Reuters Health Information: Daily sugary drinks tied to increased visceral fat
Daily sugary drinks tied to increased visceral fat
Last Updated: 2016-01-11
By Kathryn Doyle
(Reuters Health) - Drinking sugar-sweetened beverages like
soda daily may lead to more abdominal fat gain over time,
according to a new study.
"A lot of prior studies have looked at sugar-sweetened
beverages and obesity," said lead author Dr. Caroline S. Fox.
"We looked at body fat distribution, in particular change over
time."
Fox, a former investigator with the Framingham Heart Study
of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, is currently a
special volunteer with the National Institutes of Health.
She and her colleagues found that all participants tended to
gain visceral fat over time, but those who drank sugary
beverages daily gained more.
The researchers used data from about 1,000 adult
participants in the Framingham Heart Study who answered food
frequency questions about sugar-sweetened beverages and diet
soda. Most participants said they drank a mixture of sugary
beverages and diet soda.
About a third said they never consumed sugar-sweetened
beverages, 20% did so occasionally, 35% drank them frequently
and 13% drank them daily.
At the study start, they underwent a computed tomography
scan to measure quantity and volume of abdominal fat tissue. Six
years later, they underwent another scan.
Over that period, visceral fat volume increased by 658 cubic
centimeters for non-drinkers, slightly more for occasional and
frequent drinkers, and by 852 cubic centimeters for daily
drinkers of sugary beverages, as reported online January 11 in
the journal Circulation.
For daily drinkers, that's in increase of about 0.8
kilograms, or 1.8 pounds, of abdominal fat, Fox told Reuters
Health by phone.
"That's probably a very small difference of actual visceral
fat," but it's enough to make a difference for metabolic risk,
according to other studies, she said.
Diet soda wasn't linked to an increase in visceral fat.
It's not clear from this study whether decreasing sugary
beverage intake would decrease the gain in visceral fat over
time, Fox said.
The American Heart Association recommends a limit of 100
calories per day of added sugars, such as those found in
sweetened beverages, for most women, and 150 calories per day
for most men.
"Drinking one 12-ounce soft drink a day would exceed that
amount - and while they are a major source, sugar-sweetened
beverages contribute only about half of the added sugar consumed
by Americans," said Jean Welsh of Emory University in Atlanta,
who was not part of the new study.
"Water and milk are the healthiest beverage choices," Welsh
told Reuters Health by email. "Sugary beverage consumers who are
looking to reduce their sugar and calorie consumption may find
that diet soda consumption helps - but only as long as they are
careful to not eat more of something else."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1ndVKNe
Circulation 2016.
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