It’s hardly surprising to learn that diet soda is dangerous or that it “may do more harm than good.
We’ve been reporting on the dangers of diet soda here for a long while now. Well, recently researchers from Purdue reviewed a dozen studies all published within the last five years on the health risks of consuming diet soda.
They published their findings in an opinion piece in Trends in Endocrinology & Metabolism (Artificial Sweeteners Produce the Counterintuitive Effect of Inducing Metabolic Derangements).
It was there they revealed their “shock” over their findings.
The researchers wrote:
As a result, they set out to discuss the previous findings and attempt to explain how diet soda does serious damage to the body.
The researchers suggest that diet sodas trick the body into thinking it has consumed sugar. It confuses the normal reactions that follow sugar ingestion (blood sugar regulation, etc.). This leads the body to further confusion and malfunction when actual sugar is consumed, resulting in unregulated blood sugar, blood pressure fluctuations, and changes in metabolism.
Also, because these super-sweet sweeteners overload the pleasure centers of the brain, it essentially dampens them requiring you to indulge in more calorie-laden, sweeter foods to fulfill this growing need.
Following the published piece, the American Beverage Association lashed out, reminding people the article was an opinion and not a scientific study, never mind that it was an opinion piece that investigated several scientific studies.
The association said sugar substitutes are “safe and effective” tools in weight loss and management. They didn’t address the research that says these sweeteners increase the risk of heart disease, stroke, and diabetes, regardless of weight.
Another study (Associations of Sugar and Artificially Sweetened Soda with Albuminuria and Kidney Function Decline in Women) published in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology found a strong positive correlation between degeneration of kidney function and consumption of aspartame-containing diet soda.
It’s time to give up the diet soda and move toward purified water.
This decision will have a profound positive impact on your health.
|