Drinking two or more diet sodas a day increases risk of heart attack: study

Drinking two or more diet sodas a day increases risk of heart attack: study

Drinking Diet Coke every day increases your risk of dying young, experts have warned.

Two or more artificially sweetened drinks a day ups the risk of stroke by a quarter and heart disease by a third, new findings show.

And compared with people who never touch them, the risk of early death is 16 percent higher for diet drink guzzlers.

‘Diet drinks are NOT harmless’

Scientists warned their findings should serve as a warning to those on diets.

Dr. Yasmin Mossavar-Rahmani, lead author of the study at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx, New York, said: “Many well-meaning people, especially those who are overweight or obese, drink low-calorie sweetened drinks to cut calories in their diet.

“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.”

Heart disease is when the blood vessels that supply the heart with blood narrow, increasing the risk of a heart attack, angina and stroke.

A heart attack is when the artery is blocked, preventing blood from getting through — and an ischemic stroke is when a blood vessel in the brain becomes blocked in a similar way.

Obese women at even greater risk

The new findings are based on a big study of women and show some groups are at even greater risk, with those drinking two or more diet drinks a day who were also obese having more than double the stroke risk.

And African-American women also had a higher risk of stroke.

Mossavar-Rahmani did stress that while their findings suggest a link, they couldn’t prove diet drinks cause stroke and heart problems.

The research, published in the journal Stroke, included data from 81,714 post-menopausal women (who were ages 50 to 79 at the start of the study) and who were tracked for an average of 12 years.

One serving of diet drink was regarded as 12 ounces.

Mossavar-Rahmani said the study had not looked at individual artificial sweeteners, saying: “We don’t know specifically what types of artificially sweetened beverages they were consuming, so we don’t know which artificial sweeteners may be harmful and which may be harmless.”

Cutting calories? Drink water instead

The American Heart Association has recently published a science advisory that found there was inadequate scientific research to conclude that low-calorie sweetened beverages do or do not affect the risk of heart disease and stroke.

But it states that water is the best choice for a no-calorie drink.

Dr. Rachel Johnson, professor of nutrition emeritus at the University of Vermont, said: “Unfortunately, current research simply does not provide enough evidence to distinguish between the effects of different low-calorie sweeteners on heart and brain health.

“This study adds to the evidence that limiting use of diet beverages is the most prudent thing to do for your health.”

There is a growing body of evidence that does suggest diet drinks are not good for your health.

Last year, scientists from Israel and Singapore warned that six artificial sweeteners in the drinks are toxic to our gut bacteria — which could have a link to a range of diseases from obesity to bowel disease, even Alzheimer’s.

Another study warned the drinks can increase the risk of diabetes.

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