Is diet soda bad
for you? Specifically, does it actually help you lose weight?
Long story short, no. In fact, a
Purdue researcher says public health officials should tell people to avoid diet
soda much like they do with regular, sugar-sweetened soda. Susan E.
Swithers, PhD, a professor of psychological sciences and a behavioral
neuroscientist at Purdue says warnings may need to be expanded to include
limiting intake of all sweeteners, including no-calorie sweeteners.
Swithers reviewed a set of
recent studies aiming to answer the question, “Is diet soda bad for you?”
She found that about 30 percent of American adults and 15 percent of American
children ingest artificial sweeteners, including aspartame, sucralose and saccharin.
“There is a lot of pressure from the public health sector to
find solutions to counter the rise of obesity and chronic disease, and there is
a lot of money and business at stake for the food industry as it develops and
promotes these products. Beverages are becoming political issues as government
leaders and politicians seek regulation and taxing to limit their availability
and consumption, but most of these measures exclude diet soft drinks because
they are perceived as healthy. When it comes to making policy decisions, it’s
more important than ever that the science is considered and that the public
understands what the science says in order to help them make the best health
decisions.” — Susan Swithers
Artificial sweeteners seem to confuse
the body’s natural ability to manage calories based on tasting something sweet.
People tend to them overeat even if they drink diet soda. And get this: People
who consume artificial sweeteners are twice as likely to develop metabolic
syndrome, too.
Is Diet Soda Bad
for You?
Beyond that, there’s lots of research linking diet soda drinking
to all sorts of health troubles.
Depression
Drinking more than four cans a day of
soda is linked to a 30 percent higher risk of depression. On the flip side,
drinking four cups of coffee a day seemed to offer protective effects, lowering
depression risk 10 percent. The risk appeared to be greater for people who
drank diet soda compared to regular soda.)
Kidney Damage
Harvard researchers found long-term
diet soda drinking causes a 30 percent greater reduction in kidney function.
The study looked at people who regularly consumed diet soda over 20 years.
Type 2 Diabetes & Metabolic
Syndrome
A 2009 study published in the journal Diabetes
Care found drinking
diet soda daily is linked to a 36 percent higher risk of metabolic syndrome and
a 67 percent higher risk of type 2 diabetes compared to non-diet soda
drinkers.
In fact, the artificial sweeteners may tamper with
the gut-brain connection.
This can lead to brain trickery that leads to “metabolic derangements.”
Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel researchers were surprised when they
found diet soda actually alters gut microbes in a way that increases the risk
of metabolic diseases. When researchers fed mice zero-calorie sweeteners found
in these drinks, including saccharin, aspartame and sucralose, they
developed glucose intolerance.
Cardiovascular Disease
University of Miami and Columbia
University researchers followed more than 2,000 adults for 10 years and found
that those drinking diet soda daily were more likely to suffer a stroke or
heart attack. They were also more likely to die from cardiovascular disease.
This increase risk remained even when researchers adjusted for smoking,
exercise, weight, sodium intake, high cholesterol, and other factors that could
have contributed to the difference.
Compromised Lungs
Drinking soda, including diet soda, increases your risk of
developing asthma and COPD symptoms.
The more soda a person drinks, the higher the risk. (That’s called a
“dose-response relationship.”)
An Australian study found that 13.3 percent of
surveyed participants with asthma and 15.6 percent of those with COPD drank
more than two cups of soda each day.
A Less Protected Brain
Aspartame, a common artificial sweetener in diet
sodas, seems to chip away at the brain’s antioxidant defense system. The
results of an animal study found long-term consumption of aspartame leads
to an imbalance in the antioxidant/pro-oxidant status in the brain, mainly
through the mechanism involving the glutathione-dependent system.
Aspartame is also linked to:
·
migraines & headaches
·
depression
·
anxiety
·
short term memory loss
·
multiple sclerosis
·
fibromyalgia
·
hearing loss
·
weight gain
·
fatigue
·
brain tumors
·
epilepsy
·
chronic fatigue syndrome
·
birth defects
·
Alzheimer’s disease
·
lymphoma
·
diabetes
·
arthritis (including rheumatoid)
·
chemical sensitivities
·
ADHD
·
Parkinson’s
Final
Thoughts: Is Diet Soda Bad for You? (Yes.)
·
Diet soda is not a healthier
alternative to regular sugar-sweetened soda.
·
Diet soda does not promote weight
loss, contrary to popular belief.
·
Diet soda is linked to metabolic
damage, heart disease, weight gain and other health problems.
·
If you’re in the mood for a fizzy
drink, consider a much healthier option: kombucha.
Source: Dr. Axe
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