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Physiol Behav. 1991 Apr;49(4):803-10.
Soft drinks with aspartame: effect on subjective hunger, food
selection, and food intake of young adult males.
Black RM, Tanaka P, Leiter LA, Anderson GH.
Department of Nutritional Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Canada.
Ingestion of aspartame-sweetened beverages has been reported to increase subjective measures
of appetite. This study examined the effects of familiar carbonated soft drinks sweetened
with aspartame on subjective hunger, energy intake and macronutrient selection at a lunch-time
meal. Subjects were 20 normal weight young adult males, classified as either restrained or
nonrestrained eaters. Four treatments of carbonated beverages included 280 ml of mineral water,
one can of a soft drink (280 ml) consumed in either 2 or 10 minutes, or two cans of a soft
drink (560 ml) consumed in 10 minutes, administered at 11:00 a.m. Subjective hunger and food
appeal were measured from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., and food intake data were obtained from a
buffet lunch given at 12:00 noon. There were no treatment effects on energy intake,
macronutrient selection or food choice at the lunch-time meal, or food appeal, though restrained
eaters consumed more than nonrestrained eaters in all four treatment conditions. Consumption
of two soft drinks (560 ml, 320 mg aspartame) significantly reduced subjective hunger from 11:05
a.m. to 11:30 a.m. compared to one soft drink (280 ml, 160 mg aspartame) or 280 ml of mineral
water. Thus ingestion of soft drinks containing aspartame did not increase short-term subjective
hunger or food intake.
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