- Artificially Sweetened Beverages Beyond the Metabolic Risks: A . . .
We carried out a review of the available literature on the effects that artificially sweetened beverages (ASBs) such as diet soda (DS) have on health, particularly those not related to incident diabetes mellitus, obesity, and metabolic syndrome
- Artificially Sweetened Beverages and Health Outcomes: An Umbrella . . .
The consumption of ASBs was associated with a higher risk of obesity, type 2 diabetes, all-cause mortality, hypertension, and cardiovascular disease incidence However, further cohort studies and clinical trials in humans are still needed to understand the impact of ASBs on health outcomes
- Low- and No-Calorie Sweetened Beverages and Body Weight and . . .
We performed random-effects network meta-analyses for each outcome to compare the 3 interventions (LNCSBs, SSBs, and water) simultaneously Inconsistency was assessed in the direct, indirect, and network estimates
- Observational studies shed light on diet soda consumption - UCLA Health
Specific research linking frequent diet soda consumption to adverse cardiovascular effects includes an analysis of seven large studies, with a total of 308,420 participants, conducted by scientists in Great Britain
- Adolescents’ knowledge and beliefs regarding health risks of soda and . . .
A survey utilising a nationally representative sample (stratified two-stage probability design) assessed knowledge of nutritional contents and health consequences of soda, and beliefs regarding health risks of diet soda, and soda and diet drink consumption
- Soft drinks, aspartame, and the risk of cancer and cardiovascular . . .
In this issue of the Journal, Schernhammer et al (14) investigate the association between artificially sweetened and sugar-containing sodas and the risk of hematopoetic cancers in the Nurses’ Health Study and the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study
- Bittersweet Effects of Soda: Regular vs. Diet
Diet soda is often portrayed as a healthier alternative to regular soda, because of the advertizing claim of the beverage containing zero calories; however, this is just a deception as more research is portraying the artificial sweetener to cause negative health problems
- How Unhealthy is Diet Soda? We Ask Experts | TIME
“Type 2 diabetes seems to be the strongest link” when it comes to diet soda and health risks, says Susan E Swithers, a professor of neuroscience at Purdue University who researches
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