TECH & SCI

Why you may want to stop drinking diet soda 

2017-04-23 09:50 GMT+8
Editor Xie Zhenqi
Diet drinks, once thought as a good alternative to sugary drinks to reduce the risk of diabetes and obesity, may actually put you at a greater risk of stroke and dementia, new research has found.
Just one artificially sweetened beverage a day appears to increase the odds by a factor of three, compared with drinking less than once a week, according to the research published this week in the American Heart Association's journal Stroke.
The researchers cautioned the study only observed the trend mainly among one group of people and cannot establish a cause-and-effect relationship.
"Our study shows a need to put more research into this area given how often people drink artificially-sweetened beverages," said Matthew Pase, a senior fellow in the department of neurology at Boston University, Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne, Australia, and the Framingham Heart Study, a US health project that kicked off in 1948 to identify factors contributing to cardiovascular disease.
Diet Coke has in the past raised health concerns over its use of aspartame, one of the most intensively scrutinized food additives. / VCG Photo
The researchers analyzed the Framingham Heart Study Offspring Cohort of 2,888 people, primarily Caucasian, over the age of 45 for the stroke study and 1,484 people over the age of 60 for the dementia arm of the study.
Over a period of seven years, the researchers reviewed what people were drinking at three different points in time.
At the end of a 10-year follow-up period, 97 people, or three percent, suffered from stroke, 82 of which were ischemic, or caused by blockage of blood vessels; while 81 people, or five percent, developed dementia, 63 of which were diagnosed as Alzheimer's disease.
After adjusting for various risk factors such as age, sex, caloric intake and education, they found that people who drank at least one artificially-sweetened beverage a day were three times as likely to develop ischemic stroke and 2.9 times as likely to develop Alzheimer's disease dementia.
Interestingly, the researchers did not see an association with regular soda, probably because people did not drink sugary sodas as often as diet sodas, Pase said.
"This certainly does not mean they are a healthy option," he said. "We recommend that people drink water on a regular basis instead of sugary or artificially sweetened beverages."
Meanwhile, Pase noted only a small number of people in the study developed either dementia or stroke, so "it is by no means a certain fate."
(Source: Xinhua)
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