“Clean eating” has become a popular approach to healthy living, encouraging people to choose whole, minimally processed foods while limiting refined sugars, artificial additives and excess salt. Given the strong evidence linking excessive sugar consumption to obesity, type 2 diabetes and other chronic diseases, some people have taken the idea to its logical extreme: eliminating sugar altogether.
However, a preliminary study presented at ENDO 2026, the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in Chicago, suggests that cutting out every trace of sugar may not be as beneficial as it seems. In mice, a completely sucrose-free diet led to signs of metabolic dysfunction rather than improved health, highlighting the potential dangers of dietary extremes
“In the long term, these findings could help improve strategies for preventing and managing metabolic disorders, fatty liver disease and chronic inflammatory conditions,” said Rasheed Ahmad, principal scientist and head of the Immunology & Microbiology Department at the Dasman Diabetes Institute, in Kuwait, in a press release
Clean Eating and Eliminating Sugar
Many years of research have made the connection between high sugar intake and the growing prevalence of obesity and type 2 diabetes worldwide. As a result, public health recommendations encourage people to reduce their consumption of added sugars, particularly those hidden in heavily processed foods, as explained by the Independent
For some, this message has evolved into the belief that if too much sugar is harmful, eliminating it completely must be even better. Yet nutrition is rarely that simple. Restricting an entire class of nutrients may have unintended consequences for the body’s complex biological systems
To explore those effects, researchers compared two groups of mice fed low-fat diets for 16 weeks. One diet contained sucrose, while the other was entirely sucrose-free. The team assessed glucose tolerance, insulin sensitivity, metabolic hormones, gut microbes, and markers of inflammation in the liver and colon
Beneficial Gut Bacteria Need Sugars to Function Properly
On the surface, the sugar-free mice appeared healthy. They did not gain excess weight and showed no outward signs typically associated with poor metabolic health
A closer examination revealed that despite remaining lean, the mice struggled to regulate blood sugar and developed signs of metabolic dysfunction. Researchers also observed changes suggesting that the animals’ gut health had deteriorated
The gut microbiome may explain why. Many beneficial microbes depend on carbohydrates as a source of energy. In return, they produce compounds that help maintain the intestinal lining, support nutrient absorption, and stimulate hormones involved in appetite control and insulin sensitivity. When these microbial communities lose access to important fuel sources, the balance of the gut ecosystem can shift.
“Completely removing sucrose from a low-fat diet may unexpectedly disrupt gut health and promote inflammation and metabolic dysfunction, highlighting that balanced nutrition is more important than simply eliminating sugar,” added Ahmad
A Balanced, Diverse Diet Is a Healthy Diet
The findings do not suggest that high-sugar diets are healthy. The mice were also only fed strictly low-fat diets, making the experiment very different from the calorie-dense, high-fat, high-sugar eating patterns commonly associated with chronic disease
Instead, the research points to the risks of taking dietary advice to an extreme. A healthy gut relies on a diverse supply of nutrients, including those found naturally in fruits, vegetables, and whole grains, food items that all contain sugar. The findings support that diversity may be more important than eliminating specific foods entirely
“This research may influence future dietary recommendations by emphasizing the importance of maintaining a healthy gut microbiome rather than focusing only on sugar restriction,” Ahmad said
This article is not offering medical advice and should be used for informational purposes only
Read More: The Same Dose of Caffeine Can Hit Some People Harder — and Younger People May be at Higher Risk
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- This article references information from an article in TheIndependent: New study reveals hidden risk of going sugar-free


