In a Purdue University study, rats drinking liquids with artificial sweeteners consumed more calories
overall than rats whose drinks were sweetened with sugar.
Not exact matches
In a series of experiments using mouse and
rat models of depression reported today in Nature, Hu and her colleagues found that ketamine did affect the lateral habenula — but it was the pattern of firing, rather
than the
overall amount of activity, that proved crucial.
In the end,
rats with access to HFCS gained significantly more weight
than those with access to table sugar, even when the
overall caloric intake was the same as with other sweeteners.