Study: Diet Soda Linked to Heart Risks

Kalista

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Mon Jul 23, 11:14 PM

BOSTON - People who drank one or more diet sodas each day developed the same risks for heart disease as those who downed sugary regular soda, a large but inconclusive study found. The results surprised the researchers who expected to see a difference between regular and diet soda drinkers.

It could be, they suggest, that even no-calorie sweet drinks increase the craving for more sweets, and that people who indulge in sodas probably have less healthy diets overall.

The study's senior author, Dr. Vasan Ramachandran, emphasized the findings don't show diet sodas are a cause of increased heart disease risks. But he said they show a surprising link that must be studied.

"It's intriguing and it begs an explanation by people who are qualified to do studies to understand this better," said Vasan, of Boston University School of Medicine.

However, a nutrition expert dismissed the study's findings on diet soda drinkers.

"There's too much contradictory evidence that shows that diet beverages are healthier for you in terms of losing weight that I would not put any credence to the result on the diet (drinks)," said Barry Popkin, of the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, who has called for cigarette-style surgeon general warnings about the negative health effects of soda.

Susan Neely, president of the American Beverage Association, said the notion that diet drinks are associated with bulging waistlines defies common sense.

"How can something with zero calories that's 99 percent water with a little flavoring in it ... cause weight gain?" she said.

The research comes from a massive, multi-generational heart study following residents of Framingham, Mass., a town about 25 miles west of Boston. The new study of 9,000 observations of middle-aged men and women was published Monday online in the journal Circulation.

The researchers found those who drank one or more sodas a day _ diet or regular _ had an increased risk of metabolic syndrome, compared to those who drank sodas infrequently. Metabolic syndrome is a cluster of symptoms that increase the risk for heart disease including large waistlines and higher levels of blood pressure, blood sugar, cholesterol and blood fats called triglycerides.

At the start of the study, those who reported drinking one or more soft drinks a day had a 48 percent increased prevalence of metabolic syndrome compared to those who drank less soda.

Of participants who initially showed no signs of metabolic syndrome, those who drank one or more sodas a day were at 44 percent higher risk of developing it four years later, they reported.

Researchers expected the results to differ when regular soda and diet soda drinkers were compared, and were surprised when they did not, Vasan said.

But Popkin said that result isn't that surprising. He said much of the market for diet sodas are people who have unhealthy lifestyles and know they need to lose weight _ with the other portion being thin people who want to stay that way. That means many people drinking diet sodas have unhealthy habits that could lead to increased heart disease risks, whether they drink diet soda or not.

In studies in which some users were randomly given diet sodas and others were given regular soda, diet soda drinkers lost weight and regular soda drinkers gained weight, Popkin said.

In a statement, the American Heart Association said it supports dietary patterns that include low-calorie beverages.

"Diet soda can be a good option to replace caloric beverages that do not contain important vitamins and minerals," the association said, adding further study is needed before any association between diet soda and heart risk factors would lead to public recommendations.

Vasan also said poor overall health habits may be one reason diet soda drinkers did not show lower heart disease risks in the Framingham study, but there hasn't been enough research to say for sure.

Another possible reason is a controversial theory called "dietary compensation," which holds that if someone drinks a large amount of liquids at a meal, they aren't satisfied and will tend to eat more at the next meal, Vasan said.

Other theories, Vasan said, are that people who drink a large amount of sweetened drinks are prone to develop a taste for sweeter foods, or that the substance that gives soda its caramel color promotes resistance to insulin, which is needed to process calories.

Without a more definitive explanation, Vasan offers only this advice to diet soda drinkers: "Consume in moderation and stayed tuned for more research."

___

On the Net:

Framingham Heart Study: Home

American Heart Association: American Heart Association
 
Why should people be surprised?

(shrugs)

I don't drink soda or diet soda. Not my thing.
 
Why should people be surprised?

(shrugs)

I don't drink soda or diet soda. Not my thing.

That's good! I tried to quit drinking diet soda but didnt work for me so I am trying to do it gradually instead of cold turkey.
 
Why should people be surprised?

(shrugs) I don't drink soda or diet soda. Not my thing.

Hi Banjo,

As for me, I am very stunned to read that article because my husband drank alot of diet soda. He trust with any diet beverages. He passed away due to heart attack and diabetes. People who have diagnosed to diabetic, they believe everything with FDA label for years.

It makes me; I do not trust any FDA approval on the safe label on the food and beverage. Also the medication over the counter or RX side of effect. You can’t trust with government at FDA, what you drink the beverage and eat the food. Imagine, my husband would be alive today, he would be pissed off and upset to read this article.
 
Hi Banjo,

As for me, I am very stunned to read that article because my husband drank alot of diet soda. He trust with any diet beverages. He passed away due to heart attack and diabetes. People who have diagnosed to diabetic, they believe everything with FDA label for years.

It makes me; I do not trust any FDA approval on the safe label on the food and beverage. You can’t trust with government at FDA, what you drink the beverage and eat the food. Imagine, my husband would be alive today, he would be pissed off and upset to read this article.

That's one of the biggest problems with food labels, not everything is what they seems to be. For instance, if they eliminate the trans fat from a food product, they replace it with another kind of fat. Something called interestified fat. Studies are showing that it's not good for us either. There's also the MSG that can be found in many food products, it's basically a poison for the brains.
 
There are so many bad things out there that can kill or harm us but not all of us are affected the same way. I mean..my husband's great grandmother is 90 something years old and she had been chain smoking for decades but someone like Diane Reeves, who has never smoked, dies of lung cancer.


The best we all can do is to eat healthy, avoid drugs, sleep well, exercise and try not to stress out too much on a daily basis.

I knew diet soda is not the healthiest thing ..best to drink it in moderation or not at all...which is what I am trying to work on.
 
I am not surprised after read this thread here. I know about this for a long time ago.

Soda etc including artificial sweetener are not my thing... I drink water a lot.

Did you know that artificial sweetner risk your health? It's not just artifical sweetner but more chemical favor, etc. in nutrition...

Do homemade is the best thing... I am very picker about nutrition. I read the label first before buy them... I am against any chemicals favor, etc. Of course I eat some of chemicals favor but rare...

My concern is chemical, favors, soduim, sugar and fat... and make sure there're no chemical addition, how many % soduim and fat before buy them.
 
Zero calories, same great taste (and heart risks)
Diet soda linked to same health problems as sugary drinks in bubbly puzzle

MSNBC News Services
Updated: 7:50 p.m. ET July 23, 2007

Sodas — even diet ones — may be linked with increased risk factors for heart disease and diabetes, researchers said on Monday.

They found adults who drink one or more sodas a day — diet or regular — had about a 50 percent higher risk of metabolic syndrome — a cluster of risk factors such as excessive fat around the waist, low levels of “good” cholesterol, high blood pressure and other symptoms.

“When you have metabolic syndrome, your risk of developing heart disease or stroke doubles. You also have a risk of developing diabetes,” said Dr. Ramachandran Vasan of Boston University School of Medicine, whose work appears in the journal Circulation.

Prior studies have linked consumption of sugar-laden sodas with multiple risk factors for heart disease, but Vasan and colleagues also found the link extends to diet sodas.

The results surprised the researchers who expected to see a difference between regular and diet soda drinkers. It could be, they suggest, that even no-calorie sweet drinks increase the craving for more sweets, and that people who indulge in sodas probably have less healthy diets overall.

The finding comes from a massive, multi-generational heart study following residents of Framingham, Mass., a town about 25 miles west of Boston. The new study included about 6,000 middle-aged men and women who were observed over four years. They all started out healthy, with no metabolic syndrome.

Mystery weight gain
Those who drank one or more soft drinks a day had a 31 percent greater risk of becoming obese.

They had a 30 percent increased risk of developing increased waist circumference — which has been shown to predict heart disease risk better than weight alone.

They also had a 25 percent increased risk of developing high blood triglycerides as well as high blood sugar, and a 32 percent higher risk of having low high-density lipoprotein or ”good” cholesterol levels.

The researchers then analyzed a smaller sample of participants on whom data on regular and diet soft drink consumption was available. Those who drank one or more diet or regular sodas per day had a 50 to 60 percent increased risk for developing metabolic syndrome.

“The part about diet soda is more intriguing,” Vasan said.



He said people who drink soda, whether diet or sugar-sweetened, tend to have similar dietary patterns.

“On average, soda drinkers tend to eat more calories, consume more saturated fat and trans fat, eat less fiber, exercise less and be more sedentary,” Vasan said.

The researchers adjusted for those factors and still observed a significant link between soft drink consumption and the risk of developing metabolic syndrome.

Vasan said there are several theories about how diet sodas could increase a person’s metabolic risk.

Sweet tooth may be to blame
“One possibility is that diet soda is sweet. Maybe drinking something sweet conditions you in such a way that you develop a preference for sweet things,” he said.

“Also, diet soda is a liquid. When you take liquids at a meal, they don’t satiate you as much (as solids),” he said.

Poor overall health habits among diet soda drinker could be partly to blame. Barry Popkin, of the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, who has called for cigarette-style surgeon general warnings about the negative health effects of soda, says that much of the market for diet sodas are people who have unhealthy lifestyles and know they need to lose weight — with the other portion being thin people who want to stay that way. That means many people drinking diet sodas have unhealthy habits that could lead to increased heart disease risks, whether they drink diet soda or not.

Another theory holds that the substance that gives soda its caramel color promotes resistance to insulin, which is needed to process calories. The coloring has also been associated with inflammation in animal experiments.

“These are all theories which we have not studied,” Vasan said. “We’d like to see these data tested and replicated or refuted. We’d also like nutrition scientists to conduct additional research to help us understand why diet soda is associated with metabolic risk.”

Susan Feely, president of the American Beverage Association, said the notion that diet drinks are associated with bulging waistlines defies common sense.

“How can something with zero calories that’s 99 percent water with a little flavoring in it ... cause weight gain?” she said.

Without a more definitive explanation, Vasan offers only this advice to diet soda drinkers: “consume in moderation and stayed tuned for more research.”

© 2007 MSNBC Interactive

No calories, same taste (and heart risks) - Diet & Nutrition - MSNBC.com
 
I swear Coca-cola has something addicting in it.My husband and I both had a hard time stopping drinking it.Now we've switched to diet.Figured the weight would kill me before the chemicals.Ugh have to give it up alltogether.Juices so fattening water so bland.so what can we drink?
 
Don't forgot to add milk too, that's healthier than soda.

Yes a glass of milk per day in everyday is moderately and also including cereal.

I mean is drink a lot is water, herbal tea and pure juices all the time a day, not milk.

My opinion:

Water and herbal tea, you can drink all the time...

Pure juices, twice to three times a day...
 
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