
Diabetes Care. 1988 Mar;11(3):230-4.
Response to single dose of aspartame or saccharin by NIDDM patients.
Horwitz DL, McLane M, Kobe P.
Department of Medicine, University of Illinois, Chicago 60680.
Twelve normal subjects and 10 subjects with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus
were given, in random order at intervals of greater than or equal to 1 wk, three
drinks of the same beverage: one unsweetened, one sweetened with 400 mg aspartame,
and one sweetened with 135 mg saccharin. The amount of sweetener approximated that
in 1 L of sugar-free soft drink. Plasma glucose, insulin, and glucagon were measured
for 3 h after ingestion of the test beverage. Plasma glucose declined slightly throughout
the test period, probably due to fasting, with no differences between the three treatments.
Neither sweetener affected peak insulin levels in subjects with or without diabetes.
Analysis of area under the curve showed that mean insulin levels were statistically
significantly higher after aspartame than after saccharin or unsweetened beverage in
normal subjects only, but the magnitude of the difference was small and unlikely to
be of physiological importance in the absence of differences in glucose levels.
Furthermore, the differences could largely be accounted for by a decrease in
insulin values after both unsweetened beverage and saccharin, with no change from
baseline after aspartame. Glucagon levels showed time-to-time variation but no
overall differences. We conclude that ingestion of aspartame- or saccharin-sweetened
beverages by fasting subjects, with or without diabetes, did not affect blood
glucose homeostasis.