نتایج جستجو برای: Sucralose

تعداد نتایج: 378  

Journal: :Chemical senses 2011
Gregory C Loney Ann-Marie Torregrossa James C Smith Anthony Sclafani Lisa A Eckel

Female Sprague-Dawley rats display considerable variability in their preference for the artificial sweetener sucralose over water. While some rats can be classified as sucralose preferrers (SP), as they prefer sucralose across a broad range of concentrations, others can be classified as sucralose avoiders (SA), as they avoid sucralose at concentrations above 0.1 g/L. Here, we expand on a previo...

Journal: :Chemical senses 2004
Anthony Sclafani Richard A Clare

The preference of female Sprague-Dawley rats for sucralose, a non-nutritive sweetener derived from sucrose, was evaluated in 23 h two-bottle tests with water or saccharin. Overall, the rats displayed weak or no preferences for sucralose (0.25-4 g/l) over water but strong preferences for saccharin (0.5-8 g/l) over water and saccharin (1 g/l) over sucralose (0.5 g/l). The rats also preferred a sa...

2013
Susan S. Schiffman Kristina I. Rother

Sucralose is a synthetic organochlorine sweetener (OC) that is a common ingredient in the world's food supply. Sucralose interacts with chemosensors in the alimentary tract that play a role in sweet taste sensation and hormone secretion. In rats, sucralose ingestion was shown to increase the expression of the efflux transporter P-glycoprotein (P-gp) and two cytochrome P-450 (CYP) isozymes in th...

2017
Xiaoming Bian Liang Chi Bei Gao Pengcheng Tu Hongyu Ru Kun Lu

Sucralose is the most widely used artificial sweetener, and its health effects have been highly debated over the years. In particular, previous studies have shown that sucralose consumption can alter the gut microbiota. The gut microbiome plays a key role in processes related to host health, such as food digestion and fermentation, immune cell development, and enteric nervous system regulation....

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Gastrointestinal and liver physiology 2009
Jing Ma Max Bellon Judith M Wishart Richard Young L Ashley Blackshaw Karen L Jones Michael Horowitz Christopher K Rayner

The incretin hormones, glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) and glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP), play an important role in glucose homeostasis in both health and diabetes. In mice, sucralose, an artificial sweetener, stimulates GLP-1 release via sweet taste receptors on enteroendocrine cells. We studied blood glucose, plasma levels of insulin, GLP-1, and GIP, and gastric emptying ...

2013
Arthur Omran Gregory Ahearn Doria Bowers Janice Swenson Charles Coughlin

Sucralose was developed as a low cost artificial sweetener that is nonmetabolizable in humans. Sucralose can withstand changes in pH and temperature and is not degraded by the wastewater treatment process. Since the molecule can withstand heat, acidification, and microbial degradation, it is accumulating in the environment and has been found in wastewater, estuaries, rivers, and the Gulf Stream...

2013
Arthur Omran Ronald Baker Charles Coughlin

Sucralose was developed as a low-cost artificial sweetener that is nonmetabolizable and can withstand changes in pH and temperature. It is not degraded by the wastewater treatment process and thus has been found in waste water, estuaries, rivers and the Gulf Stream. Since the molecule can withstand heat, acidification, and microbial degradation, it is accumulating in the environment. The highes...

2004

INTRODUCTION Sucralose is used in the manufacture of nonnutritive sweetened food and beverage products. Sucralose, like most carbohydrates, lacks a good chromophore and therefore requires high concentrations to be detected by UV absorbance. Many food and beverage ingredients are chromophoric and can interfere with the direct detection of sucralose by absorbance. Refractive index detection has s...

2015
Izabela Furtado de Oliveira Rocha Helena Maria André Bolini

This study evaluated the effect of different sweeteners on the sensory profile, acceptance, and drivers of preference of passion fruit juice samples sweetened with sucrose, aspartame, sucralose, stevia, cyclamate/saccharin blend 2:1, and neotame. Sensory profiling was performed by 12 trained assessors using quantitative descriptive analysis (QDA). Acceptance tests (appearance, aroma, flavor, te...

Journal: :NeuroImage 2008
Guido K. W. Frank Tyson A. Oberndorfer Alan N. Simmons Martin P. Paulus Julie L. Fudge Tony T. Yang Walter H. Kaye

Animal models suggest that sucrose activates taste afferents differently than non-caloric sweeteners. Little information exists how artificial sweeteners engage central taste pathways in the human brain. We assessed sucrose and sucralose taste pleasantness across a concentration gradient in 12 healthy control women and applied 10% sucrose and matched sucralose during functional magnet resonance...

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