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wombat2u2004
07-24-2007, 01:18 AM
Study Links Diet Soft Drinks With Cardiac Risk
July 23, 2007 08:40:40 PM PST
By Ed Edelson
HealthDay Reporter

Yahoo! Health: Diabetes News

MONDAY, July 23 (HealthDay News) -- Drinking more than one soda a day -- even if it's the sugar-free diet kind -- is associated with an increased incidence of metabolic syndrome, a cluster of risk factors linked to the development of diabetes and cardiovascular disease, a study finds.

The link to diet soda found in the study was "striking" but not entirely a surprise, said Dr. Ramachandran Vasan, study senior author and professor of medicine at Boston University School of Medicine. There had been some hints of it in earlier studies, he said.

"But this is the first study to show the association in a prospective fashion and in a large population," Vasan said.

That population consisted of more than 6,000 participants in the Framingham Heart Study, which has been following residents of a Massachusetts town since 1948. When the soda portion of the study began, all participants were free of metabolic syndrome, a collection of risk factors including high blood pressure, elevated levels of the blood fats called triglycerides, low levels of the artery-protecting HDL cholesterol, high fasting blood sugar levels and excessive waist circumference. Metabolic syndrome is the presence of three or more of these risk factors.

Over the four years of the study, people who consumed more than one soft drink of any kind a day were 44 percent more likely to develop metabolic syndrome than those who didn't drink a soda a day.

The findings are published in the July 24 issue of the journal Circulation.

A variety of explanations, none proven, have been proposed for the link between diet soft drink consumption and metabolic syndrome, Vasan said. That association was evident even when the researchers accounted for other factors, such as levels of saturated fat and fiber in the diet, total calorie intake, smoking and physical activity.

One theory is that the high sweetness of all soft drinks makes a person more prone to eat sugary, fattening foods. Another is that the caramel content of soft drinks promotes metabolic changes that lead to insulin resistance. "These are hotly debated by nutritional experts," Vasan said.

Vasan, who noted that he is not a nutritional expert, said he leans toward the theory that "this is a marker of dietary behavior" -- that people who like to drink sweet soda also like to eat the kind of foods that cardiac nutritionists warn against.

"But we cannot infer causality," Vasan said, meaning there is no proof that soda itself is the villain. "We have an association. Maybe it is a causal one or maybe it is a marker of something else."

Carefully controlled animal studies might resolve the cause-and-effect issue, he said.

Dr. Elizabeth G. Nabel, director of the U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, which funds the Framingham Heart Study, said in a prepared statement: "Other studies have shown that the extra calories and sugar in soft drinks contribute to weight gain, and therefore heart disease risk. This study echoes those findings by extending the link to all soft drinks and the metabolic syndrome."

Dr. Suzanne R. Steinbaum, director of Women and Heart Disease at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City, said, "There is no safe way of eating junk food, just as we learned the lesson from trans fats and partially hydrogenated oils often found in fat-free or low-fat cookies. Diet soda does not protect us from the development of what we are trying to avoid by consuming it."

More information

Learn more about metabolic syndrome at the American Heart Association.


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moosmom
07-24-2007, 09:54 AM
That's why I drink water, LOTS of water.

BTW Wom, LOVE your siggy!!

wombat2u2004
07-24-2007, 10:08 AM
That's why I drink water, LOTS of water.

BTW Wom, LOVE your siggy!!

Thanx mate.....it's the first siggy I've ever had of my own, so I'm guarding it jealously....lol.
Wom

Laura's Babies
07-24-2007, 10:57 AM
I don't drink soda's and haven't in probably 40 years. I prefer water!

lizbud
07-24-2007, 12:11 PM
Quote from the article;

" Carefully controlled animal studies might resolve the cause-and-effect issue, he said."


Leave the animals out of it. It's a human problem & testing should be in a
controlled study of human subjects. Any excess intake of food or drink is bad by definition.

Lady's Human
07-24-2007, 02:57 PM
Dr. Ramachandran S. Vasan of Boston University School of Medicine, the lead author of the study, said it is unlikely that an ingredient in soda causes the effect. More likely is that consuming sweet sodas changes dietary patterns or that soda is a marker for the poor eating habits of the participants. (From an article in the Indianapolis Star)




However, because this was an observational study, Vasan's group could not discern any evidence that drinking soft drinks actually caused the metabolic syndrome. ( From Scientific American )


In other words, this study is completely devoid of hard conclusions. Makes for a nice, alarming headline, but means nothing in reality.

lizbud
07-24-2007, 04:45 PM
HIGH FIVE LH :D Great post.

wombat2u2004
07-24-2007, 08:20 PM
Ohhhhh....I'm sure they're on to something.
Wom

Catty1
07-24-2007, 09:55 PM
Well...only Coke Zero a day right now....*whew* :)

wombat2u2004
07-24-2007, 10:05 PM
HIGH FIVE Catty1 :D Great post.
Wom

Catty1
07-24-2007, 10:19 PM
HIGH FIVE Catty1 Great post.
Wom

What are you ON????

wombat2u2004
07-24-2007, 10:38 PM
What are you ON????

:D I'm not real sure.....but they are small and oval shaped, and there kinda blue in colour, and I keep forgetting if I've taken them or not which is why I run out of them a lot :D
Wom