
Diabetes Res Clin Pract. 1986 Apr;2(1):23-7.
Glucose tolerance, blood lipid, insulin and glucagon concentration
after single or continuous administration of aspartame in diabetics.
Okuno G, Kawakami F, Tako H, Kashihara T, Shibamoto S, Yamazaki T, Yamamoto K, Saeki M.
A nutritive sweetener, aspartame (L-aspartyl-L-phenylalanine methylester) was
administered orally to normal controls and diabetic patients in order to evaluate
effects on blood glucose, lipids and pancreatic hormone secretion. An oral glucose
tolerance test was also performed in the same subjects as a control study of
aspartame administration. In 7 normal controls and 22 untreated diabetics, a single
dose of 500 mg aspartame, equivalent to 100 g glucose in sweetness, induced no increase
in blood glucose concentration. Rather, a small but significant decrease in blood glucose
was noticed 2 or 3 h after administration. The decrease in blood glucose was found
to be smallest in the control and became greater as the diabetes increased in severity.
No significant change in blood insulin or glucagon concentration during a 3-h period was
observed in either the controls or the diabetics. The second study was designed to
determine the effects of 2 weeks' continuous administration of 125 mg aspartame, equal
in sweetness to the mean daily consumption of sugar (20-30 g) in Japan, to 9 hospitalized
diabetics with steady-state glycemic control. The glucose tolerance showed no significant
change after 2 weeks' administration. Fasting, 1 h and 2 h postprandial blood glucose,
blood cholesterol, triglyceride and HDL-cholesterol were also unaffected. From these and
other published results, aspartame would seem to be a useful alternative nutrient sweetener
for patients with diabetes mellitus.