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GB News on MSNDieters warned as sugar substitute shown to hike hunger by 20% increasing risk of overeatingA new study has shed light on why artificial sweetener sucralose might increase hunger rather than reduce it. Researchers ...
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Antibiotic resistance, a mounting crisis in global health, emerges when bacteria evolve to survive treatments meant to ...
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ZME Science on MSNThis Popular Zero-Calorie Sugar Substitute May Be Making You Hungrier, Not SlimmerThey found that sucralose, a common ingredient in “diet” drinks and “sugar-free” snacks, alters brain activity tied to hunger ...
A study reveals saccharin's potential to kill drug-resistant bacteria but warns of health risks at high doses. Saccharin may ...
In May 2023, the World Health Organization ( WHO) recommended against using non-sugar sweeteners like sucralose for weight ...
Younger children should not be given any drinks containing artificial sweeteners, UK experts are now advising. The Scientific ...
A new study found that a popular zero-calorie sugar substitute disrupts regions of the brain responsible for regulating ...
2 天
ScienceAlert on MSNArtificial Sweetener Can Trick Your Brain Into Feeling More HungryNothing in life comes free, not even a sugar-free drink. Scientists have now linked the artificial sweetener sucralose (sold ...
2 天
News-Medical.Net on MSNSweetener saccharin revives old antibiotics by breaking bacterial defencesSaccharin destabilizes bacterial membranes and interferes with DNA replication, causing lysis and impairing virulence traits.
A study by USC reveals that sucralose, a common artificial sweetener, alters brain activity in regions controlling hunger.
Sugar substitutes are readily available in restaurants throughout the country — but they may be confusing the brain and make people "feel" hungrier than they really are, a new study suggests.
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