Results 161 to 170 of about 2,259 (206)
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Toxicological studies with sodium cyclamate and saccharin
Food and Cosmetics Toxicology, 1968Abstract The effects of acute, subacute and chronic administration of sodium cyclamate, sodium saccharin or combinations of cyclamate and saccharin have been studied in mice, rats and dogs. The acute toxicity of the materials was shown to vary with the strain of animal and the fat content of the diet.
J.D. Taylor +3 more
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Long-term toxicity of sodium cyclamate in mice
Food and Cosmetics Toxicology, 1973Abstract Sodium cyclamate was fed to groups of 30 male and 30 female mice at dietary levels of 0·7,1·75, 3·5 or 7·0%, with a group of 60 males and 60 females serving as controls. There were slight reductions in the rate of body-weight gain during the last 6 months of the study in the female mice given diets containing 0·7–3·5 % cyclamate but this was
P G, Brantom, I F, Gaunt, P, Grasso
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Excretion of cyclohexylamine in subjects ingesting sodium cyclamate
Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 1969Abstract Eleven subjects ingesting sodium cyclamate (CYC) daily (1 or 3 g) all excreted cyclohexylamine (CHA) in urine and feces (0.04–154 mg/day). Although excretion of CYC became essentially maximal within 1 week after the start of ingestion of CYC, that of CHA did not reach an essentially constant value until the second week of ingestion of CYC ...
T R, Davis, N, Adler, J C, Opsahl
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Studies on Cyclamate Sodium (Sucaryl Sodium), A New Noncaloric Sweetening Agent†
Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Association (Scientific ed.), 1951While saccharin has proved over the years to be an innocuous noncaloric sweetening agent, its instability to heating and bitter aftertaste have been distinct drawbacks. A new chemical substance, cyclohexyl sulfamate sodium (Sucaryl sodium), is less potent in sweetening power than saccharin, but withstands boiling and has a clean sweet taste ...
R K, RICHARDS +3 more
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Spectrophotometric determination of sodium cyclamate and saccharin sodium with Astrazone Pink FG
The Analyst, 1984[No abstract available]
Özol T. +3 more
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Sodium Cyclamate, Saccharin and Food Efficiency
Nature, 1969FOLLOWING experiments with 0.43 per cent sodium cyclamate in rat's food1 in which rats consuming cyclamate had a better food efficiency than the controls, I performed two further experiments using two basic rations; saccharin was introduced, and both sweetening agents were given in varying amounts to weanling Wistar strain albino rats of both sexes ...
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Toxicity of food sweetener-sodium cyclamate on osteoblasts cells
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 2019In this paper, the effect of commonly used food sweetener (sodium cyclamate) on the proliferation and differentiation of osteoblasts has been researched. The morophology change of osteoblasts was investigated by confocal laser scanning microscopy. Cell viability was studied by MTT analysis.
Zhenhua Chen +5 more
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Polymorphism and thermal behavior of sodium cyclamate
Journal of Thermal Analysis and Calorimetry, 2019Due to its potential thermal degradation or polymorphic transformation, thermal stability of a food additive may limit its use in food preparations, when heating process is involved. In this paper, we present an investigation on thermal behavior of sodium cyclamate, one of the most frequently used components in tabletop sweeteners.
D. A. V. Medina +2 more
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Production of Mouse Urinary Bladder Carcinomas by Sodium Cyclamate
Science, 1970Sodium cyclamate was suspended in cholesterol pellets that were surgically implanted in the urinary bladders of mice. In duplicate experiments, incidences of mouse bladder carcinomas observed in animals exposed to these pellets were 78 and 61 percent compared with incidences of 13 and 12 percent in control mice exposed to pellets of pure cholesterol ...
G T, Bryan, E, Ertürk
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Cyclohexylamine production and physiological measurements in subjects ingesting sodium cyclamate
Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 1971Human subjects capable of metabolizing cyclamate to cyclohexylamine ingested 5 g sodium cyclamate daily for 7 or 8 days. The conversion to cyclohexylamine and consequent absorption was followed by the measurement of the amine in consecutive 24-hr urine samples.
M H, Litchfield, A A, Swan
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