F
|
resh research offers further
information on the potential for diet drinks — that is, beverages sweetened
with artificial sugar substitutes — to harm cardiovascular health.
Artificially sweetened soft drinks
may raise the risk of heart disease and death in postmenopausal women.
A
study that followed tens of thousands of postmenopausal women for more than 10
years has linked a higher consumption of diet drinks to an increased risk
of stroke, heart disease,
and death.
The
link between diet drinks and stroke was strongest for strokes that arise from
blocked arteries, and from smaller blood vessels in particular.
The
journal Stroke has
now published a paperabout the analysis. The lead author is Dr. Yasmin
Mossavar-Rahmani, an associate professor of clinical epidemiology and
population health in the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx, NY.
Dr.
Mossavar-Rahmani and her team point out that the findings do not prove that
diet drinks harm the heart and circulation system. That is because the study
was an observational one, and the figures on diet drink consumption came from
self-reports.
However, Rachel K. Johnson — who chaired the panel
that wrote the science advisory from the American Heart Association
(AHA) about diet drinks and heart health — comments, "This study adds to
the evidence that limiting use of diet beverages is the most prudent thing to
do for your health."
Experts
commenting in an editorial that accompanies the new study paper also
suggest that until there is sufficient evidence regarding who might benefit
from consuming diet drinks, the emphasis should be on drinking water as the most
healthful no-calorie drink.
Diet drinks and cardiovascular risks
The
data for this study came from a racially diverse group of 81,714 postmenopausal
women in the Women's Health Initiative Observational Study.
The
women were all aged 50–79 years when they enrolled during 1993–1998. The study
then tracked their health with regular evaluations for an average of 11.9 years
afterward.
At
the 3-year evaluation point, the women answered some questions regarding how
often they had consumed diet drinks in the previous 3 months.
The researchers defined diet drinks as any
low-calorie colas, soda, and fruit drinks sweetened with artificial sugar
substitutes.
They
did not ask the women to specify the which artificial sweeteners the drinks
contained.
When
they analyzed the data, they adjusted the results to eliminate the effect of
other factors that influence stroke risk, such as age, smoking, and high blood pressure.
The
researchers found that compared with consuming fewer than one diet drink per
week or none at all, consuming two or more per day was associated with:
·
a 23 percent raised risk of stroke
·
a 31 percent higher risk of a stroke
that results from a clot
·
a 29 percent higher risk of heart
disease, as in a fatal or nonfatal heart attack
·
a 16 percent raised risk of death
from any cause
They
also revealed that a high intake of diet drinks among postmenopausal women with
no history of heart disease or diabetes was
linked to a more than twofold raised risk of strokes arising from blockages in
small arteries in the brain.
Postmenopausal
women with obesity who drank two or more diet
drinks each day also had twice the risk of stroke than those who drank fewer
than one per week.
'Limit prolonged use of diet drinks'
Because
they confined the study to postmenopausal women, the researchers cannot say
whether the same would be true for men, or for women before the menopause. It is now up to
further studies to determine this.
Also,
because the data did not specify which artificial sweeteners the women had
consumed, Dr. Mossavar-Rahmani says that the scientists could not distinguish
the potentially harmful from the potentially harmless.
"Our research and other
observational studies have shown that artificially sweetened beverages may not
be harmless and high consumption is associated with a higher risk of stroke and
heart disease."
Dr. Yasmin
Mossavar-Rahmani
While
the AHA advise that people drink water as their preferred no-calorie drink,
they acknowledge that diet drinks might help them move away from
sugar-sweetened beverages.
However,
Dr. Johnson cautions, "Since long-term clinical trial data are not
available on the effects of low-calorie sweetened drinks and cardiovascular
health, given their lack of nutritional value, it may be prudent to limit their
prolonged use."
No comments:
Post a Comment