Are Artificial Sweeteners Sabotaging Your Bariatric Success?
Apr 15, 2025

The Hidden Dangers of Sucralose After Bariatric Surgery
What you don't know about your favorite "sugar-free" products could be hurting your long-term weight loss.
Bariatric surgery is just the beginning of your transformation, but what you consume afterward is just as important—especially when it comes to those so-called “bariatric-friendly” products like protein shakes, skinny syrups, and sugar-free bars. At The Rewrite Lifestyle Center, we’re seeing a disturbing trend: people regaining weight due to overconsumption of artificial sweeteners, particularly sucralose.
What the New Research Says About Sucralose
A recent study involving 75 participants showed that sucralose—the main ingredient in many popular shakes and bars—can disrupt fullness signals and increase food cravings, especially in those who have experienced insulin resistance or obesity.
Here’s why: Your tongue perceives sucralose as sugar and sends signals to your brain and body that something sweet is coming. But when no real sugar arrives, it confuses your body’s satiety signals. Over time, this disrupts your metabolism and hunger hormones, leading to increased cravings and the potential for emotional eating.
“It’s like the boy who cried wolf,” says Shenelle Coplien, founder of The Rewrite Lifestyle Center. “Your body stops believing your tongue.”
Why Bariatric Patients Should Avoid Sucralose
Despite being widely recommended by some bariatric surgeons, sucralose and other artificial sweeteners may work against your goals—especially if food addiction or emotional eating contributed to your weight challenges.
Many of our clients arrive at The Rewrite Lifestyle Center still consuming shakes and bars filled with artificial sweeteners. These products may have helped during the early post-op phase, but long-term use could be sabotaging their progress.
Artificial sweeteners are not just ineffective—they may actually be addictive. One bariatric physician compared them to Suboxone, the drug used to manage opioid dependence, pointing out their potential to keep people dependent on sugar cravings.
Think about it: Have you ever met anyone thriving on Suboxone? The same logic applies here.
What You Should Do Instead
Transitioning to whole foods is one of the best things you can do post-surgery. By reducing your reliance on processed, sweetened products, you give your body a chance to stabilize hunger cues and rebuild a healthy relationship with food.
At The Rewrite Lifestyle Center, we provide real solutions through whole food nutrition, mindful eating strategies, and support to help you succeed. Explore our bariatric coaching programs designed for long-term success, not short-term fixes.
If you’ve had bariatric surgery and are still dealing with cravings, binge eating, or emotional eating, it might be time for a reset. Start by learning whether food addiction could be a factor. Take our free Food Addiction Quiz and get personalized feedback from our team.
Learn More:
Are You Struggling with Food Addiction? Take the First Step Today!
If cravings, binge eating, or emotional eating are holding you back, you’re not alone. Food addiction can impact long-term weight loss, especially after bariatric surgery (gastric sleeve, bypass surgery).
At The Rewrite Lifestyle Center, we help you break free from stress eating and build a sustainable, healthy relationship with food.
✅ Discover if you're facing food addiction and get expert guidance on bariatric nutrition, meal plans, and support from Shenelle Coplien and the Bariatric Rewrite team. Your journey to lasting weight loss starts here!
👉 Take the Food Addiction Quiz Now! - https://www.rewritelifestyle.com/are-you-a-food-addict
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