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Medically Reviewed Article
Dr. Ravi Sishir Reddy - General Physician
MBBS, MD (General Medicine) • Consultant Physician & Internist
15+ Years Clinical Experience • Vivekananda Hospital, Hyderabad
Internal Medicine Diabetes & Metabolic Diseases NABH Accredited Hospital
Last Reviewed
Mar 31, 2026
🏥 Vivekananda Hospital — NABH-Accredited, 100-Bed Multispecialty, Est. 1995 📋 Our Review Process
🔥 Breaking Research 10 min read March 31, 2026 Based on 2026 Peer-Reviewed Study

That "sugar-free" protein bar you had this morning, the zero-calorie energy drink at your desk, the keto ice cream you enjoy guilt-free every night. They all likely contain the same ingredient: erythritol. For years, this sugar substitute has been marketed as a perfectly safe alternative to sugar. But a groundbreaking new study from the University of Colorado Boulder has revealed a disturbing reality that could change how you look at every "sugar-free" label.

Researchers discovered that erythritol, at levels found in just a single serving of a sugar-free drink, can damage brain blood vessel cells, reduce the body's natural ability to break down blood clots, and constrict blood vessels in ways that significantly increase the risk of stroke. This is not a fringe study. It builds on earlier research involving 4,000 people that linked higher erythritol levels to heart attacks and strokes over a three-year period.

In this doctor-reviewed guide, we explain exactly what the research found, which products contain erythritol, how it damages your body, and what safer alternatives you can switch to today.

⚠️ Key Takeaways from This Article

What the Latest Research Says About Erythritol

  • Erythritol causes a 75% increase in harmful free radicals in brain blood vessel cells
  • It reduces the body's natural clot-busting ability by 25%, increasing stroke risk
  • Blood vessels become more constricted, starving the brain of oxygen
  • A prior study of 4,000 people linked high erythritol levels to heart attacks and strokes within 3 years
  • Found in hundreds of "sugar-free" and "keto" products globally
  • Safer alternatives exist: stevia, monk fruit, small amounts of raw honey
75%
Increase in Free Radicals
25%
Drop in Clot-Busting Ability
4,000
Patients in Prior Heart Study
100s
Products Containing Erythritol

What Is Erythritol and Why Is It So Popular?

Erythritol is a sugar alcohol, a type of carbohydrate that occurs naturally in small amounts in fruits like grapes and watermelon. However, the erythritol in your food is not coming from fruit. It is industrially manufactured by fermenting corn using yeast, then crystallized into a white powder that looks and tastes remarkably like sugar.

It became a darling of the health food industry for several reasons. It has almost zero calories (0.2 calories per gram compared to sugar's 4 calories per gram). It does not spike blood sugar or insulin levels. It does not cause tooth decay. And it has about 80% of the sweetness of regular sugar with no bitter aftertaste, unlike many other artificial sweeteners.

The FDA approved erythritol in 2001, and since then it has found its way into hundreds of products marketed as "healthy," "keto-friendly," "diabetic-safe," and "zero sugar." Until recently, it was considered one of the safest sugar substitutes available. That assumption is now being seriously challenged.

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Important Distinction

The erythritol naturally present in fruits exists in extremely small quantities alongside fibre, water, and other nutrients. The concern is about the concentrated, industrially produced erythritol added to processed foods in much larger doses. Your body also produces small amounts of erythritol naturally from glucose, but this is at far lower levels than what you consume in sugar-free products.

What the New Study Actually Found

The study, published in the Journal of Applied Physiology by researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder's Integrative Vascular Biology Lab, went beyond simply observing a correlation. The researchers wanted to understand the mechanism: how exactly does erythritol increase cardiovascular and stroke risk?

They exposed human brain microvascular endothelial cells (the cells that line the tiny blood vessels in your brain and form part of the blood-brain barrier) to a concentration of erythritol equivalent to what you would get from drinking a single serving of a sugar-free beverage. The exposure lasted three hours.

The results were alarming across every measure they tested:

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Study Results at a Glance

75% increase in reactive oxygen species (free radicals) that damage cells and accelerate aging. Significant reduction in nitric oxide production, the molecule that relaxes and widens blood vessels. Increased endothelin-1 production, a protein that constricts blood vessels. 25% decrease in the cells' ability to produce t-PA, the body's natural clot-busting compound. All from just one serving-size exposure over three hours.

"Big picture, if your vessels are more constricted and your ability to break down blood clots is lowered, your risk of stroke goes up," said Auburn Berry, lead author and graduate researcher at the university. "Our research demonstrates not only that, but how erythritol has the potential to increase stroke risk."

Senior author Professor Christopher DeSouza noted that their study used only a single serving-size amount. For people who consume multiple servings of erythritol-containing products daily (which is common among keto dieters and diabetics), the cumulative impact could be significantly worse.

How Erythritol Damages Your Brain Blood Vessels

To understand why these findings are so concerning, you need to understand what the blood-brain barrier does and how erythritol disrupts it.

The Blood-Brain Barrier: Your Brain's Security System

Your brain is protected by a highly selective barrier formed by specialized endothelial cells lining the brain's blood vessels. This barrier allows nutrients and oxygen through while blocking harmful substances, pathogens, and toxins. When this barrier is compromised, the brain becomes vulnerable to inflammation, clotting, and stroke.

What Erythritol Does to This System

Step 1: Oxidative stress explosion. Erythritol triggers a 75% increase in free radicals within brain endothelial cells. While the cells attempt to fight back by producing more antioxidant enzymes (catalase and superoxide dismutase), these defences are overwhelmed. The free radicals remain elevated, damaging cell membranes, DNA, and proteins.

Step 2: Blood vessel constriction. Healthy blood vessels rely on a balance between nitric oxide (which relaxes and widens vessels) and endothelin-1 (which constricts them). Erythritol shifts this balance dramatically. It reduces nitric oxide production while simultaneously increasing endothelin-1. The result is blood vessels that stay dangerously constricted, reducing blood flow to the brain.

Step 3: Clot defence is disabled. Normally, when a blood clot forms in a brain vessel, your cells release a compound called tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) that dissolves the clot before it can block the vessel and cause a stroke. Erythritol reduces t-PA production by approximately 25%, effectively disabling this critical safety mechanism. Clots that would normally be dissolved remain intact, free to block blood flow and trigger a stroke.

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The Combined Effect

Constricted blood vessels + increased clotting tendency + disabled clot-busting mechanism = a significantly elevated risk of ischemic stroke, the most common type of stroke caused by blood clots blocking vessels in the brain. This is the same mechanism seen in many high-risk cardiovascular patients.

Common Products That Contain Erythritol

Erythritol is far more widespread than most people realise. It is not just in obvious "diet" products. Check the labels of these categories carefully:

🍦
Sugar-Free Ice Cream
Keto, low-carb brands
🍫
Protein Bars
Most "low sugar" varieties
🥤
Zero-Sugar Drinks
Energy drinks, sodas
🍬
Sugar-Free Gum
Most major brands
🎂
Keto Baking Mixes
Cakes, cookies, pancakes
💧
Flavoured Water
"Zero calorie" brands
🥧
Diabetic Snacks
Marketed as "safe" for blood sugar
🧃
Tabletop Sweeteners
Blended with stevia or monk fruit
💊
Supplements & Vitamins
Chewable and gummy formats
🔍

How to Spot Erythritol on Labels

Look for "erythritol" or "sugar alcohol" in the ingredients list. It may also appear as part of proprietary sweetener blends. Some brands list it under "other ingredients" rather than in the main nutrition panel. In the EU, it is listed as E968. If a product claims "zero sugar" or "sugar-free" and tastes sweet, there is a high probability it contains erythritol.

Who Is Most at Risk?

While the research raises concerns for everyone who consumes erythritol, certain groups face heightened risk:

👥

Higher Risk Groups

People with existing cardiovascular disease: If you already have compromised blood vessels or a history of heart attack or stroke, adding a substance that further constricts vessels and impairs clot breakdown is particularly dangerous. Diabetics: Ironically, many diabetics rely on erythritol-sweetened products to manage blood sugar. Keto dieters: Heavy consumers of erythritol through multiple daily servings. Older adults: Natural decline in vascular function means additional stress on blood vessels is riskier. People with high blood pressure: Already dealing with constricted vessels; erythritol compounds the problem.

Safer Sweetener Alternatives

If you are looking to reduce sugar without the vascular risks associated with erythritol, several alternatives have better safety profiles based on current evidence:

Sweetener Calories Blood Sugar Impact Current Safety Status
Stevia (plant-derived) Zero No spike Generally Safe
Monk Fruit (luo han guo) Zero No spike Generally Safe
Allulose 0.4/gram Minimal Generally Safe
Raw Honey (small amounts) 3/gram Moderate spike Safe (in moderation)
Erythritol 0.2/gram No spike Emerging Concerns
Aspartame Zero No spike Debated
Xylitol 2.4/gram Low spike Safe (toxic to dogs)

Doctor's Recommendation

The safest approach is reducing overall sweet taste dependency rather than simply switching between artificial sweeteners. If you need a sweetener, stevia and monk fruit extracts currently have the strongest safety profiles. For cooking and baking, small amounts of jaggery, dates, or raw honey provide natural sweetness with additional micronutrients. Always consult your physician before making dietary changes, especially if you have diabetes or cardiovascular conditions.

What Should You Do Right Now?

Based on the current evidence, here are practical steps you can take today:

First, check your pantry and fridge. Read the ingredient labels of your protein bars, sugar-free drinks, keto snacks, chewing gum, and any product marketed as "sugar-free" or "zero calorie." Look for "erythritol" or "sugar alcohol" in the ingredients list.

Second, reduce consumption rather than panic. This research was conducted on cells in a laboratory. While the findings are concerning and supported by the earlier 4,000-person study, we do not yet have definitive proof from large-scale clinical trials in humans. The prudent approach is to reduce consumption, not to assume immediate danger from occasional use.

Third, switch to safer alternatives. If you are a daily consumer of erythritol-containing products (multiple servings per day), consider switching to stevia-based or monk fruit-based alternatives where possible.

Fourth, talk to your doctor. This is especially important if you have existing cardiovascular disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, or a history of stroke. Your doctor can help you assess your personal risk and suggest appropriate dietary changes.

Fifth, do not go back to sugar. The solution to erythritol concerns is not to return to excessive sugar consumption, which carries its own well-established risks for diabetes, heart disease, obesity, and inflammation. The goal is to find the safest middle ground for your individual health situation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Erythritol Safety: Your Questions Answered

Expert answers reviewed by Dr. Ravi Sishir Reddy, MD (General Medicine)

Is erythritol banned in any country?

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No, erythritol is not currently banned in any country. It is approved by the FDA in the United States, the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) in Europe, and regulatory bodies in Japan, Canada, Australia, and India. However, these approvals were based on older safety data. The new research from 2025 and 2026 linking erythritol to cardiovascular and stroke risk has not yet been incorporated into regulatory reviews. Scientists are calling for updated safety assessments and long-term clinical trials.

How much erythritol is dangerous?

+
The University of Colorado study used a concentration equivalent to a single serving of a sugar-free beverage, approximately 30 grams of erythritol. This is roughly the amount found in a pint of sugar-free ice cream or two to three servings of a keto protein bar. The researchers noted that people who consume multiple erythritol-containing products daily could be exposed to significantly higher levels, potentially amplifying the harmful effects. A safe threshold has not been established by this research.

Is erythritol worse than sugar?

+
It is not a straightforward comparison. Excessive sugar consumption is linked to well-established risks including obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, fatty liver disease, and chronic inflammation. Erythritol avoids these sugar-specific problems but may introduce different vascular risks. The current evidence suggests that neither excessive sugar nor high erythritol consumption is ideal. The healthiest approach is to reduce overall dependence on intense sweetness, whether from sugar or substitutes, and use safer alternatives like stevia or monk fruit when needed.

Does erythritol cause cancer?

+
Current research has not established a link between erythritol and cancer. The concerns raised by the 2025 and 2026 studies are specifically about cardiovascular and cerebrovascular risks: stroke, blood clotting, and blood vessel damage. However, the increase in oxidative stress (free radicals) observed in the brain cell study is a mechanism that can contribute to cellular damage over time. Long-term studies are needed to fully understand all potential health impacts.

Is stevia safer than erythritol?

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Based on current evidence, stevia (particularly purified steviol glycosides) has a stronger safety profile than erythritol. Multiple systematic reviews have not found significant cardiovascular concerns with stevia use. Some research even suggests minor blood pressure-lowering effects. However, many commercial stevia products are blended with erythritol to improve taste and texture, so always check the full ingredient list. Pure stevia extract or stevia blended with monk fruit is the safest option currently available.

Should diabetics stop using erythritol?

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Diabetics should discuss this with their physician before making changes. Erythritol has been a popular choice for diabetics because it does not raise blood sugar. However, diabetics already have a higher baseline risk of cardiovascular disease and stroke. Adding a substance that may further increase vascular risk requires careful risk-benefit analysis. Stevia and monk fruit are viable zero-calorie alternatives that also do not affect blood sugar. Your doctor can help determine the best approach for your specific situation.

Can erythritol cause weight gain?

+
Erythritol itself has almost zero calories and does not directly cause weight gain. However, some research suggests that non-nutritive sweeteners in general may disrupt the gut microbiome and alter appetite-regulating hormones in ways that could indirectly promote overeating. The current erythritol concerns are focused on vascular health, not weight. If you are using erythritol products for weight management, switching to stevia or monk fruit should provide similar calorie reduction without the emerging vascular concerns.

Does cooking or baking destroy erythritol's harmful effects?

+
No. Erythritol is heat-stable and does not break down during cooking or baking. This is actually one of the reasons it became popular for keto baking. The chemical structure remains intact at temperatures up to 160 degrees Celsius (320 degrees Fahrenheit). The potential harmful effects identified in the research would apply regardless of whether the erythritol is consumed in a cold beverage or a baked product.

📚 Sources & References

  1. Berry, A.R. et al. (2025). "The non-nutritive sweetener erythritol adversely affects brain microvascular endothelial cell function." Journal of Applied Physiology, 138(6):1571. DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00276.2025
  2. University of Colorado Boulder (2026). "Popular sugar substitute linked to brain cell damage and stroke risk." ScienceDaily, March 28, 2026
  3. Witkowski, M. et al. (2023). "The artificial sweetener erythritol and cardiovascular event risk." Nature Medicine, 29, 710-718. (The 4,000-person epidemiological study)
  4. U.S. Food and Drug Administration - GRAS status of erythritol (approved 2001)
Medical Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult your healthcare provider before making dietary changes, especially if you have diabetes, cardiovascular disease, or are at risk of stroke. Content reviewed by Dr. Ravi Sishir Reddy, MBBS, MD (General Medicine), Consultant Physician, Vivekananda Hospital, Hyderabad.
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