Research shows
doubling of stroke risk for some women over 50
by Harriet Edleson, AARP, February 14,
2019
A study of more than 80,000 women ages 50
to 79 links drinking two or more diet drinks a day with an increased risk for
certain kinds of stroke, coronary artery disease and death.
Published today in the journal Stroke,
a publication of the American Heart Association, the study follows other
research that previously connected the artificial sweeteners found in diet soda
and other beverages with a higher risk of stroke, heart attack, type 2
diabetes, obesity and other conditions.
But the study released today is one of the
first to look at the link between drinking artificially sweetened beverages and
the risk of certain types of stroke in a large, racially diverse group of older
women.
“Many well-meaning people, especially those
who are overweight or obese, drink low-calorie sweetened drinks to cut calories
in their diet,” noted lead study author Yasmin Mossavar-Rahmani, of the Albert
Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx, New York, in a statement. “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.”
Compared with women who drank diet drinks
less than once a week or not at all, women who drank two or more artificially
sweetened beverages per day were:
·
23 percent more likely to have a stroke
·
31 percent more likely to have a clot-caused (ischemic) stroke
·
29 percent more likely to develop heart disease
·
16 percent more likely to die from any cause
The risks were found to be higher in women
who consumed diet drinks two or more times a day, more than doubling the risk
of a clot-caused stroke among women without previous heart disease or diabetes,
obese women without previous heart disease or diabetes, and African American
women without previous heart disease or diabetes.
While the study identifies the notable link
between diet beverages and, in particular, small artery strokes, the study
authors pointed out that it does not prove a cause-and-effect relationship
because it was based on self-reported information about drink consumption. The self-reported
study data also did not name specific artificial sweeteners in the colas, sodas
and fruit drinks.
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