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Access
07-17-2006, 03:09 PM
More Diet Drinks, More Weight Gain


Fowler's team looked at seven to eight years of data on 1,550 Mexican-American and non-Hispanic white Americans aged 25 to 64. Of the 622 study participants who were of normal weight at the beginning of the study, about a third became overweight or obese.

For regular soft-drink drinkers, the risk of becoming overweight or obese was:

26% for up to 1/2 can each day
30.4% for 1/2 to one can each day
32.8% for 1 to 2 cans each day
47.2% for more than 2 cans each day.
For diet soft-drink drinkers, the risk of becoming overweight or obese was:

36.5% for up to 1/2 can each day
37.5% for 1/2 to one can each day
54.5% for 1 to 2 cans each day
57.1% for more than 2 cans each day.
For each can of diet soft drink consumed each day, a person's risk of obesity went up 41%.


Diet Soda No Smoking Gun

Diet Soda No Smoking Gun

Fowler is quick to note that a study of this kind does not prove that diet soda causes obesity. More likely, she says, it shows that something linked to diet soda drinking is also linked to obesity.

"One possible part of the explanation is that people who see they are beginning to gain weight may be more likely to switch from regular to diet soda," Fowler suggests. "But despite their switching, their weight may continue to grow for other reasons. So diet soft-drink use is a marker for overweight and obesity."

Why? Nutrition expert Leslie Bonci, MPH, RD, puts it in a nut****l.

"You have to look at what's on your plate, not just what's in your glass," Bonci tells ***MD.

People often mistake diet drinks for diets, says Bonci, director of sports nutrition at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and nutrition consultant to college and professional sports teams and to the Pittsburgh Ballet.

"A lot of people say, 'I am drinking a diet soft drink because that is better for me. But soft drinks by themselves are not the root of America's obesity problem," she says. "You can't go into a fast-food restaurant and say, 'Oh, it's OK because I had diet soda.' If you don't do anything else but switch to a diet soft drink, you are not going to lose weight."


The Mad Hatter Theory

The Mad Hatter Theory

"Take some more tea," the March Hare said to Alice, very earnestly.
"I've had nothing yet," Alice replied in an offended tone, "so I can't take more."
"You mean you can't take less," said the Hatter: "It's very easy to take more than nothing." Lewis Carroll, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

There is actually a way that diet drinks could contribute to weight gain, Fowler suggests.

She remembers being struck by the scene in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland in which Alice is offended because she is offered tea but is given none -- even though she hadn't asked for tea in the first place. So she helps herself to tea and bread and butter.

That may be just what happens when we offer our bodies the sweet taste of diet drinks, but give them no calories. Fowler points to a recent study in which feeding artificial sweeteners to rat pups made them crave more calories than animals fed real sugar.

"If you offer your body something that tastes like a lot of calories, but it isn't there, your body is *****ed to the possibility that there is something there and it will search for the calories promised but not delivered," Fowler says.

Perhaps, Bonci says, our bodies are smarter than we think.

"People think they can just fool the body. But maybe the body isn't fooled," she says. "If you are not giving your body those calories you promised it, maybe your body will retaliate by wanting more calories. Some soft drink studies do suggest that diet drinks stimulate appetite."

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äÈÖ ÇáÞæÇÝí
04-27-2010, 11:42 AM
Strange this is, we believe that the drinks Diet is appropriate to reduce weight, they contain fewer calories do not know what is behind this contradiction there are some who say that drinks Diet appropriate, especially for patients with diabetes this study came to us in a dilemma
Thank you Access for this good information

fragrance
05-03-2010, 12:04 PM
that what i know the diet drinks contian special type of sugre which is not good fr the health

Thanks Access

Access
05-08-2010, 02:49 PM
Strange this is, we believe that the drinks Diet is appropriate to reduce weight, they contain fewer calories do not know what is behind this contradiction there are some who say that drinks Diet appropriate, especially for patients with diabetes this study came to us in a dilemma
Thank you Access for this good information



The problem is in the type of sugar used for diet drinks. It's worst than normal sugar

æÌæÏ
05-20-2010, 01:51 PM
Thank you Mr. Access

I’m obese but not too much because drinking soft drink tow time’s minimum each day

Because that I will try to reduce soft drink
I think it is first reason for my obese

Thank you Mr. Access very much

Access
05-23-2010, 03:11 PM
that what i know the diet drinks contian special type of sugre which is not good fr the health

Thanks Access

You most welocme Fragrance. Thanks for your contribution

Access
05-23-2010, 03:13 PM
Thank you Mr. Access



I’m obese but not too much because drinking soft drink tow time’s minimum each day


Because that I will try to reduce soft drink
I think it is first reason for my obese


Thank you Mr. Access very much




Thanks Wojood for your contribution, try to reduce soft drinks more and more