Guest guest Posted December 29, 2006 Report Share Posted December 29, 2006 Different Chemicals in Sweetners Have Different Risks Dec 29th - 8:41am http://www.wtopnews.com/index.php?nid=106 & sid=1017702 (U-WIRE) NEW YORK -- There are a lot of pies and cookies to be baked and eaten this holiday season, and a lot of warm beverages waiting to be sipped with them. It is not just the candy canes and sugar plums that dance in our heads, but the sweetness accompanied with the treats. Yet, at 25 calories per tablespoon, sugar is often avoided by most dieters due to its empty calories, and sometimes replaced with a calorie-free sweetener. " Calorie-free " may have a nice ring to it, but unless it's describing water, it does not necessarily mean " healthy. " If you think you are doing your body a favor by opting for a non-nutritive sweetener, cue the Price is Right " you just lost all of your money, grandma " music and think again. Those blue, yellow, and pink packets may have a hazardous effect on your long-term health. The yellow packet, Splenda, or Sucralose is " made from sugar, so it tastes like sugar " according to manufacturers Tate and Lyle. Indeed, part of Splenda comes from the sugar compound, but bonded to the sugar is a chlorine atom. Since chlorine is difficult for the human body to digest, the sugar molecule bonded to the chlorine is not absorbed into the blood stream as easily. If the sugar cannot be absorbed, neither can the calories. However, over exposure to chlorine can cause side-effects that range in extremities from hives to cancer. Aspartame is the main ingredient in diabetic products and diet soda because it is calorie free and sugar free, and is what Equal and NutraSweet are composed of. The compound, first manufactured by the chemical company Searle, resembles arsenic more so than sugar. Although it may not pack on the pounds or raise blood sugar, it may cause long-term effects such as neurological disorders and brain tumors. Because of this, the sweetener was first denied the right to be commercially sold by the FDA in 1980. However, the product was later approved by the FDA in 1981 after lobbying from then-Searle Chairman Rumsfeld. The oldest non-nutritive sweetener, Saccharin, is the main ingredient in the pink packets: Sweet n' Low. Discovered in 1878, this sweetener was once listed as a carcinogen because some lab rats developed cancer after prolonged exposure to Saccharin. However, on the sweetener's 125th birthday, the FDA took saccharin off of their list of carcinogens, claiming the tests done in the past represented misleading information. Most countries, including Canada, still ban the dietary use of saccharin, and still claim the chemical is hazardous to human health. Even though it has empty calories, compared to the potentially cancer-causing sweeteners, sugar is probably still your best bet. A large portion of refined sugar is actually produced from sugar beets rather than sugar cane and most granulated table sugar is a combination of both glucose and fructose. It will definitely raise blood sugar levels, but there is no bitter after-taste or swimming pool chemicals accompanied with it. If possible, the best form of packet sugar is Sugar in the Raw, which can be found in the brown packets. (Copyright 2006 The Pace Press via U-WIRE. All Rights Reserved.) The material in this post is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.For more information go to: http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html http://oregon.uoregon.edu/~csundt/documents.htm If you wish to use copyrighted material from this email for purposes that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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