Comparing E1200 - Polydextrose vs E968 - Erythritol

Synonyms
E1200
Polydextrose
68424-04-4
E968
Erythritol
Meso-erythritol
Tetrahydroxybutane
E-968
E 968
Products

Found in 1,339 products

Found in 2,409 products

Search rank & volume
#1805.8K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#6163.1K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×0.63
under-aware

×9.87
over-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 3 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Interest over time for 6 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Popular questions
  1. Is polydextrose bad for you?

    No—major regulators (e.g., FDA, EFSA) consider it safe as a food additive and soluble fiber; large amounts may cause gas, bloating, or a laxative effect in some people.

  2. Does polydextrose raise blood sugar?

    It has a very low glycemic impact because it’s largely non‑digestible and provides about 1 kcal/g, so it typically does not significantly raise blood glucose.

  3. Polydextrose what is it?

    A synthetic, soluble fiber made by polymerizing glucose with small amounts of sorbitol and citric acid (E1200), used as a bulking agent, humectant, stabilizer, and thickener.

  4. What is polydextrose fiber?

    It’s a low‑digestible soluble fiber that adds bulk and slight sweetness to foods, helps boost fiber content, and is partially fermented in the gut.

  5. Is polydextrose good for you?

    It can help increase fiber intake and reduce calories/sugar in foods, which may support digestive regularity and weight management; tolerance varies, and excessive intake can cause GI discomfort.

  1. Is erythritol bad for you?

    No—regulators (e.g., FDA, EFSA) consider erythritol safe at typical food-use levels, and it doesn’t raise blood sugar or cause tooth decay. Large amounts can cause digestive upset, and a recent observational study linked high blood erythritol levels with cardiovascular risk, but causation hasn’t been shown.

  2. What are the dangers of erythritol?

    The main concern is gastrointestinal discomfort (bloating, diarrhea) when large amounts are consumed; in the EU, polyol-containing foods may carry a laxative-effect warning. An observational study has linked high circulating erythritol with cardiovascular events, but evidence is not conclusive and guidance has not changed.

  3. Is erythritol safe?

    Yes—it's authorized in the EU (E968) and considered GRAS in the U.S., with no safety concern at reported uses. Some people may experience digestive upset if they consume a lot at once.

  4. What is erythritol made from?

    It’s typically produced by fermenting glucose (often from corn or wheat starch) with yeast-like microorganisms (e.g., Moniliella), then purified and crystallized.

  5. Does erythritol raise blood sugar?

    No—erythritol has little to no effect on blood glucose or insulin and is largely excreted unchanged.