Stevia (from the plant stevia rebaudiana in the family Compositae) is a small perrential herb with a history and current usage of being a sweetening agent.[1] There are 154 plants within the stevia family[2][3] with all plants being sweet but rebaudiana having the highest sweetness levels.[2] The usage of stevia as a sweetener relative to table sugar (sucrose) is said to range from 200-300 sweeter (on a gram per gram basis)][4][2] or simply be 250-fold more potent.[5]
The main bioactive in stevia is the diterpene known as steviol, although it itself is in low concentrations with the majority of the plant containing glycosides of steviol (steviol bound to sugars); rebaudioside A is also used as a sweetening agent[3] and may be causative of the reported bitter aftertaste[6] via two particular bitter receptors (hTAS2R4 and hTAS2R14).[7] On a molecular level, stevioside is approximately 300-fold more potent than sucrose whereas rebaudioside A is 400-fold sweeter.[8][9]
Usage of steviol glycosides for sweetening has a GRAS (Generally recognized as safe) rating in the US[10] as appears to have an adequate daily intake (ADI) of 25mg/kg[11] (following 100-fold safety factor, commonly seen in ADI values) in rats which is around 7.9mg/kg in humans.
Stevia is a leaf that it, and its extracts, are used as sweetening agents as on a gram per gram basis they are about 200-300x as sweet as sugar. Stevia may have a slightly bitter aftertaste, and with infrequent usage in food products is generally recognized as safe