Splenda is not satisfying-at least according to the brain. A new study
found that even when the palate cannot distinguish between the
artificial sweetener and sugar, our brain knows the difference.



At the University of California <http://www.ucsd.edu> , San Diego, 12
women underwent functional MRI while sipping water sweetened with either
real sugar (sucrose) or Splenda (sucralose). Sweeteners, real or
artificial, bind and stimulate receptors on the taste buds, which then
signal the brain via the cranial nerve. Although both sugar and Splenda
initiate the same taste and pleasure pathways in the brain-and the
subjects could not tell the solutions apart-the sugar activated
pleasure-related brain regions more extensively than the Splenda did. In
particular, "the real thing, the sugar, elicits a much greater
response in the insula," says the study's lead author,
psychiatrist Guido Frank
<http://eatingdisorders.ucsd.edu/Bios/GuidoFrank.html> , now at the
University of Colorado <http://www.cudenver.edu>  at Denver. The insula,
involved with taste, also play a role in enjoyment by connecting regions
in the reward system that encode the sensation of pleasantness.

Although Splenda elicits less overall activity within the brain, the
researchers were surprised to find that the artificial sweetener seems
to inspire more communication between these regions. "Looking at the
connection between the taste areas, Splenda is stronger," Frank
says. He suggests that when we taste Splenda, the reward system becomes
activated but not satiated. "Our hypothesis is that Splenda has less
of a feedback mechanism to stop the craving, to get satisfied."

If that theory plays out, there could be implications for those who use
artificial sweeteners as weight control aid. Recent research indeed
suggests a correlation between artificial sweetener intake and
compromised health. In one large survey, diet soda consumption was found
to be associated with elevated cardiovascular and metabolic disease
risk. A different study reveals a possible mechanism behind this effect:
rats that were fed artificially sweetened yogurt in addition to their
regular feed ended up eating more and gaining more weight than rats that
ate yogurt with real sugar. The study's authors suggest that
exposure to and artificial sweetener may undermine the brain's
ability to track calories and to determine when to stop eating.



"There is good evidence that the brain responds differently to
artificial sweeteners, and you should take that into account when
designing weight-loss programs," Frank says. The team plans to
extend this research to elucidate mechanisms that underlie eating
disorders.

Happy Learning,


Yovan P. Putra
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com/>
Expand your genius through  Total-Mind Learning  Series coaching 
program  <http://www.primastudy.com/>   ....

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