Food and Behaviour Research

Donate Log In

UK Nutrient Gaps and Impacts on Early Development with Dr Emma Derbyshire and TC Callis - BOOK HERE

Non-caloric sweetener effects on brain appetite regulation in individuals across varying body weights

Chakravartti S, Jann K, Veit R, Liu H, Yunker A, Angelo B, Monterosso J, Xiang A, Kullmann S, Page K (2025) Nature Metabolism  7, pages574–585 (2025 10.1038/s42255-025-01227-8 

Web URL: Read this article on Nature Metabolism

Abstract:

Sucralose, a widely used non-caloric sweetener, provides sweet taste without calories. Some studies suggest that non-caloric sweeteners stimulate appetite, possibly owing to the delivery of a sweet taste without the post-ingestive metabolic signals that normally communicate with the hypothalamus to suppress hunger. In a randomized crossover trial (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02945475), 75 young adults (healthy weight, overweight or with obesity) consumed a drink containing sucralose, sweetness-matched sucrose or water. We show that acute consumption of sucralose versus sucrose stimulates hypothalamic blood flow (P < 0.018) and greater hunger responses (P < 0.001). Sucralose versus water also increases hypothalamic blood flow (P < 0.019) but produces no difference in hunger ratings. Sucrose, but not sucralose, increases peripheral glucose levels, which are associated with reductions in medial hypothalamic blood flow (P < 0.007). Sucralose, compared to sucrose and water, results in increased functional connections between the hypothalamus and brain regions involved in motivation and somatosensory processing. These findings suggest that non-caloric sweeteners could affect key mechanisms in the hypothalamus responsible for appetite regulation.

FAB RESEARCH COMMENT:

See also the following news article and FAB comments related to this research:


For further information suitable for both health professionals and the general public, please see the excellent books:


And for more information on Sweeteners, see: