One Soft Drink a Day Increases Type 2 Diabetes Risk by a Fifth
Western
lifestyles blamed as one in 20 UK adults now thought to suffer from the
disease
Drinking
a can of cola a day increases the risk of developing diabetes by a fifth,
according to research.
The largest study of the link between soft-drink consumption and Type 2
diabetes in Europe has found that the sweetened beverages not only cause
weight gain, which is associated with a higher rate of diabetes, but also
increase the risk of the condition independently.
Almost one in 20 adults in the UK has diabetes, of which 2.6 million are
diagnosed and 500,000 are undiagnosed. Rates are rising in this country and
around the world, driven by Western lifestyles, and the number of cases is
expected to exceed 4 million in the UK by 2025.
Researchers from Imperial College, London, led the study of more than
12,000 people with Type 2 diabetes whose diets were compared with 16,000
controls in nine European countries, including the UK.
The results showed that people who drank one can of sweetened soft drink a
day had a 22% increased risk of diabetes.
The risk remained almost as high, at 18%, even after account was taken of
how overweight the individuals were and how much they ate.
Sweetened soft drinks contain a lot of calories which contribute to
overweight and obesity, which in turn is a cause of diabetes.
But the drinks appeared to increase the risk separately from this effect,
possibly by triggering insulin resistance, reducing the body's ability to
use glucose.
Diet drinks, with artificial sweeteners, did not appear to increase the
risk once account was taken of individuals' weight and calorie intake. Dr
Dora Romaguera, of Imperial College, who led the study published in
Diabetologia, said: “There was an association in normal weight individuals,
overweight and the obese. Even in normal weight individuals, those who
drank a glass of soft drink a day were more likely to develop diabetes.”
No link with diabetes was found for those who drank fruit juice. But the
researchers were unable to distinguish between pure unsweetened fruit juice
and the sweetened and diluted fruit juices as the data was collected in the
1990s and no distinction was made. Dr Romaguera said: “The hypothesis for
fruit juice is different. We know they naturally contain sugar but fruits
are not associated with an increase in diabetes, rather they are
protective. It may be the anti-oxidants they contain that counter the
effect of the sugar.”
JEREMY LAURANCE THE INDEPENDENT ET130426
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