The
noncalorically-sweetened beverages (diet sodas and
other “diet” drinks) are preferable to calorically-sweetened
beverages because they provide water and sweetness, but no calories.
FDA-approved noncaloric sweeteners are considered safe, although
other than FDA surveillance data there is no evidence from long-term
studies in humans available to this Panel and is most likely lacking.
Consuming beverages sweetened with noncaloric sweeteners were associated
with weight loss when ingested in amounts similar to calorically-sweetened
beverages where weight gain and increased blood pressure occurred.
A new literature is emerging that seems to suggest that the high
sweetness in these beverages may contribute to conditioning for
a high preference for sweetness, and thus these noncalorically-sweetened
beverages would be less desirable than water, tea, or coffee
The
panel recommends that 0-32 ounces of Noncalorically-Sweetened
Beverages [0-32 fl. oz./day ] be consumed (could substitute for
tea and coffee with the same limitations regarding caffeine)
See
table below for calories and caffeine content
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