Sorbitol Xylitol and Sugar Alcohols

Sabine Hossenfelder has talked about sugar alcohols causing her gut trouble. The key point is medically plausible: sorbitol and xylitol can cause GI symptoms, especially in sensitive people or at higher doses.

Why they cause gut problems Sorbitol and xylitol are sugar alcohols / polyols. They’re only partly absorbed in the small intestine. The unabsorbed part can:

  • Pull water into the bowel → loose stool or diarrhea
  • Get fermented by gut bacteria → gas, bloating, cramps
  • Act like a laxative, especially with repeated or large intake

Common symptoms:

  • bloating
  • gas
  • abdominal cramps
  • urgency
  • diarrhea / loose stools
  • sometimes nausea

Sorbitol vs xylitol

  • Sorbitol is especially notorious. It’s found in sugar-free gum/candy and naturally in prunes, pears, apples, apricots, etc. It’s one reason prunes can work as a laxative.
  • Xylitol can also cause bloating, gas, upset stomach, and diarrhea, though tolerance varies.

Who is more likely to react?

People with:

  • IBS
  • FODMAP sensitivity
  • SIBO or gut dysbiosis
  • recent antibiotic use
  • generally sensitive digestion

Some people react to small amounts; others tolerate moderate amounts fine.

Practical test If you suspect this:

  1. Avoid sorbitol, xylitol, maltitol, mannitol, isomalt for 1–2 weeks.
  2. Check labels on “sugar-free,” “keto,” gum, mints, protein bars, cough drops.
  3. Reintroduce one at a time in small amounts.
  4. If symptoms return, you’ve likely found a trigger.

Safety note – common sense, not medical advice

These symptoms are usually not dangerous and improve after stopping the sweetener. But see a clinician if you have blood in stool, weight loss, fever, severe pain, dehydration, or persistent diarrhea.

Sources: Harvard Health, NHS, Yale New Haven Hospital, UC Davis Health, and systematic reviews on polyols/GI symptoms.

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