Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Even Diet Soft Drinks Can Expand Your Waistline

Darpan News Desk IANS, 07 Apr, 2015 11:39 AM
    If you drink diet soda thinking it will help you shed unwanted belly fat, nothing could be further from the truth, says a new study.
     
    For the study, researchers gathered data on health status and lifestyles of 749 men and women aged 65 and older, and then tracked the health outcomes in 466 survivors for more than nine years.
     
    The number of sodas they consumed -- and whether they were diet or regular -- was recorded at the beginning of the study and at each of three follow-up visits.
     
    "Among participants, who reported that they did not consume any diet sodas, waist circumference increased less than one inch on average over the total follow-up period," said lead author Sharon Fowler from University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio.
     
    Among participants who reported occasional use -- drinking less than one diet soda a day -- waist circumference increased almost two inches.
     
    And among those who consumed diet sodas every day, or more often than once a day, waist circumference increased over three inches.
     
    These findings raise a red flag for seniors because fat around the waist -- the proverbial tire around the middle -- has been linked with increased inflammation and risk of metabolic disease, diabetes, heart attack, stroke, cancer and mortality.
     
    When waistlines expand in older age, visceral fat increases disproportionately, and risk rises, the researchers noted.
     
    The study appeared in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Human sleep patterns evolved first in ocean?

    Human sleep patterns evolved first in ocean?
    The cells that control our rhythms of sleep and wakefulness may have first evolved in the ocean - hundreds of millions of years ago - in response to pressure...

    Human sleep patterns evolved first in ocean?

    How exercise keeps depression at bay

    How exercise keeps depression at bay
    It is known that physical exercise has many beneficial effects on health and researchers have now found how exercise shields the brain from stress-induced depression....

    How exercise keeps depression at bay

    Blocking immune cells may treat deadly skin cancer

    Blocking immune cells may treat deadly skin cancer
    British scientists have found that chemical signals produced by a type of immune cells, called macrophages, also act as a "survival signal" for melanoma cells....

    Blocking immune cells may treat deadly skin cancer

    Expanding waistlines may increase breast cancer risk

    Expanding waistlines may increase breast cancer risk
    A study co-authored by an Indian-origin professor has found a link between expanding waistlines and breast cancer risk for women between 20s and post-menopausal age....

    Expanding waistlines may increase breast cancer risk

    Memory slips in elderly may signal Alzheimer's

    Memory slips in elderly may signal Alzheimer's
    "What's notable about our study is the time it took for the transition from self-reported memory complaint to dementia or clinical impairment - about 12...

    Memory slips in elderly may signal Alzheimer's

    Why Asians may be at increased risk of heart disease

    Why Asians may be at increased risk of heart disease
    A genetic mutation that occurs predominantly among people of East Asian descent disables a common metabolic protein called ALDH2, encoded in the gene...

    Why Asians may be at increased risk of heart disease