Amazon has
12-Count 2.12-Oz Quest Nutrition Hero Protein Bar (Blueberry Cobbler) on sale at
2 for $33.79 when you you 'clip' the 15% off coupon on the product page,
change the quantity to 2 and checkout via Subscribe & Save.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to Deal Hunter
babgaly for finding this deal.
Note, must be logged in to clip coupons; coupons are typically limited to one per account. You may cancel Subscribe & Save anytime after your order ships.
Deal Instructions:
- Go to 12-Count 2.12-Oz Quest Nutrition Blueberry Cobbler Hero Protein Bar (Blueberry Cobbler)
- Clip the 15% off coupon on the product page
- Select the "Subscribe & Save" option on the product page.
- Change the quantity to 2
- Select any frequency, then click 'Set Up Now'
- Proceed to checkout
- Total should be 2 for $33.79 + Free Shipping
Top Comments
I have no idea whether dietary erythritol is good or bad or neutral but I'll take a pretty educated guess and say your risk of a cardiovascular event isn't going to increase based on this quest bar. Though if I was picking a product like this, I'd want a far higher protein amount.
1. Erythritol is created by your own body. This is a pretty important fact to be aware of.
2. Their findings don't differentiate between endogenous and dietary erythritol. Do you see the problem here?
3. According to them, the participants were enrolled before erythritol became a major food additive.
4. Erythritol levels were still high a day after dietary consumption. From endogenous erythritol!
This isn't difficult to comprehend. The study doesn't show anything to link dietary erythritol to cardiovascular disease. It doesn't even show causality between circulating erythritol and disease.
I don't know whether or not erythritol is bad for you, but this paper doesn't demonstrate it.
At this point the research is pretty clear that exercise and energy balance in diet are the things that people need to keep in mind for longevity. Avoiding erythritol in a quest bar is likely far down the checklist of things to worry about when it comes to good health.
Your anecdotal story doesn't actually show anything. Are you telling me you never ate a single artificial sweetener, then ate some and had heart related episodes, then stopped and they went away?
47 Comments
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The prices on some flavors have gotten so high.
The prices on some flavors have gotten so high.
At a Glance. Higher blood levels of the artificial sweetener erythritol were associated with increased risk of heart attack and stroke. The results highlight the need for further study of erythritol's long-term risks for cardiovascular health
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