the most was my blood sugars dropped after drinking the lemonade with xylitol.
Of course this wasn't done by a lab but my diet was very steady and I'm confident that the sweeteners played the largest role in the blood sugar spikes I got. A few months later I tried to get my BF off the soda and did the same experiment with him, similar results but he didnt care lol. It was eye opening for me and it made sense since I already knew on days I drank diet soda I tended to have a larger appetite and eat more food. For that reason I generally avoid the diet sweeteners completely now. I treat them as a treat. Not something I have every day. I think it helps me keep cravings and appetite under control.
Did you do the necessary control of drinking the lemonade without any sweetener? Because I'm pretty sure injesting anything will spike your blood sugar momentarily, whether it is sweet or not.
Yes. The batch of lemonade I made for the "experiment" on day 1 (that I used for the remainder of the days) I drank with no sweetener. The unsweetened lemon water had very little effect on my blood sugar level. I noticed a very minor spike at 20 mine out and by 2 hours out I was back to my waking blood sugar. With all the sweeteners except xylitol I still had higher blood sugar levels 2 hours out. Granted they were nothing compared to what sugar sweetened lemonade caused (I didn't try sugar the first time but did when I did the second experiment with my bf cause he drinks a ton of sugar and I wanted him to see the difference) but the elevated levels were still evident. For the record I am pre-diabetic so that may have played a large role in my results.
Well aspartame is a digestable dipeptide with some caloric value (like 3 or 4 calories worth in a diet coke) so I suppose its possible that you'd get something out of it, but I'm not sure where the sugar in the spike in blood sugar comes from other than an insulin release related to consumption. If you drink or eat anything your body is going to respond to it.
But none of that matters really, if you personally find that avoiding diet soda helps you personally manage your weight then by all means you should avoid diet soda. Doesn't matter why really
The problems I have with people on this topic aren't ones you are exhibiting. You are not taking this to the point of saying "therefore its bad and everyone should avoid it". Personal experience IS useful, to the person experiencing it and that is the way you applied it. Cool.
If people want to avoid beverage Y or food X as an experiment to see if they feel better and having done so and they end up feeling better it would be silly to try to argue them out of it in my opinion.
Big leap between "I feel better personally if I avoid X" and "X will make you fat and give you cancer so I'm going to tell everyone to avoid X because its dangerous"5 -
There was actually quite an interesting programme on the BBC here where they conducted an experiment, with admittedly small numbers but did point to saccharin causing increased blood glucose compared to stevia. There was also the suggestion that artificial sweeteners mess up gut flora. And there's been a massive interest recently in how our gut microbiome contributes to health and how it can be modulated by things like breastfeeding and diet. The field is somewhat in its infancy but interesting nonetheless.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/51yxBQyvqpNYPT3PF0LGL3G/are-artificial-sweeteners-bad-for-me
To be honest microbiomes have been picked up by the public kind of like quantum physics was about 15 years ago. Public hears of a concept that has actually been around for 50 years. Public runs with it as possible explanations for X,Y,Z because "we don't know enough therefore this might be an explanation". News agencies pick up on that public interest and run stories that are entirely speculative saying "might be so" basically and get readership.
Not knowing something about X is not a reason to apply it as an explanation for Y and that is what is going on here. We don't know enough about microbiomes therefore this thing I think causes this other thing might cause it by affecting the microbiome.
Crystal power and other woo flocked to quantum physics in much the same way. It was wierd and hard to understand and therefore became the place to put their ideas that science had thusfar not validated. Now, with biology, suddenly a lot of these claims of toxins and dangers associated with GMOs and Aspartame and Vaccines are hung on the microbiome in much the same way. So far no study conducted for toxicology has actually validated our claims but we don't know enough about the microbiome so I bet that is the cause. They want X to be the cause of Y and are actively looking for places where that causal link might be hiding. Its the opposite of what good scientific approach is and is pure bias.
Not saying articles like the one you posted aren't necessarily a good read, but these days when I see "microbiome" in the public sphere it just seems like hand-waving to try to put something science-sounding in place of saying "we don't know"3 -
I just worry about overall kidney health. I'm a person with one kidney and I remember my doctor telling me if I were to drink a soda make it a real one. Seriously if you are working so hard to look good on the outside..... learn what can damage your insides. Diet soda is not good for you one bit. Yeah it has no calories, however, do you find that weird at all based on the colour and taste of your drink? Chemicals are rank......1
-
I just worry about overall kidney health. I'm a person with one kidney and I remember my doctor telling me if I were to drink a soda make it a real one. Seriously if you are working so hard to look good on the outside..... learn what can damage your insides. Diet soda is not good for you one bit. Yeah it has no calories, however, do you find that weird at all based on the colour and taste of your drink? Chemicals are rank......
Aspartame does not cause kidney damage, at least not anymore than chickenbreasts and orange juice does.6 -
Aspartame causes me to have headaches & it increases my appetite.0
-
I just worry about overall kidney health. I'm a person with one kidney and I remember my doctor telling me if I were to drink a soda make it a real one. Seriously if you are working so hard to look good on the outside..... learn what can damage your insides. Diet soda is not good for you one bit. Yeah it has no calories, however, do you find that weird at all based on the colour and taste of your drink? Chemicals are rank......
Why would the color and taste make it weird?0 -
Aaron _k123
Thank you for your opinion but are you a doctor? Um, no is my guess. Or do you specialize in kidney health? Um no is my guess. Or do you read stuff on the Web and take it as gospel? Yes, would be my guess.
My kidney health is fantastic. Just sayin...maybe cause I drink water... lol.... I don't know...
Have you tested your kidneys? Probably not...
What I wrote was for people to read and think about. But thank you for your response.1 -
Aaron _k123
Thank you for your opinion but are you a doctor? Um, no is my guess. Or do you specialize in kidney health? Um no is my guess. Or do you read stuff on the Web and take it as gospel? Yes, would be my guess.
My kidney health is fantastic. Just sayin...maybe cause I drink water... lol.... I don't know...
Have you tested your kidneys? Probably not...
What I wrote was for people to read and think about. But thank you for your response.
Well, he's not an md but he has a pH.d5 -
DeficitDuchess wrote: »Aspartame causes me to have headaches & it increases my appetite.
Okay. Well avoid it then. Are you advising the OP they should also avoid it because it causes you headaches and increases your appetite?1
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 391.7K Introduce Yourself
- 43.5K Getting Started
- 259.7K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.6K Food and Nutrition
- 47.3K Recipes
- 232.3K Fitness and Exercise
- 394 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.4K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 152.7K Motivation and Support
- 7.8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.3K MyFitnessPal Information
- 23 News and Announcements
- 954 Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.3K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions