Effect of sweetened beverages intake on salivary aspartame, insulin and alpha-amylase levels: A single-blind study

[Display omitted] •This is the first study that report aspartame excretion in saliva.•Greater salivary aspartame area under the peak was observed after Diet soft drink compared to Water + sweeteners intake.•Higher salivary insulin levels were observed after regular and diet soft drinks compared to l...

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Veröffentlicht in:Food research international 2023-11, Vol.173, p.113406-113406, Article 113406
Hauptverfasser: Finassi, Carolina Martins, Calixto, Leandro A., Segura, Wilson, Bocato, Mariana Zuccherato, Barbosa Júnior, Fernando, Fonseca, Fernando L.A., Lamy, Elsa, Castelo, Paula Midori
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •This is the first study that report aspartame excretion in saliva.•Greater salivary aspartame area under the peak was observed after Diet soft drink compared to Water + sweeteners intake.•Higher salivary insulin levels were observed after regular and diet soft drinks compared to low sucrose and water test-drinks ingestion. The objective was to assess aspartame excretion in saliva and the salivary insulin, total protein (TP), and alpha-amylase (AMI) levels in response to the ingestion of sweetened beverages (sodium cyclamate, aspartame, acesulfame, and sucrose). Fifteen healthy participants were included in a single-blinded trial with the intake of Diet soft drink, Regular soft drink, Water + sweeteners, Low sucrose content (3.5 g), and Water (blank) in 5 different days. In each day, saliva was collected at T0 (fasting), T1 (15 min after test-drink intake), T2 (30 min), T3 (60 min), and T4 (120 min) for the measurement of salivary aspartame (HPLC), TP, AMI (ELISA assays) and insulin levels (chemiluminescence). Chi-square, Friedman, ANOVA and Spearman correlation tests were applied. The late-perceived sweet/sour residual flavor was reported at a frequency of 80%, 60% and 20% after ingestion of artificially sweetened drinks, beverages with sucrose, and plain water, respectively (p 
ISSN:0963-9969
1873-7145
DOI:10.1016/j.foodres.2023.113406